With the disappearance of the Iron Curtain, Prague stepped out of the gray shadows. What did visitors see?
This wasn't Prague's first burst of glory. In 1900, when the city had 600,000 residents, Baedeker described it as the "capital of the kingdom of Bohemia, the headquarters of the 8th Army Corps, and residence of a prince-archbishop and an imperial governor...." A decade later and in an exuberant expression of optimism, the city opened a new municipal hall. The site was an odd one, because the street the building fronted followed the alignment of the city's old moat. The new city hall in addition was a multi-purpose affair, with offices, exhibition spaces, a concert hall, and commercial space. None of this inhibited the architects, Osvald Polivka and Antonin Balsanek, who "followed the "hero of all Czech architects of the nineteenth century, Charles Garnier." A century later, the building was brilliantly lit at night as a symbol of a freshly exuberant city. (SeePrague, in French, by Marketa Theinhardt and others, 2005, p. 39.)
The city hall has an odd attachment, the Powder Tower or Prasna Brana, completed in 1883. For the preceding 400 years, it had been nearly ignored because the king of Bohemia, after starting work on the tower in 1475, had moved across the river to Prague Castle. A temporary roof had been installed on the tower, and the place had become a storehouse. Four centuries later the tower became (and remains) an icon of the city. The street beyond leads straight to the city square.
That street is the pedestrianized Celetna Ulice, carefully (which means not excessively) lit.
Just before coming to the square, pedestrians can hardly miss the towers of Our Lady Before Tyn, a church completed about 1450. Here it looks like Disneyland's Sleeping Beauty Castle, but on the spot it's arresting.
The main facade of the church is oddly obscured by the Tyn School, opened in 1550. The arched, stepped gables are cheerfully incongruous with the church towers behind them.
The church faces the town square, or Velke Namesti, as do these houses with Renaissance facades. The houses often have names: the one on the far left, from 1520, is the House of the Stone Lamb.
Directly opposite the church is the old city hall.
On the side of the old city hall there is a 15th century astronomical clock, showing the time, date, and more.
There are several choices of pathway from here, but the path to the river leads to this, The House at the Minute, from 1610, with sgraffiti portraying rulers and figures from mythology and the Bible.
The Vlatava River wraps the city as in the crook of an elbow. A castle was built on the hill opposite by 900. It too—Prazsky Hrad or Prague Castle—is artfully lit.
The river historically was fordable but is now crossed by the Charles Bridge, or Karlov Most. Anyone entering the city from the bridge passes under this tower, built in the 1230s and a remnant of the city's wall.
The tower has images of Emperor Charles IV and King Vaclav IV.
The baroque Church of St. Salvator, from 1660, is one of the few spots where the lighting experts have gone overboard.
In the light of day, the Town Hall and Powder T\ower lose a bit but not all of their charisma.
The facade bent to fit the site.
The mosaic is Hommage a Prague, by Karel Spillar.
In the morning, Celetna Ulice seems more prosaic.
The buildings around the Velke Namesti, on the other hand, lose nothing in the light of day. This is the Maison Storch. The figurative sgraffiti are part of an evolving national style, in this case featuring St. Wencelas.
The church and school.
The astronomical clock.
The House of the Minute, Dum U Minuty. The name has nothing to do with time but with the tiny bits of tobacco once sold here. The building is said also to have been a childhood home of Franz Kafka.
La table de pierre, or U kamenneho stolu.
Paintings by Ladislav Novak and Arnot Hofbauer, following sketches by Mikolas Ales, decorate a building from 1896-97. The architect was Eduard Rechziegel.
As early as 1901, Jan Koula prescribed "new areas creating a harmonious whole with the old parts of the city." New buildings, he continued, should "be picturesque, and variation should be achieved by the use of pitched roofs, gables, projections, bay windows etc. but under no circumstances should there be the straight, right lines of ledges and roofs." (Rostislav Svacha, The Architecture of New Prague, 1895-1945, 1994, p. 21.)
And so neighborhoods like this along the river have survived.
Across the river, St. Vitus Cathedral, within Prague Castle, rises in the morning light.
The Novometska Radnice or New City Town Hall was built in the 15th century, modified in 1806, but restored to its Gothic roots when it was modified again in 1905.
New forms did take shape in the city. Like this train station.
Its interior structure.
Here's the much grander Wilson Train Station, designed by Josef Fanta and completed in 1909. It's described as the most important Secession building in the city.
Structural detail.
Interior.
Floral decoration.
Residential neighborhoods changed, too. Parizska Ave, inspired by Haussmann's Paris, was developed between 1895 and 1910 in accordance with a plan from 1893 to connect the historical center with a bridge leading to garden suburbs.
Vaclavske Namesti runs through the New Town, established despite its name a very long time ago, in 1348. The streets here are gridded.
Looking back the other way on the same street, which ends at the National Museum. Yes, a man is riding with the concrete bucket.
The national museum, or Narodmi Muzeumat, stands atop Wenceslas Square at the head of Vaclavske Namesti. The architect was Josef Schulz.
The museum's new wing, by Karel Prager and others, 1967-1973, was built as the federal parliament. It later was the home of Radio Free Europe.