The monument to the count, a Polish playwright and a honorary citizen of
Lviv, was set up in 1897 on the Akademicka square on the initiative of the
Literary and Artistic Circle. Its author was sculptor Leonard Marconi. After WW2
the monument was transported to Poland and installed on the market square in
Wrocław in 1956.
The monument to Kornel Ujejski, "the last great poet of the Romantic era," was installed on the initiative of the Literary and Artistic Circle near the City Casino in 1901. It was made by sculptor Antony Popiel. After the Second World War the monument was transported to Szczecin (Poland).
The four-story residential house, which is located on contemporary Shevchenka boulevard 21, was built in the years 1909-1910 under a project drawn up by architect Jan Schulz for Dr. Bruno Pokorny and his wife Stanisława. Due to its rich Neo-Gothic décor, this house is one of the most striking patterns of this style among the residential houses of Lviv. It is an architectural monument (protection number M-408). As for today (2014), it is a residential house; the Park Avenue clothes shop and the Veronika confectionary restaurant are situated on the ground floor.