Werkbund Baba estate You're out coordinates houses architects model 3D contacts This third design of the medium-sized house in Baba, a villa for a section head at the Ministry of Education, Dr. Hugo Zaorálek, marked the peak of Ladislav Žák’s efforts to design a prototype of a house as an independent living unit of a collective house. The concept also included an area to provide care for the body and soul – the upstairs bathroom was fitted with gym equipment and directly connected to the sundeck. The direct connection of the large ground-floor living room with the garden was a very functionalist and unusual element, even compared to the other Baba houses. Ladislav Žák (*1900 Prague +1973 Prague) An architect, painter, interior and furniture designer, theoretician, and teacher; a student of Josef Gočár at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts. During his stay in France, Germany, and the Netherlands, he was interested in functionalist buildings, Bauhaus architecture, and Dutch rationalism. Three exceptional houses in Baba (Zaorálek, Herain, and Čeněk) marked the culmination of his functionalist work in which he applied the functionalist principles: a free floor plan, large rooms connected to outdoor sundecks, bright façades, and strip windows. His work also shows characteristics of the nautical (cabin-like) style: rounded shapes of buildings and windows. For example, he put a captain’s bridge on the roof of the Herain villa. Even his interiors and furniture displayed functionalist and purist characteristics. Following a falling-out with the builders, he focused on landscape architecture and urban planning, which he summarised in the publication Obytná krajina (1947). Under the socialist regime, he remained a lecturer at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts thanks to the architect Frágner. 1919-1924 studied painting with Professor Karel Krattner at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague 1924-1927 studied architecture with Professor Josef Gočár at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague 1927-1930 taught drawing at the technical schools in Brno and Pilsen 1927-1948 independent architect in Prague 1945-1973 associate professor of Garden and Landscape Architecture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague Significant Works 1932 houses of Ludmila and Karel Herain, Bohumil Čeněk and Hugo Zaorálek, Baba, Prague-Dejvice 1932-33 Dr. Ing. Miroslav Hain’s villa, Prague-Vysočany 1934-35 villa of the film director Martin Frič, Prague-Hodkovičky reconstruction of his own residential building with small apartments, Prague-Letná 1936-37 villa of the actress Lída Baarová, Prague-Dejvice 1946 memorial to the victims of WWII, Ležáky Na Ostrohu 54, No. 1708 Dr. Hugo Zaorálek’s House Architect: Ladislav Žák Builder: The MOK Company with Jiří Palička as construction manager the Zaorálek House now, 2020 the Zaorálek House, original state (south façade facing the street) Owner Dr. Hugo Zaorálek Dr. Zaorálek’s family emigrated to Munich after the Soviet army entered the country in 1968. The villa then found a new owner, the erstwhile Deputy Prime Minister Bohumil Šimon. He interfered greatly with the construction of the house; for example, he bricked up all of the terraces, thus devaluing the exceptional villa.