Eastern Trade Fair
The Eastern Trade Fair or Targi Wschodnie in
History
It was established in 1921 in Lwów (now
The Eastern Trade Fair was held in Lwów's most attractive city park, called Stryj Park (Park Stryjski in Polish), where the famous Racławice Panorama was exhibited during the General National Exhibition of 1894,[2] next to the newly built Palace of Art (now an indoor swimming pool). Some 130 new pavilions were erected in 1921 from designs by Eugeniusz Czerwiński and Alfred Zachariewicz. The annual trade fair was held there 18 times before the invasion.[3]
Highlights
The opening ceremony of the first Eastern Trade Fair held on September 25, 1921, was marred by the failed attempt by a
By 1928, the Fair could boast some 1,600 exhibitors, about 400 being foreign firms. That year, the event attracted 150,000 visitors. The exhibition grounds comprised some 220,000 square metres (2,400,000 sq ft), with 46 pavilions and other buildings of some 20,000 m2 (220,000 sq ft) of total exhibit space, as well as some 15,000 m2 (160,000 sq ft) of outdoor show areas.
The
See also
- General National Exhibition in Lviv[2]
- Poznań International Fair
- Targi Północne
- Polish culture in the Interbellum
Notes
- ^ LWÓW 1929 directory, retrieved November 9, 2007. (in Polish)
- ^ )
- ^ Aleksander Nikodemowicz (2006). "Targi Wschodnie we Lwowie". Kwartalniki (in Polish). Cracovia Leopolis. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
- ^ Kalicki, Włodzimierz. "25 IX 1921. Kula w rękawie" Gazeta Wyborcza, retrieved on November 10, 2007. (in Polish)
- ^ LWÓW 1929 directory, retrieved on November 9, 2007. (in Polish)