Share Solidarity in Prague costs her 64 years. Stle is great here
Share Solidarity grew up in Stranice between the Brigdnk, Dtsk, Biennials, Novostranick, Solidarity, Turnovsky and U Kombintu on an unstoppable rectangular area south of Ernokosteleck Street measuring 880,440 meters.
In two years (so-called two-year-olds) 1,200 flats have grown here, half of which are in family houses and the rest were in delicate standard houses. The construction deals with six residential and six industrial and national enterprises.
The area of the whole share was divided in the middle by a green dog of 170 meters. Here the inhabitants had a house and an apartment to play sports. Around this green island, buildings have been designed for maternity and primary school, sweat, shelter, medical facilities, cultural heritage, trit, heating plant and central laundry.
The proposal was economically and urbanistically controversial. The two-storey cottages were built without basement, the ground floor had a kitchen, bathroom and living room, the two bedrooms were on the fifth floor. . then prefabrication was used for pioneering. Walls of saddles, roofs of saddles with classic ceramic roofing.
The association was created under the leadership of the architect Frantisek Jech, who followed the established functionalism and was inspired by the scales of the Austrian architect Le Corbusier about cities with simple houses without courtyards, but in greenery.
Share SolidarityThe book will be ceremoniously presented at the Party Theater in Prague10 on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 from 7 p.m. |
About the first consignment of the Solidarity of the New Publications of the same name. The book, which describes the origin and development of the present and the present, was published by the Archive of Fine Arts.
The texts of the history of architecture and art Kimberly Elman Zarecor, Eva Novotn, Michaela Janekov and Barbora are accompanied by twelve interviews with local residents. They contributed photographs from family albums to the book, which show the daily life of this communication throughout its history.
Thanks to living at Solidarity, I realized that the architecture and urban development of buildings could affect its inhabitants, their lives and their relationships, to Barbara Pikov, an art historian and citizen who told Solidarity, who edited the book.