The object stands on a gap site on Okružní street leading to the castle. The position closely lines the boundary of the municipal heritage zone.
The architectural design was created based on previously developed project documentation. The investors suspended the design work and sought an architect to help them adjust the project in terms of layout and aesthetics while preserving the already proposed volume and construction system.
The intention of the design was to create a striking building that would blend into the urban structure and become a part of it.
Jevíčko is distinguished by its beautiful interwar architecture, from which the design drew some features and built upon a modest building tradition. The floors are finished with cornices, and the window frames are sharply cut. The street façade features openings for gates, windows, and two entrance doors unified by a wooden surface. The façade is finished with a fine lime plaster. The color of the façade, windows, and metal cladding is uniform, gray-blue. Sunlight then highlights the plasticity of the mass and transforms it throughout the day through a play of shadows and lights. The roof is covered with a fine, natural beaver tail tile in a crown covering.
Zavoral Architect
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