Max Rosenthal House is a historical tenement located at 42 Gdaà Âska Street in downtown Bydgoszcz, Poland, built when the city was part of the Kingdom of Prussia. It is registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Heritage List.
The building stands on the eastern side of the street, between Krasià Âski and Sà Âowackiego streets. It is adjacent to the Stanisà Âaw Miaskowski house.
The building was constructed between 1905 and 1906 on the site of a previous house dating from 1874. At this time, the address was 149 Danziger Strasse, Bromberg. It was designed by the architect Fritz Weidner, following a commission from the shipping investor () Max Rosenthal. The first tenant was Friedrich Herzer, who ran a men's fashion salon offering elegant clothing, uniforms and sportswear until World War I.
A notable doctor, Elmiar Schendell, lived there from the 1910s to the 1930s. During First World War, he gave nursing courses to young mother at the Infant Dispensary on Koà Âcielecki Square.
Fritz Weidner was a German builder who came to Bydgoszcz at the end of the 19th century. He conducted frantic building activity in the city between 1896 and 1914. From 1912, he lived in the house he built for himself at 34 Gdaà Âska.
In the same area, Fritz Weidner built houses at the following addresses:
In 1918, the merchant Bronisà Âaw Kentzer bought the tenement to set up there the "Colonial Goods Wholesale and Coffee Roaster B. Kentzer i Ska" (). The firm became one of the largest trading companies in Pomerania and Greater Poland.
End of 2017, a thorough refurbishment of the building has anew underlined the features of the elevation on Gdaà Âska street.
The tenement at the time reflected the new artistic trends in architecture during the first decade of the 20th century in Germany, where the stucco decoration is reduced to a minimum, leaving room for the system of architectural elements that make up the facade.
The tone of the facade underlines the pair of gallery-connected balconies, supported by massive corbels. The whole is crowned with a broken-semicircular mansard roof.
The interiors have still preserved stoves, staircases, glass elevators and stained glass windows.
The building has been put on the Pomeranian heritage list (Nr.601299-Reg.A/1059), on 26 August 1996.