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František Lydie Gahura (10 October 1891 in Zlín – 15 September 1958 in Brno) was a Czechoslovak architect and sculptor.
Career
editGahura became famous for his collaboration on the architectural and urban design of the Czech city of Zlín. He worked for the Bata Shoes organization in the 1920s and 1930s. Gahura was one of a number of Czech architects to design the "Bata houses" and Bata shoe factory at East Tilbury, Essex, England. The most impressive architectural work of František Lydie Gahura is Tomas Bata Memorial. The building process started in 1932 and the monument was open with ceremony on the day of the first anniversary of Tomáš Baťa death that is on 12 July 1933. It is the most valuable building of the Zlín functionalism.[1][2][3]
Works
edit- City Hall, Zlín (1923)
- Baťa Hospital, Zlín (1926-1930)
- Church of Saint Anthony of Padua, Míškovice (1922–1927)
- Chapel of Saint Wenceslaus, Kudlov (1927)
- J. A. Baťa Villa, Zlín (1927)
- Masaryk Schools, Zlín (1927-1928)
- Baťa Service House, Prague (1928-1929)
- Forest cemetery, Zlín (1931)
- Department store, Zlín (1931)
- Grand Cinema, Zlín (1931)
- Tomas Bata Memorial, Zlín (1933)
Gallery
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Baťa Hospital, Zlín
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Church of Saint Anthony of Padua, Míškovice
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Chapel of Saint Wenceslaus, Kudlov
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J. A. Baťa Villa, Zlín
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Grand Cinema, Zlín
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Forest cemetery, Zlín
References
edit- ^ Rose, Steve (2006-06-19). "Steve Rose: on East Tilbury the most Modern town in Britain". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
- ^ Burrows, Tim (2016-09-08). "The town that Bata built: a modernist marvel on the marshes of Essex". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
- ^ "Homepage". The Memorial reconstruction. Retrieved 2019-09-25.