Prace konserwatorskie w Krakowie w roku 2024 finansowane ze środków Narodowego Funduszu Rewaloryzacji Zabytków Krakowa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12797/RK.2025.91.08Keywords:
Social Committee for the Restoration of Monuments of Krakow, National Fund for the Restoration of Monuments of Krakow, conservation of Krakow’s monumentsAbstract
CONSERVATION WORK IN KRAKOW IN 2024 FINANCED BY NATIONAL FUND FOR THE RESTORATION OF MONUMENTS OF KRAKOW
The selection of tasks was subject to the programme assumptions of the Social Committee for the Restoration of Monuments of Krakow (SKOZK), specified since 1990. The amount of PLN 40,405,695.12 was available, of which PLN 40 million was a subsidy from the state budget (transferred by the Chancellery of the President of the Republic of Poland). A total of 103 tasks were carried out in 79 buildings. The beneficiaries contributed PLN 31,522,574.35 to these tasks, as well as PLN 26,426,482.27 to other works carried out in these buildings, without co-financing from the National Fund. For every zloty from the National Fund, the statistical beneficiary contributed PLN 1.44 from other sources. At Wawel, the most important tasks were the completion of the conservation of the dome of the cathedral’s Clock Tower, the continuation of the restoration of the Fortress Road and the implementation of the task ‘Wawel Underground – Wawel Lapidarium’. In the historic city centre, work was carried out in numerous churches (including the completion of the conservation of the Bugle Tower of St. Mary’s Church) and secular monuments. In Kazimierz, the conservation of the rich furnishings of the Corpus Christi Church was continued, as well as work within the former Jewish Town (in the Isaac and Tempel synagogues and the New Cemetery). In the Biskupie area, the wooden chapel of the Holy Stairs in the garden of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Monastery was secured on an emergency basis. In Podgórze, the restoration of the Old Cemetery continued. On the outskirts of the city, work continued on the religious complexes of Tyniec, Mogiła and Camaldolese in Bielany, in the villa in Wola Justowska, and in the forts of the Austrian Krakow Fortress.
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