I moved to an apartament in the outskirts of Warsaw in 2002. It was situated in the middle of nowhere. There still was a harvested fields and city bus came only once in 1 hour. Now it's a big settlement with shops, bars, many bus lines. Soon will be the brand new subway (underground) station.
Bemowo, Gorce? I remember that place in 2002. Cows, farmlands, gravel, holes, mud. Zero level of infrastructure. It was hard to get there by car. Public transport was almost non-existent. Now we have metro (subway) station 200 meters from apartment, buses every 10 minutes and a lot of tram stations. And of course a looooooot of buildings, shops, restaurants, hospitals etc. around. Now is everything here and 20 minutes by subway (subway arrived every 4 minutes) to center of the city.
What a super cool video Paul! Thank you for showing the beautiful development of my beloved city in such an ingenuous way. God bless you my friend. 🙂🙏🍻
What can you say? Photos from google maps - currently. Well, they don't look like the pictures anymore. Especially those with visible construction machines, but not only those.
@@alh6255 This green space was an integral part of the real estate. The housing cooperative sold the plot to a private investor and a residential building was built on a very busy road in bad place. People who walk along the footbridge visible on the left can look directly into the apartments. The problem of Warsaw and all of Poland is poor urban planning. New buildings are often being built in places that are not adapted to this.
Wrocław also changed massively, some parts in outskirts of the city are beyond recognizable (jagodno or bielany). Interesting is that in Wroclaw they mostly renovated and polished existing old architecture in the center instead of building new.
How stupid do you have to be to believe in "friendships" in politics? Also why are you proud of the fact that your own country will stop developing and will pour billions into a foreign country? We are already in debt and you're acting like a child.
@@bababa4275 I have ukrainian neighbours jumping on a garage screaming and throwing sticks right across the street. Last week I took a train to Warsaw and there was a single ukrainian who was almost shouting into his phone for almost an hour and later he scattered peanuts on the floor and didn't clean them he was just sitting in his trash not giving a f**k. Literally everyone onboard wanted him off the train. You're blinded by what the government says.
@@barteksz932 Unfortunately, some Ukrainians behave this way. But it is a definite minority. Why did no one tell this boor to be more quiet or not to litter?
I will reply for Ukrainians, because they are busy covering your arse by fighting their way through ruins to die, you have no right to offend any Ukrainian women or a child in Poland. If you don't want to help, fine, sit on your hands and ejoy the sun. But complaining at our sisters and children cannot be accepted. They came here running away from war. These are your sisters, and your children too.
I am 53 years old, I have lived here all my life, this city was changing before my eyes. It's funny how you don't pay attention to it on a daily basis
Funny thing is that there is still a big difference between 2018 (which in the movie is "now") and 2022 which is now. :)
I moved to an apartament in the outskirts of Warsaw in 2002. It was situated in the middle of nowhere. There still was a harvested fields and city bus came only once in 1 hour. Now it's a big settlement with shops, bars, many bus lines. Soon will be the brand new subway (underground) station.
Cool!
Bemowo, Gorce?
I remember that place in 2002. Cows, farmlands, gravel, holes, mud. Zero level of infrastructure. It was hard to get there by car. Public transport was almost non-existent.
Now we have metro (subway) station 200 meters from apartment, buses every 10 minutes and a lot of tram stations.
And of course a looooooot of buildings, shops, restaurants, hospitals etc. around. Now is everything here and 20 minutes by subway (subway arrived every 4 minutes) to center of the city.
I love my country. ❤️ POLand
The fact that most if not all of these areas were rubble/farmland in the 1940s is shocking.
Nice! Today it is even better.
Felicitaciones Polonia esta avanzado la nueva tecnología y desarrollado. Viva Polonia
Muchos gracias, amigo. Saludas desde Polonia
What a super cool video Paul! Thank you for showing the beautiful development of my beloved city in such an ingenuous way. God bless you my friend. 🙂🙏🍻
Thanks!
1:42 this place actually looks so much diffrent in 2022, 2018 was 4 years ago and it has changed so much since then
Thanks for info!
@@PAULSGEO Yup many more skyscrapers around, it's quite different. Rondo Daszyńskiego x Grzybowska area
What a terrific video, thanks for posting.
Poland baltic pearl. Good job. Thanks you.
That's so cool! Now we have to reduce amount of lanes and parkings to make place for new greenery
Poland came a long way and today it’s well-developed European country.
God bless Poland and USA ...
What can you say? Photos from google maps - currently. Well, they don't look like the pictures anymore. Especially those with visible construction machines, but not only those.
2.47 it's typical example of Warsaw's development pathology.
Could you explain?
@@alh6255 This green space was an integral part of the real estate. The housing cooperative sold the plot to a private investor and a residential building was built on a very busy road in bad place. People who walk along the footbridge visible on the left can look directly into the apartments. The problem of Warsaw and all of Poland is poor urban planning. New buildings are often being built in places that are not adapted to this.
@@miglanceLike in Romania but probably in Romania is even worse. Greetings from Romania 🇷🇴❤️🇵🇱
@@djprojectusThis is a problem that can be seen all over Eastern Europe, except maybe the Czech Republic.
I want same in Wrocław. Then i can record some walk on my channel.😋
Wrocław also changed massively, some parts in outskirts of the city are beyond recognizable (jagodno or bielany).
Interesting is that in Wroclaw they mostly renovated and polished existing old architecture in the center instead of building new.
@@kaliente0 👍 c ya next time in post .
@@kaliente0And some parts are nearly the same like Psie Pole. (Btw this isnt hate on Wrocław its my 2nd fav polish city behind Kraków)
Kinda sad that the new stuff looks all the same.. with there was more diversity and stronger urban planning
We will do the same with Ukraine after the war. We will rebuild it in a few years and we will live in friendship. Glory to the Slavs!
Yeah I was thinking about that for a while
How stupid do you have to be to believe in "friendships" in politics? Also why are you proud of the fact that your own country will stop developing and will pour billions into a foreign country? We are already in debt and you're acting like a child.
I hope Ukraine will have a new, good start, out of Russian shitty "world" as soon, as possible
We will rebuild Ukraine stronger and even more beautiful. Best wishes from Poland.
Somehow I have serious doubts does Poles will rebuild Ukraine
Well, this is why I don't want to live in Warsaw. It's a pathology and no happy sounding music will make it better.
Teee zainteresuj się sobą a nie innymi. Zdupcaj
And just after we have made our country a good place to live in, they made us "happy" with...
ukrainians.
It is enough for everyone, you have to see the bigger picture in order to understand it.
@@bababa4275 I have ukrainian neighbours jumping on a garage screaming and throwing sticks right across the street. Last week I took a train to Warsaw and there was a single ukrainian who was almost shouting into his phone for almost an hour and later he scattered peanuts on the floor and didn't clean them he was just sitting in his trash not giving a f**k. Literally everyone onboard wanted him off the train. You're blinded by what the government says.
Pierdolicie hipolicie
@@barteksz932 Unfortunately, some Ukrainians behave this way. But it is a definite minority. Why did no one tell this boor to be more quiet or not to litter?
I will reply for Ukrainians, because they are busy covering your arse by fighting their way through ruins to die, you have no right to offend any Ukrainian women or a child in Poland. If you don't want to help, fine, sit on your hands and ejoy the sun. But complaining at our sisters and children cannot be accepted. They came here running away from war. These are your sisters, and your children too.