Warszawska Praga jako miejska przestrzeń eksploracji turystycznej
Abstract
The aim of the article is to show that Warsaw’s district of Praga is a space of
tourist exploration, to investigate the processes which led to this phenomenon
and to answer a question of direction, in which the further transitions within this
area can go.
The theoretical framework of this paper is based on the concept of a tourist
space by S. Liszewski (1995). The author distinguished five types of tourist
space and adapted her typology to the urban space (Liszewski 1999). The areas
of tourist exploration within a city include areas undiscovered by mass tourism,
as well as those, commonly visited by tourists. According to S. Liszewski (1999),
the tourist exploration spaces can include residential areas, production areas
(warehousing, industrial), communication areas (stations, airports, seaports) as
well as green and recreational areas (zoos, botanical gardens, parks, cemeteries,
recreational facilities).
This article analyses Warsaw’s district of Praga, defined as three out of four
regions comprising an administrative borough of Praga Północ: Nowa Praga,
Stara Praga and Szmulowizna, according to Civic Information System (see Fig.
2). As far as Warsaw is considered, this area is not particularly outstanding in
terms of population size or cultural values, but it does have a genius loci of
a sort, which is related, among other things, to the fact that this part of the city
was not destroyed during World War II. Since the mid-1990s, artists started to
intensively populate the district (cataloguing performed in October 2010, showed
28 art galleries and artist studios, although it can be assumed that these figures
are lower than the actual amount) and their migration brought the boom of new
trendy cafes and clubs (see Fig. 2). The artists of Praga contributed to the
change of the district’s image.
The Warsaw’s district of Praga fulfils all the criteria of tourist space’s
exploration. It is a unique and interesting part of the city, which is emphasized by
both, artists and interviewed owners of a dozen clubs, bars and restaurants in
the area. Mass tourism has not (yet?) reached this location. Those tourists, who
visit Praga are scarce. Are they attracted to a myth of artistic Praga? They do
not necessarily visit the area to see an art gallery or to explore open artist
studios. Instead, they rather come to see a trendy district, frequently mentioned
by the media.
Praga has a chance to become a space of tourist penetration (although some
of its parts, such as the City Zoo, already function as this type of tourist space).
As one of the photo studio owners in Praga says: “This is Warsaw, at its most
original. (...) If managed properly, this district can become a real tourist-magnet,
although not for all, as not everyone likes this type of ambience”.
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