my-server
← Wiki

Lecznicza Street

Lecznicza Street is a street in Łódź, Poland, approximately 0.3 km long with 17 address numbers, situated in the district within the area of the .

It starts at the intersection with and ends beyond 17 Lecznicza Street, transitioning into , which leads to . From its beginning to 13a Lecznicza Street, it is classified as a private road. The status of the segment from 13a to 17 Lecznicza Street is unclear, as it is not categorized in the public roads list. Two-way traffic is permitted along its entire length. Piaseczna Street extends southwest from Lecznicza Street beyond the Rzgowska Street intersection.

The street falls entirely within the pastoral jurisdiction of the Roman Catholic in Łódź.

History

Lecznicza Street was laid out after 1914, absent from a city plan of that year, likely in the mid-1910s, on land from the village of , annexed to Łódź by a Council of Ministers decree on 18 October 1906. Słownik nazewnictwa miejskiego Łodzi suggests it was initially named Mała Street, though another source disputes this. By 1923, it appeared as Zimna Street in Eugeniusz Romer and Atlas krajoznawczy województwa łódzkiego, linking Rzgowska Street to Dolna Street (now Podmiejska Street) without cross streets. A Łódź plan published between 1925 and 1930 by A. I. Ostrowski shows Mała Street as an extension of an unnamed street (likely Zimna) beyond Podmiejska Street, heading northeast, renamed Adam Asnyk Street in the early 1930s.

Before 1927, the health insurance fund acquired a plot on Zimna Street for a clinic, but construction was delayed due to the city's repeated revisions to the street's layout and the addition of Kasowa Street. The plans changed three times, forcing the fund to adjust its project. In late 1926 or early 1927, preliminary work began, but the city halted it for a fourth revision, leading to a complaint to provincial authorities.

The current name, Lecznicza Street, was likely assigned between May and June 1931, following the construction of the Social Insurance Clinic (now at 6 Lecznicza Street). It appeared as Zimna Street in Dziennik Zarządu m. Łodzi on 26 May 1931 and as Lecznicza Street by 9 June 1931. By then, the street had its current layout, ending in a fork beyond the clinic. Its northern extension was Podmiejska Street, leading diagonally to and Rzgowska Street, while its northeastern extension was Adam Asnyk Street (now replaced by buildings at 15 and 17 Lecznicza Street), reaching nearly to Juliusz Słowacki Street. Kasowa Street had become a cross street.

In early 1931, the city established a playground near the new clinic, covering about 2 hectares on land owned by Ferdinand Kenig's heirs, who permitted its use and offered to exchange it for part of the city's clay pit on . The site was proposed for permanent Jordan gardens and city squares.

From 2011 to 2013, Lecznicza Street ranked 299th out of 362 Łódź streets for traffic accidents, with one accident and one injury.

Following residents' requests, new trees, benches, trash bins, and a "kiss & ride" zone for quick drop-offs at the clinic were added. Residents had long sought solutions for traffic and parking issues, which had damaged the green strip along the street. The renovation was completed in spring 2025.

Name changes

Notable sites

  • 6 Lecznicza Street – Modernist , built from 1927 to 1930 by Warsaw architect Stefan Kraskowski for the Social Insurance Clinic, listed in the register of monuments. It is Łódź's oldest and largest operating clinic. In September 1939, it served as a military field hospital for bombing victims, organized with scouts from the Romuald Traugutt 3rd Łódź Scout Troop at , later becoming a hospital for prisoners of war. In the 1950s, it housed Łódź's first oncology clinics for gynecological oncology and general oncology. Renovated from 2001 to 2003, it hosts the Łódź-Górna Healthcare Team, Falck Medycyna Łódź Region, and the Aglonema pharmacy.
  • – Łódź's first post-World War II park, covering about 2 hectares, designed by K. Marcinkowski, located behind the Municipal Clinic.

Address numbers and postal codes

Source:

  • Even numbers: 2–6
  • Odd numbers: 1–17
  • Postal code: 93-173 (entire street)

Nearby points of interest

  • Arboretum – Residential building at 4 Łukasiński Street, completed in April 2012, 212 m north of the park. It incorporates two reconstructed walls from the Aleksander Schicht Factory, built before World War I, noted for its Art Nouveau brick facade, unusual for a factory in a park-like setting.
  • People of the Sea Monument – Opposite the entrance to the Joachim Lelewel High School at 21 Podmiejska Street, 340 m away, unveiled on 22 March 1984. The school houses a Maritime Museum, opened on 22 March 1993.

References