The Brno municipal architecture office attempted to address the pressing lack of housing after World War I by seeking ways to build comfortable houses at a minimum cost in the early 1920s. Several architects dealt with this issue at the same time, including Jindřich Kumpošt, Jaroslav Grunt and Bohuslav Fuchs. Six small terraced houses covered by a shared hipped roof designed by Fuchs were built in Barvičova Street in 1923. This solution enabled not only the cost effectiveness of the construction work, but also reduced the costs of the maintenance of the houses, as their proximity produced better thermal insulation. The interior of these two-level buildings is highly practical and contains three residential rooms. Although the design of these houses emphasized cost effectiveness, the architect did not neglect their esthetic effect, which is achieved mainly in the relief two-color design of the facade, where both the relief and color stress the empty area over the entrance. However, the original two-color facades are, due to later reconstruction, only a memory.
Terraced houses
Name
Terraced houses
Architect
Bohuslav Fuchs
Code
C007
Type
Villa, family house
Adresa
Barvičova 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 14 / 4–14,
Brno
Public transport
Žlutý kopec (TROL 35, 38, 39)
Vaňkovo náměstí (TROL 35, 38, 39 / BUS 68)
GPS
49.195234,16.584208
Literature
Rostislav Švácha. Bohuslav Fuchs. Domov. 1985. 6. s. 4–7.
Zdeněk Kudělka. Bohuslav Fuchs a Brno. Architektura ČSSR. 1965. XXIV. s. 250–257.
Zdeněk Kudělka. Počátky architektonické tvorby Bohuslava Fuchse. Sborník prací filosofické fakulty brněnské univerzity F 8. 1964.