“Warsaw is restoring Szpiegowo, illegally occupied by the Russians. It is extremely symbolic that we are closing this long process right now, in the era of Russian aggression. And what will the Ukrainian community benefit from this,” Trzaskowski said.
We are talking about Russian real estate at Sobieski 100. This is a closed complex built in the late 70s by order of the USSR. From the outside, the building looks like a fortress – a three-meter fence, a concrete wall, and even a car entry and exit control point.
Approximately from the 90s, the complex was no longer taken care of. The number of inhabitants from that period to this day remains unknown. The Warsaw mayor’s office decided to take the building for a formal reason – it did not fulfill its obligations to allocate land plots for Poland in Moscow.
“Each room is checked, everything that was in place is recorded. After the inventory, we will begin to check the technical condition. Many private companies turned to us with an application for help in repairing this property, for which I am very grateful to them,” the mayor of the city added.
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