The so-called Gà Âowià Âski monoplane was an otherwise unnamed aircraft built by Bronisà Âaw Gà Âowià Âski in Poland in 1911, and which became the first aircraft built on Polish territory to fly. Gà Âowià Âski was a student of an Engineering School in Lwów, and he built his plane in his brother's workshop in Ternopil (then: Polish city under Austrian rule). Modelled superficially after the French Blériot XI, Gà Âowià Âski's design differed from that aircraft most significantly in using a frame of welded steel tube rather than wood, and that an engine was mounted higher. Like the Blériot (and most other designs of the era), the fuselage was left uncovered as an open framework. Although Gà Âowià Âski managed to make a number of short flights in the machine from May to summer 1911, it was too heavy for the powerplant selected, which itself was worn out, and development was soon abandoned. By 1913, Gà Âowià Âski had broken up his plane. Parts of the aircraft survived until World War II.