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Duztr · Notes № 14 · kujawsko-pomorskie

Toruń.Web design · 2026

Motifgothic→digital craft
Population196 000
SectorsIT
Coords53.0138°N

Part 01The city as a brief

Web design in Toruń has a backdrop no other Polish city can offer: Gothic brick inscribed on the UNESCO list. That is not a burden — it is a standard. Every project we take on here must withstand comparison with seven centuries of craftsmanship. Every digital map reflects a physical one — and in Toruń that principle is impossible to miss. Before we sit down to design a website for a company from this city, we read the city itself: what built it, what broke it, what defines it today. A website never emerges in a vacuum. It emerges in the context of the street where the client's desk sits — even when the client cannot articulate that.

Toruń demands craft. It is not about Gothic fonts or brick textures — it is about respect for detail. A website that looks like it was made in five minutes is an insult in this city. Everyone here can tell the difference between work and production.

A project is always about the city, even when it appears to be about the product.

Part 02Sectors and who’s buying

Toruń's market has clear centres of gravity. Not every industry is equally represented here — and that fact is more telling than any official statistics. Who commissions websites in Toruń? Most often, companies from these five areas:

ITAkademiaSpożywczyTurystykaChemia

Ranked by frequency of briefs that reach the studio. The top spot — IT — is no accident. It is the sector that generates the most enquiries for new websites in Toruń. For companies in this field, a website is not a business card — it is a sales tool.

What the local market lacks

Some industries in Toruń are invisible in the website market — not because they do not exist, but because they order elsewhere: in Warsaw, from chain agencies, or from freelancers. That shapes which projects feel natural here and which have to be built from scratch, without local precedent.

Part 03Fabric — where brands grow

Toruń has a handful of districts worth knowing before writing the first line of copy. Not because the brief needs to reference them, but because that is where the decision-maker sits — and their daily reality shapes what they consider "natural-looking."

DistrictMarket character
Stare Miastoturystyka, gastronomia, rzemiosło
Bydgoskie Przedmieściesecesja, kancelarie, firmy usługowe
Rubinkowodzielnica mieszkaniowa, MŚP
Podgórzpark technologiczny, firmy IT

Reference points

A few places that appear in every brief from Toruń's market — whether as a moodboard element or as a negation ("we want it to look nothing like..."):

Starówka (UNESCO)
najlepiej zachowany gotyk ceglany w Polsce
Toruński Park Technologiczny
hub IT i R&D
Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika
36 tys. studentów, motor miasta
Fabryka Kopernik
marka spożywcza rozpoznawalna globalnie
Editorial observationToruń demands craft.

Part 04Local aesthetics

There is something — you cannot prove it, only observe it — that companies from Toruń's market gravitate toward a particular visual language. It is not a matter of one client's taste; it is a matter of ecosystem. When the competition looks a certain way, you either belong to that code or you consciously break from it.

in Toruń, three patterns dominate what we see in competitor projects — and what we consciously weigh in every new brief: grids with pronounced hierarchy, restricted colour palettes (often a single accent), and typography that does not try to be "original" for its own sake. The local market does not reward experimentation as demonstration; it rewards experimentation as a better answer to a problem.

That does not mean we play it safe here. It means we know when a bold gesture reads as a bold gesture and when it reads as loss of control. in Toruń, that line falls differently than in Warsaw or Wrocław.

Part 05Digital chronology

Toruń's digital history does not begin with the first website. It begins with the moment the city decided what it wanted to become after the transformation. From that decision to the current website scene, 37 years have passed. Here is the short version.

YearEvent
1233Założenie przez Krzyżaków
1473Urodziny Mikołaja Kopernika
1997Wpis na listę UNESCO
2005Otwarcie Toruńskiego Parku Technologicznego
2016Toruń = jedno z 7 cudów Polski (National Geographic)
2023Rozbudowa kampusu UMK — nowe wydziały IT
202610 tys. studentów kierunków technicznych na UMK

Part 06What this means for the project

If you are commissioning a website in Toruń — whether you work with us or with another studio — there are three questions worth asking, questions that people from Toruń's market have better instincts about than anyone outside the city:

  • Do we want the site to signal local provenance, or would we rather be perceived as a company with no address?
  • At which stage of the customer journey does our client decide to click "contact" — and does that decision happen on this page, or somewhere earlier?
  • Does our competition in Toruń have websites we are competing with visually, or are they so different that we get to set the standard ourselves?

The answers to these three questions are usually more valuable than every moodboard combined. They are also harder to come by — and that is why this essay exists. By writing about Toruń's market, we write about the context in which your project will be born — regardless of whether you bring the brief to us or to someone else.

Toruń is a city of 196 000 residents. Every year, dozens — perhaps hundreds — of local businesses commission new websites. Most will receive a project that could have been ordered from anywhere in Poland. Some will receive a project that would not make sense without Toruń's context. The difference between the two is what this series of notes is about.

We work with companies from Toruń's market and across Poland.

Duztr is a design studio. We build websites and process-support systems — for companies in Toruń, in kujawsko-pomorskie voivodeship, and nationwide.

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