Błękitny Wieżowiec (the Blue Skyscraper), Warsaw. This massive, mirrored tower is on a prominent intersection called Plac Bankowy (Bank Place), and on the other side of its bulky, stepped-pyramid base is the single-block long Tłomackie (to the left of the building in the second photo). It was this little street, once a large formal square, that was the address of the site’s previous structure, the magnificently palatial Great Synagogue of Warsaw, one of the largest and grandest Jewish temples in the world.
As a final act of annihilation at the conclusion of the destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto in 1943, the SS dynamited the building.
I saw this tower earlier in the day, the MetLife sign in the distance, and as I was researching the sites and contours of the Ghetto, I was haunted to discover this history, even more so when later I passed by this reflective office building which seems to have no reference to, or acknowledgment of, its sacred predecessor. And I was particularly awed to learn that I just happened to be walking around this glossy, oblivious commercial successor on the 76th anniversary of the spring morning that the Nazis detonated the charges. It seemed to be an almost Sebaldian coincidence.
Jerzy Czyż, Andrzej Skopiński, Jan Furman, Lech Robaczyński, Marzena Leszczyńska, architects, 1976, 1989-91. Photos May 2019 Bauzeitgeist.