Municipal House details
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Address Republiky náměstí 5, Staré Město
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Phone
222 002 101
- Website
- Transport
underground rail: Náměstí Republiky
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Lonely Planet review
Prague's most exuberant and sensual building stands on the site of the Royal Court, seat of Bohemia's kings from 1383 to 1483 (when Vladislav II moved to Prague Castle), and demolished at the end of the 19th century. Between 1906 and 1912 the Municipal House was built in its place - a lavish joint effort by around 30 of the leading artists of the day, creating a cultural centre that was to be the architectural climax of the Czech National Revival.
Restored in the 1990s after decades of neglect during the communist era, the entire building was a labour of love, every detail of the design and decoration carefully considered, every painting and sculpture loaded with symbolism.
The mosaic above the entrance, Homage to Prague, is set between sculptures representing the oppression and rebirth of the Czech people; other sculptures ranged along the top of the façade represent history, literature, painting, music and architecture. You pass beneath a wrought-iron and stained-glass canopy into an interior that is Art Nouveau down to the doorknobs (you can look around the lobby and the downstairs bar for free). The restaurant and the kavárna (café) flanking the entrance are like walk-in museums of Art Nouveau design.
Upstairs are half a dozen over-the-top halls and assembly rooms which you can visit by guided tour. You can book tours at the building's information centre, which is through the main entrance, and around to the left of the stairs.
First stop on the tour is the Smetana Hall, Prague's biggest concert hall, with seating for 1200 ranged beneath an Art Nouveau glass dome. The stage is framed by sculptures representing the Vyšehrad legend (to the right) and Slavonic dances (to the left).
Following are several impressive official apartments, but the highlight of the tour is the octagonal Lord Mayor's Hall (Primatorský sál), whose windows overlook the main entrance. Every aspect of its decoration was designed by Alfons Mucha, who also painted the superbly moody murals that adorn the walls and ceiling. Above you is an allegory of Slavic Concord, with intertwined figures representing the various Slavic peoples watched over by the Czech eagle. Figures from Czech history and mythology, representing the civic virtues, occupy the spaces between the eight arches, including Jan Hus as Spravedlnost (justice), Jan Žižka as Bojovnost (militancy), and the Chodové (medieval Bohemian border guards) as beady-eyed Ostražitost (vigilance).
On 28 October 1918 an independent Czechoslovak Republic was declared in the Smetana Hall, and in November 1989 meetings took place between Civic Forum and the Jakeš regime. The Prague Spring (Pražské jaro) music festival always opens on 12 May, the anniversary of Smetana's death, with a procession from Vyšehrad to the Municipal House, followed by a gala performance of his symphonic cycle Má Vlast (My Country) in the Smetana Hall.
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