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Julian Puterman-Sadłowski

Julian Puterman-Sadłowski
Born(1892-10-02)October 2, 1892
DiedMarch 22, 1953(1953-03-22) (aged 60)[1]
Alma materTechnical University of Munich
OccupationArchitect
Building of the Telecommunications and Telegraph Office at Nowogrodzka Street 45 in Warsaw
Julian Puterman-Sadłowski (third from the left) with colleagues from the Bureau of Reconstruction of the Capital (1945)

Julian Puterman-Sadłowski (until 1942 Julian Puterman; October 2, 1892 – March 22, 1953)[2] Polish architect and academic lecturer.

Biography

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His parents were involved in medicine; his father, Jakub Puterman, was a doctor, and his mother, Anna Margulies, worked as a bacteriologist and was the heiress of a family that owned the Meyerhold Steel Industry in Sosnowiec.[3]

After graduating from the Commercial School in Będzin, he moved to Kraków, where he completed his secondary education in 1911 at the Higher Real School. He then moved to Munich, where he began engineering studies at the Technical University of Munich. The outbreak of World War I forced him to interrupt his studies, but he resumed them in 1916 and graduated as an architect-engineer a year later. Until February 1918, he held the position of assistant at his alma mater, then returned home to become a plant architect at the Azoty Plant in Chorzów, while also apprenticing under architect Jan Rakowicz.[3]

In 1919, he became a professor at the Higher School of Construction in Poznań. He held this position until the end of the 1925/1926 academic year, with a one-year break for military service during the Polish-Soviet War, in which he fought as a private. In 1926, he moved to Warsaw, where he opened a private architectural office.[3]

He was a professor at the Warsaw University of Technology in the Department of Sanitary Construction. From 1928, he served as the head of the design office of the Ministry of Post and Telegraph. From 1929, he co-ran an architectural firm with sculptor Antoni Miszewski. During 1939–1940, he lived in Kaunas. From 1940–1941, he worked in Vilnius as the head of the Industrial Design Office.[3]

In 1944, in Lublin, he participated in organizing the Ministry of Reconstruction. From 1945, he lived in Warsaw, where he worked in the Bureau of Reconstruction of the Capital (BOS) until 1947.[3]

Works

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  • 1922–1929 – School of the Monastery of the Sisters of Sacré Coeur in Polish Village near Pobiedziska[4]
  • 1928–1929 – Main Post Office building in Gdynia (jointly with Antoni Miszewski and Waldemar Radlow)
  • 1929 – Exhibition pavilion of the Ministry of Post and Telegraph at the General National Exhibition in Poznań in 1929[5][6]
  • 1930 – Garage for postal vehicles at Ratuszowa Street in Warsaw (demolished in 1944)[7]
  • 1931 – Post office building in Sandomierz (jointly with Jan Najman)[7]
  • 1931–1933 – Main Post Office building in Kalisz[7]
  • 1929–1934 – Telecommunications and Telegraph Office building at Nowogrodzka Street 45 in Warsaw; the first steel-frame building in Poland (collaboration with Antoni Miszewski)[8]
  • 1935–1937 – Post office at the railway station in Bydgoszcz
  • 1936 – Post office in Łuck
  • 1937 – Post office in Równe
  • 1937 – Residential block for employees of the Ministry of Post and Telegraph in Warsaw[9][10]
  • 1938 – Marine radio station Gdynia-Witomino (Kielecka Street 103)
  • 1937–1938 – Postal workers' housing estate in Gdynia-Grabówek; three residential blocks with a kindergarten pavilion in one of the courtyards
  • 1938–1942 – ZUS housing estate for officials and their families in Starachowice; four detached residential blocks with a garage building, completed during the
  • 1939 – Project of a postal building in Vilnius (construction 1939–1940, completed in 1959 according to another project)
  • 1948–1950 – Residential estate for employees of the Ministry of Public Security in Warsaw; five residential blocks at Niepodległości Avenue 143–143B and Madalińskiego Street 70/78C–D–E (jointly with Jan Klewin)
  • 1947–1951 – Hospital of the Ministry of Public Security at Wołoska Street 137 in Warsaw (jointly with Leopold Kohler)[11]
  • 1951–1960 – Bielański Hospital in Warsaw (jointly with Leopold Kohler and Stanisław Roszczyk)

Undated works

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  • Hotel-sanatorium Excelsior in Iwonicz (jointly with Edward Madurowicz and Karol Rauch) (construction 1927–1931)
  • House at św. Barbary Street No. 2/4 in Warsaw (No. 2 office building, No. 4 apartments for employees)
  • Villa of Antoni Miszewski at Racławicka Street 31 in Warsaw
  • Sanatorium of the Health Insurance Fund in Lwów (jointly with Madurowicz) – competition project

References

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  1. ^ "Julian Puterman-Sadłowski". www.beta.architektura.warszawa.sarp.org.pl. Archived from the original on 26 March 2016. Retrieved 2018-08-02.
  2. ^ Piłatowicz, Józef (1993). "Julian Sadłowski (until 1942 Julian Puterman)". In Markiewicz, Henryk (ed.). Polski Słownik Biograficzny. Vol. XXXIV.
  3. ^ a b c d e Piłatowicz, Józef (1993). "Julian Sadłowski (until 1942 Julian Puterman)". In Markiewicz, Henryk (ed.). Polski Słownik Biograficzny. Vol. XXXIV. Rząśnicki Adolf-Sapieha Jan. Archived from the original on 2024-12-22.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ "Krótka historia Polskiej Prowincji". Siostry Sacre Coeur (in Polish). Retrieved 2025-07-11.
  5. ^ "Architektura i Budownictwo 1929 nr 1". Wóycicki, Zygmunt. Red., Woźnicki, Stanisław. Wyd. 1929. Archived from the original on 2024-06-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ "Architektura i Budownictwo 1929 nr 11-12". Wóycicki, Zygmunt. Red., Woźnicki, Stanisław. Wyd. 1929. Archived from the original on 2025-03-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ a b c "Architektura i Budownictwo 1933 nr 7". 1933. Archived from the original on 2024-08-05.
  8. ^ "Architektura i Budownictwo 1934 nr 11". 1934. Archived from the original on 2022-10-07.
  9. ^ Grzegorz Mika (2020). "Better Praga". Skarpa. 3 (131): 38.
  10. ^ Project of a residential building with a post office and a shop at the corner of Jagiellońska and Ratuszowa streets in Warsaw. Eng. Arch.-Julian Puterman (1937), Archive of New Records, MSW team, ref. 5.5/I 3762
  11. ^ Leopold Koehler (1958), "Hospital at Wołoska Street in Warsaw", Architecture (11–12/1958): 474–480

Bibliography

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