Museum of the High-Rises Diary

The six buildings designed by Josef Havlíček in Kladno, photo from Vysehradskej.cz

In Kladno, not far from Prague, I visited the Museum of the High-Rises, located in one of the tall buildings designed by Czech functionalist architect Josef Havlíček during the 1950s. The tour consisted of the minimalist lobby and mailboxes, a small museum room, an atomic shelter, roof terraces and a flat that was considered to be luxurious during the 1950s, housing for high-ranking Communist families.

House sign by Marta Jirásková-Havlíčková

In the Rozdělov neighborhood, the high-rise’s exterior was decorated with two ceramic house signs, one of a cat and the other of a dog, showing circular blue backgrounds with the animals in white. I learned that they had been created by Havlíček’s wife, a sculptor named Marta Jirásková Havlíčková, who originally had made 12 of them for the six buildings in the complex. Other ceramic house sings had featured a hawk, an owl, a rooster, a turkey, sheep and a ram. In the small museum space I saw more of Jirásková-Havlíčková’s work, including a statue of a dignified-looking white cat. She certainly had been talented. Models of some of Havlíček’s designs were also in the space.

I also noticed that the façade consisted of ceramic materials. The use of intriguing materials was a reason that this one-time complex had caught international attention. The French especially were interested in the structures, as Havlíček had been inspired by the architecture of neoclassicist French guru August Perret, who was known for utilizing reinforced concrete in fascinating ways without eliminating the harmony of the design. Perhaps Perret is most renowned for the rebuilding of the port town Le Havre after World War II. His reconstruction helped make Le Havre into a World Heritage Site. Another of his most prominent designs involved the first Art Deco edifice in Paris, the Theatre des Champs-Élysées. 

You can see the various house signs behind the sculpture of the cat.

Who was Josef Havlíček? That question was answered in the small museum under the ground floor. Havlíček lived from 1899 to 1961, when he died from exhaustion. As a prominent architect, he was a member of Devětsil, Artěl and SVÚ Mánes, the most influential artistic groups of the time. His mentor at school during the Czechoslovak First Republic of the 1920s was Czech architect Josef Gočár, who designed many important Cubist works in Prague, Hradec Králové and other places. Gočár took Havlíček under his wing and employed him in his studio until 1928.

Josef Havlíček, photo from Muzeum věžáků Kladno webpages.

While Havlíček was given the title of director of the architectural Stavoproject in 1948, he left two years later due to frustration with totalitarian politics. For a while his plans were not realized due to his political stance, but later he used Stalinist social realism architecture that pleased the authorities, even though his style combined creativity while fulfilling the ideology of the times.

Havlíček’s building constructed in Žižkov

Some of his other accomplishments included a building in Prague’s Žižkov, built from 1932 to 1934 with the help of Karel Honzík and dubbed “the first Prague skyscraper.” He also designed the residential development Labská Kotlina in Hradec Králové from 1946 to 1959 and residential buildings in Ostrava. He presented designs for a United Nations building in New York City and a town hall in Toronto, though they were not carried out.

Some models of Havlíček’s creations were on display in the museum.

In the museum space that presented a large timeline and much information about the life and career of Josef Havlíček, we stood around a detailed model of the Rozdělov high-rises in Kladno as they had been planned. In 1946 Havlíček had intended for the project to appear differently – with six buildings of 10 floors each in a Y pattern, flaunting a functionalist style. Due to the political changes in the country during and after 1948, these designs never came to fruition.

From the roof terrace looking down on another of Havlíček’s designs

During the late forties and fifties Kladno was in dire need of more housing. The city had become much more industrialized after the Communist coup of 1948. For example, Kladno was the prominent home of the Poldi steelworks. Construction of new buildings was necessary to accommodate the new workers who were toiling in the black coal industry.

View from the roof terrace

In 1951 Havlíček redid his conception of the suburb, pressured to conform to social realist architectural regulations. He received permission that year. He came up with something that was accepted by the authorities but was also modern and authentic. From 1952 to 1958, Havlíček worked on the design along with Karel Filsák and Karel Bubeníček. Construction began on the project with the first and second buildings. Tenants moved into the first building at the end of 1956 and into the sixth building at the end of the following year.

You can see some of the suburb’s high-rises from the roof terrace.

The six buildings that formed the letter T were inaugurated as the Victorious February suburb to commemorate the February Communist coup of 1948. The building we were in had 13 floors, not including the ground floor and upper ground floor. Each floor consisted of six apartments, two much bigger than the others. The more luxurious flats of that era had balconies.

Another view from the roof terrace

The project was planned to be much more elaborate than the 48-meter high residential buildings. Havlíček and his colleagues envisioned the suburb to flourish with cultural and shopping centers. It was slated to become a major hub for cultural activities, such as theatre, and to have much needed impressive stores. While the shopping center plans were carried out, the theatre was never built. Financial problems and other barriers did not allow the designs to be fully developed. From the model it was possible to see how Havlíček had proposed that the suburb become a leading place for activities as well as original housing made from inventive materials.

We went down to the second basement floor, the atomic shelter. I saw many gas masks and rows of hard, wooden benches in several spaces. It would certainly be depressing and frightening to be trapped down there for any reason let alone a nuclear war. Many buildings were constructed with atomic shelters during the 1950s in Czechoslovakia.

Then we visited the roof with impressive terrace, which was a prominent component of the project in its day. Even though now ugly high-rises surrounded the building, during a clear day it was possible to see the historic Říp Hill and the mountains of central Bohemia, even some of the mountains at the German border.

The living room of the flat

Then we went into a 55 meters squared flat preserved with 1950s furnishings and equipment, looking as it had during its construction as a luxury home for high-ranking Communist families. The living room had a couch and table on which were a cake and mugs. I noticed one cup was adorned with a red Communist star and the other sported a Communist symbol. On the table there was also an open pack of cigarettes and an ashtray filled with cigarette butts. A lace tablecloth covered part of the table. A large radio and a black-and-white TV with three buttons under the screen also stood out in the room. Social realist-styled statuettes decorated cabinets.The bedroom was dominated by a big double bed. On each nightstand was a framed photo. A large mirror adorned the wall above the bed.

The bedroom

The kitchen included a gas stove, a counter and pantry with shelves for storing food as well as cabinets. Although it looked small to me, at that time this type of kitchen had been luxurious, only available to the most prominent families. The flat featured a big balcony, too, something that not many apartments in the building had.

Now the museum, which opened in 2020, is a cultural monument to an innovative style designed during Stalinist times. This was Havlíček’s last big project to be carried out as he died of exhaustion in 1961, exasperated by his discomfort with the country’s Communist ideology of which he had been a critic. It had taken a toll on his physical and mental state.

The kitchen

This is the first Czech museum showing off suburban Czech architecture. The museum was something totally different than the kind I usually visited. I had never been to a museum focusing on a suburb of a city. I had thought of the suburbs of Kladno as eyesores with socialist high-rises that scarred the landscape. This one was different. During the period of its construction, the architecture had forged a new path in suburban appearances. It was a pity that only two of the buildings survive today and that fate had intervened and prevented the project from being completed.

The gas stove in the kitchen

I took all the necessities such as the stove and kitchen space for granted. I thought the flat seemed relatively small. At one time, though, a flat this size had been a luxury. I could see the accomplishments in modern architecture as I viewed all the spaces through a 1950s lens. I could better appreciate the modernity of the present by immersing myself into the past.

The simple chandelier in the living room

Tracy A. Burns is a writer, proofreader and editor in Prague.

The Jára Cimrman Theatre Diary

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Bust of Jára Cimrman, from Museum of Jára Cimrman, north Bohemia

My way of dealing with stress and keeping my blood pressure textbook perfect is going to hilarious plays performed by the Jára Cimrman Theatre in the gritty, down-to-earth Žižkov district of Prague. For me it is a sort of home, a cozy theatre with a little more than 200 seats on a steep, cobblestoned street. I go as often as I can get tickets, usually between once and four times a month.

The plays have helped me cope with life’s trials and tribulations. On November 9, 2016 I was in shock and despair because Donald Trump had just been elected president of the USA. I just happened to have a ticket to the Czech version of The Conquest of the North Pole (It is performed by different actors in English, too.)

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The Conquest of the North Pole, Dobytí severního Polu

One of my two favorite plays, The Conquest of the North Pole  focuses on an expedition to the North Pole, led by Czech Karel Němec (then played by the late Bořivoj Penc), whose common Czech surname translates as “a German.”  The play takes place during the days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, when Germanization was enforced throughout the lands. At one point, when they think they are out of food, the Czechs even consider eating one of their fellow travelers. Although the Czechs are the first to conquer the North Pole –one day before the Americans -, the feat goes unrecorded because the Czechs do not want hated Austria-Hungary to get credit for their accomplishment.

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Blaník

That performance saved me from falling into a deep depression. I watched the Czech expedition overcome a bout of pessimism and other obstacles to go on to conquer the North Pole, and I thought that I, too, could get through four years of Trump’s presidency. I thought I could keep my sanity as I watched the events in the USA unfold from Europe. That play provided me with an outlook that wouldn’t allow me capitulate to negative thoughts. At the theatre that evening, instead of crying over Trump’s victory, I laughed. I laughed and laughed and laughed.

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Pub in the Glade, Hospoda Na mýtince

Significant contributors to Czech culture and Czech national identity, the 15 plays performed by the all-male Jára Cimrman (pronounced Tsimmerman) Theatre ensemble feature an unlucky fictional Czech character living in the Austrian part of the oppressive Habsburg-controlled Austro-Hungarian Empire in which German was the official language. (Several plays do not take place during the monarchy’s rule. For instance, The Act is set in the 1960s.) The ensemble, which even includes two octogenarians, celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in October of 2016, and all performances from its inception have been sold out. Many spectators know the plays by heart. Most actors have been with the theatre for decades. In Murder in the Parlor Car, two father-and-son acting teams (one for each cast) performed until one of the fathers (the talented Václav Kotek) died in 2019.

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The Plum Tree, Svěstka

Humor is how the Czechs have come to terms with a past punctuated by oppression. Czechs found themselves living in the Nazi Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia during World War II and later in Communist Czechoslovakia for more than 40 years, before the Velvet Revolution of 1989 brought democracy to the nation. The plays were written by co-founders of the theatre Zdeněk Svěrák (who is perhaps best known for his 1996 Oscar-winning performance in Kolya) and the late Ladislav Smoljak, who made a name for himself as an actor and director in both theatre and film.

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The Long, Short and Sharp-sighted, Dlouhý, krátký a bystrozraký

The productions are divided into two parts. The first hour is a seminar in which the actors, as themselves, discuss various aspects of Cimrman’s fictional life and work. After the intermission, the ensemble performs the play itself.

Chosen the greatest Czech in a survey conducted during 2005 (though disqualified because he isn’t a real person), Jára Cimrman was a Czech nationalist who was adamantly anti-Habsburg. An inventor who came too late to the patent office with his creations, Cimrman is presented as an unlucky outsider whose feats go unrecognized until 1966, when Svěrák and his cousin discover Cimrman’s posthumous papers and bust at Liptákov 12, a cottage in a hamlet nestled in the Jizera valley.

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The Stand-In, Záskok

Born to an Austrian actress and a Czech tailor, Cimrman was much more than an inventor. He was a prolific writer of plays, operas, fairy tales and novels as well as poetry and amassed the largest collection of stories in the world. He was also an avid traveler who visited six continents, including the North Pole. The man whose parents forced him to dress as a girl for the first 15 years of his life was also a philosopher, teacher, filmmaker, psychologist, builder, self-taught gynecologist and physicist, among numerous other professions. He did time, incarcerated for two months because he told a joke about the emperor. While in prison, Cimrman formed a choir and orchestra with the inmates and organized contests in Morse Code. At another time, he worked as a travelling dentist, lugging with him a foot-operated drill on wheels and a dentist’s trolley.

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Czech Heaven, České nebe

Perhaps what makes this theatre unique is the sense of mystery that pervades Cimrman’s identity. The only photos of Cimrman are group shots taken too far away to make out his features. Cimrman’s bust is so damaged that it is only possible to decipher two eye sockets, two ear holes and two chins. No one even knows when exactly he was born or when he died.

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Cimrman in the Paradise of Music, Cimrman v říši hudby

In Cimrman in the Kingdom of Music, another of my favorites, the actors discuss how Cimrman entered a contest for best operetta with his seven-hour, 96-scene creation but, because he did not send it registered mail, famous composers stole his ideas. In that same play, the group performs Cimrman’s operetta The Success of a Czech Engineer in India. The plot revolves around a Czech engineer (Miloň Čepelka or Petr Reidinger) tinkering with a broken machine that is supposed to make sugar. He fixes the apparatus so that it makes Czech beer. At the end, a British Colonel (Svěrák) sings that he wishes he had been born Czech. A small orchestra plays superbly during this play, and Čepelka’s singing is a true delight.

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The Act by Cimrman English Theatre

For the last five seasons, the character of Jára Cimrman has been introduced to English speakers. The popular Cimrman English Theatre performs four of the plays – The Stand-In, The Conquest of the North Pole, Pub in a Glade and The Act – in English at the same theatre. These plays are perfect for theatregoers who don’t speak Czech but want to experience Czech culture and understand Czech history. The translations are top-notch. The acting and singing by the professional ensemble are amazing.

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The Act, Akt, Czech production

In a world that often seems overwhelming, I keep my sanity and balance in life by going to the Žižkov Jára Cimrman Theatre on 5 Štítného Street, where I can always count on humor to give me a fresh perspective on my problems and the world’s troubles.

Tracy A. Burns is a writer and proofreader in Prague.

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Blaník, from Museum of Jára Cimrman

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Conquest of the North Pole, from Museum of Jára Cimrman

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Africa, from Museum of Jára Cimrman

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Names of Important Czech Historical Figures with Cimrman also listed, from Museum of Jára Cimrman

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Museum of Jára Cimrman, north Bohemia

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View from Museum of Jára Cimrman, north Bohemia

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View from Museum of Jára Cimrman, north Bohemia