Havlíček

Josef Havlíček

*5. 5. 1899Prague, Czech Republic
30. 12. 1961Prague, Czech Republic
Hlavní obrázek
Biography
Born on May 5, 1899, in Prague. Studied architecture at the Czech Technical University in Prague (until 1924) and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague under Prof. J. Gočár (until 1926), in whose studio he then worked until 1928. From 1928 to 1936, he designed and wrote alongside Karel Honzík, later collaborating mainly with K. Neumann. A member of Devětsil, the Left Front, SVU Mánes, and chairman of the editorial board of the magazine Architekt SIA. He closely collaborated with artists and designers and was a member of the Artěl cooperative. Since 1929, he has been active in CIAM (Congrés Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne), and from 1945 to 1947 was a member of the World Council of this international organization. In 1948, he became the first director of the Prague Stavoprojekt. He died on December 30, 1961, in Prague. In 1963, a comprehensive posthumous exhibition of his work was held in Prague.
Josef Havlíček was a member of the interwar artistic avant-garde striving for technical and social revolution. He was a typical constructivist, yet with a sense for sculptural artistic solutions in buildings. At the same time, he was active as a progressive painter, sculptor, and visual artist. As an architect, he designed urban concepts, public buildings, and residential groups, most of which were not realized due to their excessive generosity or extravagance. Nevertheless, the building of the General Pension Institute remains perhaps the most typical building of Czech functionalism.
eng.arch. Kamil Dvořák, DrSc.
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Realizations and projects

Works      
  • Rental Houses of the Officers' Cooperative, Prague-Dejvice, Kafková 23-29, no. 544-547; 1925-26
  • Chicago House, Národní Street, Prague, 1925-27 - with J. Polívka
  • Habich Department Store, Žitná no. 645, Prague, 1927-28 - with J. Polívka
  • Four-Story Residential Block, Křížkovského St. 20, Brno-Pisárky, 1928
  • Family House of Editor Jíša, U dívčích hradů 20, Prague-Smíchov, 1929 - with K. Honzík
  • School, Lipenec near Žatec - with K. Honzík
  • General Pension Institute, Prague-Žižkov, 1929-34 - with K. Honzík, a key work of Czech functionalism and the first high-rise building in Prague
  • Cooperative Residential Buildings, 5. května St. 37-41, Prague-Nusle, 1931-32 - with K. Honzík
  • Block of Residential Buildings Molochov, no. 845-862 in Letenská plain, Milady Horákové Ave., in Prague-Holešovice, 1936-38
  • Rental House, Letohradská St. 60, Prague-Holešovice, 1938-39
  • Residential Quarter Labská Kotlina, Hradec Králové, 1946-59 - with F. Bartoš and V. Klimeš
  • Housing Estate in Litvínov - with F. Pacholík
  • Housing Estate with Tower Buildings in Kladno-Rozdělov, 1952-58 - with K. Filsak

a series of unrealized studies, such as:
  • High-rise buildings for the reconstruction of the center of Prague, 1943-45 - a considerably insensitive solution
  • Buildings around the former Pension Institute in Prague, 1959
  • New development of the Prague Exhibition Grounds, 1959
  • Reconstruction of Prague-Holešovice, 1960

a series of unrealized competition projects, such as:
  • original design for the Nusle Bridge in Prague, 1927
  • crematorium in Havlíčkův Brod, 1946
  • Ministry of Post in Prague-Smíchov, 1946
  • UN Palace in New York, 1947
  • solution for the Pankrác Riverbank in Prague, 1954
  • town hall in Toronto, Canada, 1958
  • border pillars of Czechoslovakia, 1926 - with sculptor B. Stefan
  • memorial plaque for J. Štursa, Nové Město na Moravě, 1927 - with sculptor V. Žalud
  • memorial to architect B. Feuerstein, Loučeň, 1928
  • memorial to Josef Mánes, Alšovo Embankment in Prague, 1951 - sculptor B. Kafka

Publications
  • Buildings and Plans, 1931 and 1936 - with K. Honzík
  • On the Way to the New Žižkov, 1940 - with E. Hruška
  • Designs and Buildings, 1962
  • dozens of professional articles in journals such as Stavba, Styl, Stavitel, Musaion, Veraikon, Architekt SIA, Architektura ČSR, Čs. architekt, and others.
Literature
  • Josef Havlíček - overview of works 1925-61. Exhibition catalog, Mánes, Prague 1963