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Hotel Bohemia: a hotel in the Old Town of Prague adds to urban richness, as well as providing a civilized place to stay in the city centre.


Prague is a city of enormous and invigorating in·vig·or·ate  
tr.v. in·vig·or·at·ed, in·vig·or·at·ing, in·vig·or·ates
To impart vigor, strength, or vitality to; animate: "A few whiffs of the raw, strong scent of phlox invigorated her" 
 stylistic diversity. Its magic arises from its disposition either side of the Vltava river Vltava River
 German Moldau

River, Czech Republic. The Czech Republic's longest river, it flows 270 mi (435 km). The river rises in southwestern Bohemia from two headstreams in the Bohemian Forest.
, with Prague Castle The Prague Castle (Czech: Pražský hrad) is the castle in Prague where the Czech kings, Holy Roman Emperors and presidents of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic have had their offices. The crown jewels of the Bohemian Kingdom are kept here.  omnipresent om·ni·pres·ent  
adj.
Present everywhere simultaneously.



[Medieval Latin omnipres
 on the left bank, dominating the city's labyrinthine lab·y·rin·thine
adj.
Of, relating to, resembling, or constituting a labyrinth.



labyrinthine

pertaining to or emanating from a labyrinth.
 streets and squares, hidden courtyards, grand boulevards and palaces. But more intangibly, it must arise from the intensifying effects wrought by a fantastical Bohemian imagination on successive influences from France, Italy, Austria and Germany. The result is extraordinary decorative richness and strange dream-like juxtapositions. At times, the flourish over the city of towers and spires, domes, cupolas and pinnacles has an insubstantial visionary quality, seeming detached from the sturdy fabric beneath.

New insertions in central Prague are rare. Recent blots include the lumpen Hilton Hotel; but Frank Gehry's fantastical tendencies seem to have found a natural place, in the form of the topsy-turvy Fred and Ginger building (AR April 1997). Built on the right bank of the river, its elegant interior was designed by Eva Jiricna Architects. Jiricna, who was born in Prague, was also responsible for the glass and steel Orangery or·ange·ry  
n. pl. or·ange·ries
A sheltered place, especially a greenhouse, used for the cultivation of orange trees in cool climates.
 in the Royal Gardens of Prague Castle (AR January 2000), and most recently for the Hotel Josef at 20 Rybna in Josefov - the former Jewish quarter
For the article on Jewish Quarters throughout the Jewish diaspora, see Jewish Quarter (diaspora)
The Jewish Quarter (Hebrew:
 of Prague's Old Town. The hotel, Jiricna's largest new building, is off a tiny square, an urban clearing formed by the junction of three streets. The square is dominated by a decorative nineteenth-century police station which flanks the hotel's south side.

All Jiricna's works acknowledge their context. This is true of the Pragu e Orangery which, built alongside a sixteenth-century brick wall, is a sophisticated and thoughtful response to a historic site and to the requirements of modern horticulture. In Josefov, Hotel Josef's street presence is so discreet that you are upon it before you know it. Continuing the line of the police station's pitched roof pitched roof
n.
A two-sided sloped roof having a gable at both ends. Also called gable roof.
, it has a plain white facade articulated by the rhythm of lightweight perforated awnings over windows on six floors. The geometric modelling produced by projection and shadow is reminiscent of Czech Cubism without its distortions. (Around the corner at 34 Celetna is one of the movement's masterpieces, Josef GocAr's House of the Black Madonna The House of the Black Madonna is a cubist building in the "Old Town" area of Prague, Czech republic. It was designed by Josef Gočár. It is currently in use as a small museum of Cubism and is open to the public. , built 1911-12). The building is crowned by two further levels, stepped back from the street to give balconies and city views, and to diminish the impression of height next to its northerly, lower neighbour. The ground floor is completely glazed and has an elegant glass canopy projecting over the street. Jiricna's brand of modernity has been gently introduced into this historic quarter. It has been made seductive by transparency, light and use of a sumptuous material--creamy stone--the language overlaid by Jiricna's distinctive engineering bias. So the building is another quiet surprise, adding to the city's richness and diversity.

From the street you see into a luminous white lobby with a diaphanous glass bar and reception desk. At the centre of the pale stone floor, a sculptural flourish of steel indicates the latest version of the practice's filigreed fil·i·gree  
n.
1. Delicate and intricate ornamental work made from gold, silver, or other fine twisted wire.

2.
a. An intricate, delicate, or fanciful ornamentation.

b.
 staircases, virtuoso performances in glass and steel (here descending to conference rooms). The preponderance of glass, the luminosity luminosity, in astronomy, the rate at which energy of all types is radiated by an object in all directions. A star's luminosity depends on its size and its temperature, varying as the square of the radius and the fourth power of the absolute surface temperature. , the silvery glass staircase spun round the exuberant steel ribbon, also seems part of Bohemian expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism  
n.
A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences.



ex·pres
 traditions.

The hotel is two buildings (colour-coded pink at the front, orange at the back) separated by an internal courtyard and linked by a glass corridor. A practical response to a deep and irregular site, which slopes from west to east, the arrangement allowed an underground car park and brought natural light into the centre of the plan. Public areas flow seamlessly around the courtyard.

Giving onto the garden through along glazed wall is the breakfast room. Designed in black, white and polished steel, it is a tranquil tribute to '30s Czech Modernism.

The hotel has 110 civilized and airy bedrooms--more than required by the original brief. This is something of a feat considering a tight budget, Prague's planning exigencies and a constricted con·strict  
v. con·strict·ed, con·strict·ing, con·stricts

v.tr.
1. To make smaller or narrower by binding or squeezing.

2. To squeeze or compress.

3.
 site.

In designing the bedrooms, the practice has been concerned with clear plans, and the quality of light and space. Limpid light is drawn in through generous windows or glazed walls, and rooms look either into the courtyard or over the city --the largest of them with balconies, on the eighth floor of the pink building, have views over rooftops and the forest of spires and pinnacles to Prague castle.

Using glass and reflection to enlarge space is a device Jiricna adopted long ago (notably in designs for Joseph shops, AR January 1989), and here the device has been put to good effect, the elegant and ingenious detailing distracting attention from the fact that some rooms are quite small. Some bathrooms are stone-lined, others entirely of glass, their privacy guaranteed by sliding mirrored doors. In the smaller rooms they do allow an impression of space. As usual with this practice, attention has been paid to the smallest detail, from design of light fittings to bed linen and coat hangers. The practice has designed the lighting and most of the furniture--such as the glass and steel desks which have a pull-out section for writing; and the carefully proportioned units concealing a minibar min·i·bar  
n.
A small refrigerator, as in a hotel room, stocked with liquor and nonalcoholic beverages. Also called servibar.

Noun 1.
 and safe. Such pieces are supplemented by brilliantly coloured Balleri chairs, the colour matching that of the blanket thrown over the pristine white bed.

After walking around this city you cannot but be aware of Czech tendencies, the love of surfaces and materials, the continual reworking of motifs and forms. Jiricna's architecture is wholly idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
, but all these things are present.

Architect

Eva Jiricna Architects, London

Project team

Eva Jiricna, Georgina Papathanasiou, Gabriel Alexander, in conjunction with A.I. Design, Prague/Petr Vagner

Lighting

Thorn Lighting

Glass bathrooms and tables

Cekov

Glass staircase, bar and reception

Pavel Ruzicka-Artefakt

Photographs

Ivan Nemec
COPYRIGHT 2003 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:4EXCZ
Date:May 1, 2003
Words:958
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