Works on the modernist housing estate in Tschansch began in 1924 with the creation of a master plan for Breslau at the City Development Office under the direction of Fritz Behrendt in cooperation with Heinrich Knipping. The final urban planning assumptions for Klein and Groß Tschansch were made in January 1925, followed by the final design of the settlement in Klein Tschansch on April 26, 1928.[2]
Księże Małe estate is the only pre-war housing estate in Wrocław that was envisioned and executed entirely in line with modernist principles (WuWA and other estates were built as parts of districts, where Księże Małe estate was designed for the then unsettled Księże Małe neighbourhood). The estate consists of low-rise buildings with distressed concrete façades. As the estate was planned primarily for working class residents, who at the time were less literate than other social classes, each building featured a different relief above the entrance to help people differentiate buildings between each other, as they were mostly uniform in design. [5] The estate features open green spaces, public playgrounds and services, and due to cost constraints, the dwellings originally did not feature bathrooms and drying rooms - instead each building had a shared bathroom and drying room space.
Księże historically has been, and still retains a reputation of a poorer, less affluent district than others. This is likely due to its working class and industrial history and subsequent loss of investment and urban decay. The district features on the list of "degraded areas of revitalisation"[6], alongside many other southeast Wrocław districts.
Revitalisation efforts are in place, the district's main street (Opolska Street), subsequently an artery for southeast Wrocław is due to undergo a big revitalisation investment.[7]
In 1991, after reforms in the administrative division of Wrocław, Księże became one of the city's 48 districts.[8]
The district was heavily affected by the 1997 Central European flood.[2]