LTXVIII a. pabaigoje Polocko g. 26 ir gatvės atkarpoje ties namu 28B posesijose stovėjo mediniai gyvenamieji pastatai, daugiausia lūšnos (VAA, f. 1019, a. 11, b. 4430, p. 10–13). XIX a. I pusėje situacija nežymiai pasikeitė, buvusi 610 posesija padalinta į du sklypus: V prie Polocko gatvės, kur žymimas medinis namas matomas ir 1808 m. plane, ir R – vaizduojamas be pastatų. Dabartinis vietovės užstatymas susiformavo XIX a. pabaigoje – XX a. 3–4 dešimtmečiuose. Tarybiniais metais nemažai pastatų nugriauta. 1937 ir 1938 m. Vilniaus planuose jau matome du pastatus sklypo centrinėje dalyje. R dalyje stovėjo vieno aukšto medinis sandėliukas, statytas 1879–1880 m., V dalyje – vieno aukšto 6 patalpų sandėlis, kuriame 1901 m. veikė aludė. 1944 m. Vilniaus aerofotografijoje prie Polocko gatvės, sklypo PV kampe jau matomas 2 aukštų mūrinis Polocko gatvės namas 26. Namas pastatytas 1938– 1944 m. laikotarpiu. [...] [p. 365-366].
ENIn the late 18th century, a wooden residential building stood on the plot at Polocko St. 26 and in the street in front of 28B. 136 m2 were excavated and 1546 m2 surveyed and evaluated on the plot at Polocko St. 26. The investigation yielded 29 small finds, including 19 late 17th–20th-century coins, and 190 17th–18th-century finds. The excavated mid-17th – early 21st-century cultural layer was 1.25–3 m thick, but over 5 m thick in a 19th-century well (?) shaft. Archaeologically valuable mid-17th – first half of the 18th-century layers survived well only in 39.5 m2 in the SW part of the plot. A mid- 17th – early 18th-century household stone and brick stove that had survived fragmentally was excavated in the SW corner of area 1. Its central part had been badly disturbed by a 19th-century well (?) shaft. The stove had been used for about 30–40 years during a period from the mid-17th century to the late 17th – early 18th century. The stove’s demolition and dereliction layers contained lumps of yellow clay with finger marks, bricks without any binder, a fragment of a flat roof tile that had been affected by high temperatures, John II Casimir GDL shillings from the 1660s, and a Gustavus Adolphus Livonia shilling, fragments of 17th century stove tiles and household pottery, and a masonry foundation fragment from a late 18th – first half of the 19th-century structure.