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Hotel-type Housing: The Updated Idea for Collective Housing in the 1960s

Publication at Faculty of Arts |
2014

Abstract

Collective housing has long been regarded as a failed and dead-end branch of architecture from the interwar period. In fact, ideas for more communal forms of living did not end in Czechoslovakia with the collective housing that was built after the Second World War in Zlín and Litvínov but continued in the late 1950s with the advent of 'hotel-type' residential buildings.

This kind of residential architecture was based on a Soviet model. Singles and couples were the intended tenants of hotel-type apartment buildings, in which space was provided for collective living (communal gathering rooms and clubrooms) and collective services (dining halls, laundry collection, and central cleaning services), whereby, for a fee, the tenants were freed from the usual domestic responsibilities.

Architects often designed these buildings for new housing projects as part of the local centre of a housing estate and as its most visually prominent structure. Architects had a relatively free hand in how they chose to design these structures and this gave rise to some interesting creations, though they were oftentimes in the course of their construction with the use of economising measures.

Some very interesting hotel-type buildings were built in Olomouc, Ostrava-Zábřeh, Ústí nad Labem, Teplice, Litvínov, Prague, and other towns in Czechoslovakia. This form of housing continued to be built until 1990.