Current Affairs Refurbished Bohemian National Hall in New York reopens after two decades
After years of discussion, planning and extensive renovation work, New York’s Bohemian National Hall finally reopened on Thursday evening in a lavish gala event. The imposing five-storey building on Manhattan’s Upper East Side first opened in 1896, but closed in 1986, and was left unused for many years. Now it’s ready once again to serve as the centre of Czech cultural and social life in the Big Apple. Radio Prague’s director Miroslav Krupička was at the opening.
Bohemian National Hall, photo: CTK
It was a fairly festive night really – the building was illuminated
and there was a ribbon-cutting ceremony. There were a number of journalists
from the Czech Republic, the ribbon was cut by the Czech deputy prime
minister Jiří Čunek, there was a dance show and a musical performance by
the Czech artist Iva Bittová. Of course all the guests were shown around
the building and finally there was a big reception. So it was a fairly big
event.”
The building looks pretty impressive in the photographs – can you describe it?
Ája Vrzáňová and Jiří Čunek, photo: CTK
“Yes, it’s really very well restored. There are a number of facilities
in the building. You may have seen the picture of the cinema which is on
the ground floor. There’s also supposed to be a restaurant on the ground
floor – that’s being restored at the moment but we’re told it will be
ready soon. Then there are some very modern offices on the first floor,
which house the Czech consulate and Czech Centre. Then there’s a large
exhibition on the second floor, which is currently showing an exhibition
about the victims of communism in Czechoslovakia. And then there’s the
ballroom, which is the largest room in the building, and this is where many
cultural events will take place.”
So the Bohemian National Hall is designed as a centre of Czech social and cultural life in one of the world’s most vibrant cities.
“Yes, exactly, and that’s what most guests mentioned in their
speeches, that the Bohemian National Hall should become what it once was,
what it used to be in the late 19th century and throughout most of the 20th
century – to be a centre of Czechoslovak life, a meeting place for the
Czech and Czechoslovak expatriate community, for various institutions. So
all this combined together – a Czech place, a Czech centre, for New York
and a part of America.”








