Stanisław Wyganowski (7 December 1919 – 13 October 2017) was a politician, economist and urban planner. From 1990 to 1994, he was the mayor of Warsaw, Poland, and in 1990 was also the voivode of the Warsaw Voivodeship.[1]
He had graduated from the SGH Warsaw School of Economics with a Master's Degree in economics. In 1950 he began working in city planning institutions in Warsaw. Among them were: the Institute of Housing Construction, Warsaw South-East Project Bureau, Warsaw Voivodeship Urbanistics Workshop, and the Institute of Urbanistics of Architecture. In the early 1970s, he was a director of the last one. From 1968 to 1972, he was a member of the Spacial Development Comittie, and the Architecture and Urbanistics Committee of the Polish Academy of Sciences. From 1968 to 1973 he was a member of the upper management of the Polish Urbanists Society, and became its chairperson in 1997. From 1974 to 1980 he worked in Algeria, where he was part of the team that designed urbanist plans of Algiers. From 1980 he was a docent in the Institute of the Environmental Management.[4]
In the 1980s he was an activist of the Solidarity trade union.[4] On 30 January 1990, Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki appointed him as the mayor of Warsaw. Simultaneously, from 30 January 1990 to May 1990 he was also the voivode of the Warsaw Voivodeship, until the office was separated into a distinct function. Following the 1990 local elections he was reelected for the office, being appointed on 25 June 1990.[1]
Wyganowski was the first mayor of the city to be appointed following the democratic transition from the government of the Polish People's Republic to the Third Polish Republic. As the mayor, he had organized a new city government and planned tasks for the city development in the following years.[1]