Exhibit Examines Legacy of Functionalist Architecture in Prague

Prague Functionalism: Tradition and Contemporary Echoes opens at New York's Center for Architecture on February 12.

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Prague may be famous for its Gothic and Baroque architecture, but the interwar period also gave rise to a new signature style. Functionalism, which emerged in the 1920s, was influenced by the Bauhaus and strove to strip away superfluous ornamentation in favor of simple, clean lines.

The EURO Palace office building, by DaM.

Prague Functionalism: Tradition and Contemporary Echoes, which was originally presented at the Jaroslav Fragner Gallery in Prague, opens at the Center for Architecture in New York City on February 12 and runs through May 23. It marks the U.S. premiere of the exhibition and the first time that the Center for Architecture has devoted a major exhibition to Eastern European design.

A block of flats next to the Bio Oko Cinema, Prague.

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Functionalism was effectively over by the time of the communist putsch in 1948, but a new generation of architects has revived the style, modifying and updating it through a series of new structures that have remade Prague’s urban landscape. Through photographs, drawings, and models, Prague Functionalism explores both the original movement and the bold, new buildings that it inspired.

The Kolbenova Metro station, Prague, designed by Chalupa Architekti and d u m architekti.

The Baba housing estate.

The Hotel Julis.

The reinforced-concrete Church of St. Wenceslas, completed in 1930.

The VK Slavia Praha Rowing Club.

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