For Kraków, the first such alternative district was Kazimierz. In dire need of refurbishment, it attracted a new type of visitor: certainly not your history teacher but younger folk, eager to chat until the small hours, have some drinks, perhaps dance on an odd bar or two, but first of all enjoy the company of like-minded people. They first discovered ul. Szeroka and plac Nowy, spilt into Meiselsa, Bożego Ciała and Miodowa streets to take over most of the district. They became a powerful force for its revival in more than just one sense.
Many brows raised to learn that the younger generation no longer consider the district the default source of leisure and pleasure. Podgórze! The other side of the Vistula River was discovered. The Kładka Bernatka foot-and-bike-bridge let thousands of people walk and pedal into the district. Little wonder that the new fashionable places developed on Mostowa street leading to it, and the very centre of Podgórze it leads to blossomed and burgeoned. The square at its end and ul. Brodzińskiego are still lined with the area’s most fashionable places, from a pub and a bar, via a sushi joint, a restaurant, a café and an ice cream shop, to a pizza place.
Yet that was the discovery of the Forum Hotel, the huge derelict relic of the 1970s, that provided the greatest venue for the new, hip generation. Forum Przestrzenie, as the place is known, offers both plenty of open indoor space and thousands of deckchairs in the shadow of the former hotel. They are eagerly occupied by groups who have just escaped their 9-to-5 jobs as well as Kraków’s artists and fashionistas. Soon a mini funfair sprouted nearby to be joined by a river-beach, a “Kraków Eye” balloon, and hotels on barges moored on the river. It’s always best to look around and decide which fashionable areas you like most, yet why not take a hint or two from here: just click.