“…In the case of the larger cities of Central and Eastern Europe, the presence of large non-urbanised areas, particularly agricultural land, which can now serve as potential space for new construction investments, results from the features of territorial development of the cities transformation and intensified in the 2000s. Moreover, in this case suburbanisation is manifested not only in the development of individual residential construction in the suburban zone (so-called residential suburbanisation), but also has the nature of commercial suburbanisation, with the effect of business activity development in the near suburban zone (Brezdeń and Szmytkie, 2019). Processes occurring in the surroundings of Wrocław are thus like those observed in the surroundings of other large cities in Central and Eastern Europe (compare: Sýkora, 1999;Lowe and Tsenkova, 2003;Soós and Ignits, 2003;Hamilton et al, 2005;Nuissl and Rink, 2005;Hirt and Stanilov, 2007;Sýkora and Ouředníček, 2007;Brade et al, 2009;Kubeš, 2013;Martyniuk et al, 2016).…”