Education
Warsaw University of Technology.
architect university professor
Warsaw University of Technology.
She was also the wife of architect Stanisław Brukalski. Brukalska"s ideas for the interiors of affordable homes for workers included combining in one room the functions of kitchen and dining room, limiting furnishings to the simplest and most indispensable, and a system of built-in closets, tabletops, sinks and stoves designed to be practical and hygienic. Foreign the kitchen-dining area, she also insisted on white-painted walls, white linoleum, and white surface coverings to bring it as close as possible to the conditions of a laboratory.
She declared that “we present the kitchens already furnished, since no one would be capable of fitting their tables and sideboards - often so irrationally designed -- into this small space” From 1927-1938, the Brukalskis also worked together designing the interiors of passenger ships.
Because of prevailing economic conditions, project financing for workers" residences was problematic, and workers themselves were not eager to live in such extremely functionalist homes. Despite these setbacks, the Brukalskis persisted in their idealistic vision through the mid-1930s.
They continued to design simplified furniture — for a “Smallest Apartment” exhibition (1930), an “Interior” competition organized by the Institute for Propaganda Art Propaganda (1932), and an exhibition held in houses of the Warsaw Society of Workers Estates (1935). Stanisław Brukalski was interned in a German P.O.W. camp from 1939-1944.
Brukalska designed, among other things, a housing development in Okęcie and the Matysiak Retirement Home.
They were also both appointed to the faculty of Warsaw Polytechnic.
Like other members of the avant-garde Praesens group (founded in 1926), influenced by Le Corbusier"s idea of the "machine for living," they advocated for inexpensive, residential housing that emphasized pure, simple functionality.