Archive: Travel | Prague Prague

A visit to Skalka in Prague's Smíchov

10-07-2012 14:01 | Dominik Jůn

Photo: Lukyn.v, CC 3.0 license In this week's Spotlight, Dominik Jun visits Skalka in Prague's Smíchov district, and discovers baroque-era ruins, and forests and meadows galore... More

Jiří Vidím – Owner of a hotel with a history

25-06-2012 | Ian Willoughby

Unitas House Jiří Vidím, a former teacher, entered the hotel business almost at the very moment that communism fell in Czechoslovakia, and seized the opportunities that freedom brought. For two decades now he has been running Unitas House, a hotel in downtown Prague with a fascinating history. More

A bit of Paris in Prague – the Bohemian coffeehouse Café Montmartre

03-04-2012 15:24 | Sarah Borufka

Tucked away on Řetězová street in Prague’s Old Town, Café Montmartre is one of the city’s oldest coffeehouses. While it looks rather unassuming from the outside, the former cabaret has a fascinating history. Famous writers such as Franz Kafka and Egon Erwin Kisch are said to have spent many a wild night here, and Café Montmartre continues to draw artists, writers and actors. We spoke to its manager, Iva Nesvadbová, about the café’s history, its guests and its upcoming anniversary. More

Boating along the Vltava river in Prague

24-03-2012 02:01 | Rosie Johnston

Jaroslav Knapp, photo: Rosie Johnston Forget the Blue Danube, it’s the greeny-brown Vltava which is the watery muse of artists and musicians in this part of the world. The Vltava is the Czech Republic’s longest river, stretching more than 400 km. It is also the main waterway through the Czech capital Prague, and has been most famous in recent years for bursting its banks in 2002. The floods caused billions of crowns’ worth of damage to the capital alone, and put the city’s metro out of action for several months. More

Cycle path shows the hidden side of Žižkov

21-03-2012 16:52 | Christian Falvey

The rumbling railroad track that used to pass through Žižkov in Prague was completely natural to the gritty-but-chic image of the 19th century proletariat quarter. The main western entrance to Žižkov was arched by three foreboding railway bridges, and the noisy, spray-painted cars passed alongside Vítkov hill to the cargo station. Four years ago the trains were still rattling the plaster off that lower end of the neighbourhood, just as they had been since the late Industrial Revolution, and then the route was cancelled for a higher-capacity alternative. More

A Prague institution - the famous Café Slavia

07-03-2012 13:46 | Sarah Borufka

Prague’s wealth of traditional coffeehouses is a legacy from the era of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. But even in today’s hectic time, grabbing a quick cup on the run is fortunately not the only option for coffee lovers in the Czech capital. Probably the best-known café in the golden city is Kavárna Slavia, or Café Slavia. We recently visited this traditional coffeehouse. More

Prague’s “Rocket” TV Tower undergoes re-fuelling on 20th anniversary

22-02-2012 14:32 | Dominik Jůn

In this week's Spotlight, we visit Prague's infamous TV tower and find it in the middle of a major re-construction. More

The Cross Club – independent culture centre with a twist

15-02-2012 14:25 | Dominik Jůn

In this week’s Spotlight we take you to an independent culture centre decorated with an abstract array of industrial machine part artistry. More

The Mánes Exhibition Hall – an icon of functionalist architecture

08-02-2012 13:49 | Sarah Borufka

Photo: Petr Novák, CC 2.5 license The functionalist Mánes Exhibition Hall, located on the right bank of the Vltava river between the bridges Jiraskův most and Most Legií, is one of only two buildings in Prague that were expressly designed to house art – the other one being the famous Rudolfinum gallery. Martin Pavala, the chairman of the supervisory board of the Czech Art Foundation, which owns it, explains that the art gallery’s history started in 1930. More

Karlín – Prague’s first suburb

28-01-2012 | Christian Falvey

Karlín, photo: City Museum in Prague Prague’s leafy central suburb of Karlín may best be known outside of the Czech Republic for the devastating floods that laid ruin to it in 2002, but much of the world has been using the machines and products born of Karlín factories for more than a hundred years and aside from that it is also Prague’s oldest suburb – a point recalled by an exhibition being held this year at the City Museum in Prague that was created by historian Dr. Zdeněk Míka: More

Featured

Archive

August 2012

MoTuWeThFrSaSu
12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031

July 2012

MoTuWeThFrSaSu
1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031

June 2012

MoTuWeThFrSaSu
123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930

Complete archive

Latest programme in English