PZU Tower in Warsaw, Office skyscraper in Śródmieście, Warsaw, Poland.
The PZU Tower is a skyscraper in the Śródmieście district of Warsaw, standing 97 meters tall with a curved blue glass facade. It has 28 floors above ground and 4 levels below, used for offices and parking.
The tower was completed in 2000, designed by architect Tadeusz Spychała as part of a wave of commercial construction that reshaped central Warsaw after the fall of communism. It was built during a period when the area around the Central Station was being transformed by new office towers and foreign investment.
The tower takes its name from PZU SA, Poland's largest insurance company, which uses it as its main office. The building is a visible marker in central Warsaw, representing the shift toward a service-based economy that began after 1989.
The tower stands very close to Warsaw Central Station and the Złote Tarasy shopping center, so it is easy to reach on foot or by metro. Since it is a private office building, public access is limited to the lobby area.
Although the tower was among the first glass skyscrapers built in Warsaw after 1989, its rounded shape is unusual compared to most of the rectangular towers around it. This curved outline makes it recognizable from a distance, including from across the Vistula River on a clear day.
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