fbpx
Wikipedia

Ještěd Tower

Ještěd Tower (Czech: Hotel a televizní vysílač na Ještědu) is a television transmitter on top of Mount Ještěd near Liberec in the Czech Republic. Measuring 94 m (308 ft), it is made of reinforced concrete shaped in a "hyperboloid" form. The tower was designed by architect Karel Hubáček,[1] who was assisted by Zdeněk Patrman, involved in building statics, and by Otakar Binar, who designed the interior furnishing. It took the team three years to finalize the structure design (1963–1966). The construction itself took seven years to finish (1966–1973).[2]

Hotel and transmitter in one
Ještěd mountain with the tower
Ještěd model on display in the National Technical Museum in Prague
Restaurant ramp

The hyperboloid shape was chosen since it naturally extends the silhouette of the hill and, moreover, resists the extreme climate conditions on the summit of Mount Ještěd. The design combines the operation of a mountaintop hotel and a television transmitter. The hotel and restaurant are located in the lowest sections of the tower. Before construction of the hotel, two huts stood near the mountain summit: one was built in the middle of the 19th century, and the other was added in the early 20th century. Both buildings had a wooden structure, and both burned to the ground in the 1960s.

The tower is one of the dominant features of the North Bohemian landscape. The gallery on the ground floor and the restaurant on the first offers views as far as Poland and Germany. The tower has been on the list of Czech cultural monuments since 1998, becoming a national cultural monument in 2006. In 2007, it was entered on the Tentative List of UNESCO World Heritage sites.[2] In 1969, Karel Hubáček was awarded the Perret Prize of the International Union of Architects (UIA).[2]

Access edit

The monument is accessible by road and by the Ještěd cable car from the foot of the mountain.[3] However since a crash in 2021, the system has been closed indefinitely.[4]

Construction edit

After the existing Ještěd lodge burned down in January 1963, a decision was made by Restaurace Liberec (the company that used to manage the burned-down lodges) and the Prague Radio Communications Administration to build a new complex on the summit of Mount Ještěd, which would accommodate a mountain hotel including a restaurant and at the same time would serve as a TV signal transmitter. An architectural competition for the building design was announced. It took place in February 1963 on the Liberec Stavoprojekt premises.[5] Eleven architects/teams took part in the competition, including individual architects Otakar Binar, Jiří Svoboda, Pavel Švancer, Ota Nykodým, Karel Hubáček, Jaromír Syrovátko, Miroslav Ulmann, Jaromír Vacek and teams Josef Patrný - Jiří Hubka - V. Netolička, Miloš Technik and Svatopluk Technik.[6] Hubáček's design was the only one complying with both the requirements.[6] All the designs were put on public display in the Liberec branch of Československá spořitelna. The jury (aka the council of Liberec district national committee) on its 22 April 1963 meeting chose Hubáček's proposal as the winner.[6]

The building design created some technical problems for Hubáček and his team due to the climate conditions at the summit of Mount Ještěd.[7] Experts from the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, the Czech Technical University in Prague and the Liberec Institute of Textile and Mechanical Engineering helped to overcome the technical difficulties. The technological equipment and procedures that were put together were protected by the Czechoslovak patents.[7] Some elements (such as the laminated cladding, the special pendulum or the transverse tuned mass damper) introduced by Zdeněk Patrman in collaboration with the academy experts have since been included in other structures (e.g. the Cukrák transmitter tower).[7]

The ceremonial laying of the foundation stone took place on 30 July 1966.[7] The general contractor was Pozemní stavby from Liberec.[6] On 1 May 1971 the transmitter began its operation. However, the hotel interiors and the restaurant were completed two years later. On 9 July 1973, the Ještěd Tower grand opening took place.[7] The total construction was 64 million Czechoslovak crowns (in 1973).[6]

Description edit

Structure edit

The tower foundation consists of a circular reinforced concrete slab with a thickness of 1 metre and a diameter of 13.40 metres.[8] The foundation is laid in the altitude of 1004.75 metres.[9][10] The load-bearing element of the structure consists of two concentric reinforced concrete cylinders with inner diameters of 4.4 and 12.5 metres (and wall thickness of 30 centimetres each);[10][11] the narrower is 42.4 metres high, the wider (external) is 22.5 metres high.[12] Individual floors are suspended on these columns on steel structures, starting with the second floor.[5] The columns were constructed by Průmstav Pardubice.[12] The supporting steel structures for the floors and for the tower structure were manufactured in the Mostárna plant in the then state-owned company Vítkovice Iron Works of Klement Gottwald. A steel shell with a length of 44 metres of a variable diameter (from 10.50 m to 1.62 m) is attached to the inner column.[10] The laminate support cylinder (diameter of 1.90 m and a wall thickness of 16 to 12 mm) attached to it originally had a length of 17.52 m which was extended another 3 metres during the 1997 reconstruction.[10][13]

 
Restaurant interior

Floors edit

In the basement of the building, there are engine rooms and warehouses. The first floor is shared by the administrative offices and the television transmission hall that is connected to the antenna systems on the ninth floor by means of an elevator and an emergency staircase built inside the central tube. The rest of the first floor is occupied by the restaurant kitchen. On the second floor there is an observation terrace, a buffet and the main entrance hall with the reception desk. The hall is dominated by a suspended staircase leading to an observation restaurant on third floor.[5]

On the fourth and fifth floor there are hotel rooms. On the fourth floor there are 12 double rooms and one apartment. Rooms on the fifth floor were originally used as flats for the hotel and transmitter employees but were later converted to hotel apartments. The sixth and seventh floors house the transmitting technology. There is a specially developed laminated cladding in the shape of a revolving hyperboloid[2] shielding against extreme weather conditions. On the eighth and ninth floors the architect placed drinking water tanks and a backup battery power supply. There is an elevator engine room on the tenth floor.[5] Above it a special pendulum is installed, movement of which absorb cross vibrations caused by the wind.[2]

 
Jiří Jiroutek Phenomenon Ještěd 01

Exterior edit

At the third to the fifth floor levels (i.e. the restaurant and hotel floors) the outer shell takes on the shape of a conical rotating surface. It consists of 64 conically placed panels. The panel surface is made of anodized aluminium sheets. At the restaurant level, these panels are glazed over the entire width and complemented by a low window sill, while at the hotel level there are smaller windows with rounded corners.[5]

Parabolic antennas of microwave transmitters are located on the seventh and eighth floors. The building cover is made of trapezoid-shaped laminated panels, which are not joined by any metal elements, as these would prevent the passage of electromagnetic waves. The upper side of the elevator machine room on the tenth floor is fitted with a welded steel tube, which forms a 48 meter high antenna mast. Its surface is covered with metallized aluminum and a spiral staircase leads up inside the tube. At the top of the mast there is a self-supporting laminate extension of 18 meters attached. During the 1997 transmitter reconstruction it was extended by another 3 meters. The extension is there to protect the TV broadcast antennas against the elements. On top of the extension there is a steel lid, on which an annular pendulum weighing 800 kg is suspended by means of dampers.[5]

 
Glass emblems mounted on the concrete transmitter shaft

Interior design edit

The interior design including its furniture comes from Otakar Binar. Cookware and some textile accessories were based on Karl Wünsch designs. Glass makers Stanislav Libenský and his partner Jaroslava Brychtová also participated in the interior furnishing. They originally planned inserting a tall glass pendulum in the publicly accessible space. The pendulum would consist of two lenses representing the eternal movement. Instead, they decided to drill eight glass emblems into the concrete transmitter shaft. According to the artists, the shaft and its modification suggested the tower was growing up from the rock. On the other hand, for Karel Hubáček the glass emblems embodied fallen meteorites. The author of the trellis located in the hotel corridor is Jaroslav Klápště. The staircase walls and the hotel corridors are lined with ceramic tiles designed by Děvana Mírová. The entrance doors and the hotel reception walls are covered with wrought sheets by Miloš Koška, the tapestry hanging on the lounge wall was created by Vladimír Křečan.[5]

Transmitter edit

On 1 May 1971, the transmitter (equipped with Tesla III-Zona)[14] began broadcasting television signal[5] from the new tower. In September 1973, broadcasting of the second Czechoslovak Television program was added.

After the Velvet Revolution, the transmitter (using a Tesla equipment) was spreading signals of Czech Television (ČT1 and ČT2), Nova and Prima and Czech Radio (Radiožurnál, Praha (today Dvojka) and Vltava) and of private operators (Radio Proglas, Radio Contact Liberec and Europe 2).

In connection with the broadcasting digitization in the Czech Republic, in June 2009 the antenna systems in the laminate extension were updated.[14]

In addition to radio and television broadcasting, Jested is also an important node for radio relay and optical links.[14] Mobile operators T-Mobile, O2, Vodafone and Nordic Telecom have base stations (BTS) here.[15]

Awards and accolades edit

In 1964, the Association of Architects of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic awarded the Ještěd Tower design on its annual Architectural Works 1962–63 exhibit. In spring of 1969, at a time when the building had not yet been completed, Karel Hubáček was awarded the Auguste Perret Prize for the creative use of technology in architecture by the International Union of Architects. It is the most significant award ever achieved by a Czech architect.[7] In 2000, the building was awarded the title “The Most Important Czech Building of the 20th Century”[16] In September 2005, in the iDNES.cz "Seven Wonders of the Czech Republic" readers survey the tower ranked as second being defeated by the Dlouhé stráně Hydro Power Plant.[17]

On 26 March 1998, the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic registered the building as an immovable cultural monument.[18] In January 2006, the building was declared a national cultural monument.[19] On 29 May 2007, it was added to the Indicative List of Cultural Property of the Czech Republic, of which buildings are nominated for inclusion in the UNESCO World Heritage List.[7]

Impact edit

The tower is the main symbol of the city of Liberec. Its silhouette appears on the region flag and the coat-of-arms, on the local university's logo and on the logo of the local first-league football club FC Slovan Liberec.

The building is featured in the Czech movie Grandhotel based on the eponymous book by Jaroslav Rudiš.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Czech architect Hubacek, author of famous Jested hotel, dies". Czech News Agency. ČeskéNoviny.cz. 25 November 2011. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Mountain-top Hotel and Television Transmitter Ještěd". whc.unesco.org. UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  3. ^ "Ještěd – TV transmitter". Liberec Region. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  4. ^ "The cableway". Hotel Ještěd. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Sial. Švácha, Rostislav., Beran, Lukáš, 1978-, Muzeum umění Olomouc., SIAL architekti a inženýři (Firm) (Vyd. 1 ed.). Olomouc: Arbor vitae. 2010. ISBN 9788087164419. OCLC 677863682.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ a b c d e Fenomén Ještěd = Phenomenon Ještěd = Phänomen Ještěd. Jiroutek, Jiří, 1967- (Vyd. 1 ed.). Liberec: J. Jiroutek. 2005. p. 9. ISBN 8023951750. OCLC 85155680.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Sial. Švácha, Rostislav., Beran, Lukáš, 1978-, Muzeum umění Olomouc., SIAL architekti a inženýři (Firm) (1st ed.). Olomouc: Arbor vitae. 2010. pp. 50–61. ISBN 9788087164419. OCLC 677863682.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. ^ "Ještěd - An Inventory of the Qualities of Post-War Architecture" (PDF).
  9. ^ "Era21". Era21. 2005. ISSN 1801-089X. OCLC 1050035976.
  10. ^ a b c d Česká komora autorizovaných inženýrů a techniků činných ve výstavbě; Český svaz stavebních inženýrů; Svaz podnikatelů ve stavebnictví v ČR (2006). Časopis stavebnictví: časopis stavebních inžernýrů, techniků a podnikatelů (in Czech). Brno: EXPO DATA. OCLC 320683918.
  11. ^ Ještěd : evidence hodnot poválečné architektury = an inventory of the qualities of post-war architecture. Vorlík, Petr, 1973-, Fragner, Benjamin, 1945-, Beran, Lukáš, 1978-. Praha: Výzkumné centrum průmyslového dědictví a Fakulta architektury ČVUT v Praze ve spolupráci s Národním památkovým ústavem. 2010. ISBN 9788001044759. OCLC 607527802.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  12. ^ a b Art & antiques: váš průvodce světem umění (in Czech). Prague: Feive. 2002. OCLC 320415723.
  13. ^ "Aoc architects - Renovation of a hotel/transmitter Ještěd". aoc.archi. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  14. ^ a b c Podhorský, Marek. (2009). Vysílací věže (1. vyd ed.). Praha: Freytag & Berndt. pp. 58–63. ISBN 9788086236216. OCLC 670478495.
  15. ^ "GSMweb.cz - hledání BTS". www.gsmweb.cz. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  16. ^ "Nova: Ještěd byl zneužit v reklamě na mistrovství světa lyžařů". iDNES.cz. 27 February 2009. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  17. ^ "Čtenáři iDNES vybrali za div Česka Dlouhé Stráně". iDNES.cz. 16 September 2005. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  18. ^ "Památkový Katalog". pamatkovykatalog.cz. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  19. ^ "422/2005 Sb. Nařízení vlády o prohlášení Horského hotelu a televizního vysílače Ještěd u Liberce a některých movi..." Zákony pro lidi (in Czech). Retrieved 13 September 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Heinle, Erwin; "Türme aller Zeiten – aller Kulturen", Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart (Germany), ISBN 3-421-02931-8, 1997.

External links edit

50°43′56″N 14°59′07″E / 50.73222°N 14.98528°E / 50.73222; 14.98528

ještěd, tower, czech, hotel, televizní, vysílač, ještědu, television, transmitter, mount, ještěd, near, liberec, czech, republic, measuring, made, reinforced, concrete, shaped, hyperboloid, form, tower, designed, architect, karel, hubáček, assisted, zdeněk, pa. Jested Tower Czech Hotel a televizni vysilac na Jestedu is a television transmitter on top of Mount Jested near Liberec in the Czech Republic Measuring 94 m 308 ft it is made of reinforced concrete shaped in a hyperboloid form The tower was designed by architect Karel Hubacek 1 who was assisted by Zdenek Patrman involved in building statics and by Otakar Binar who designed the interior furnishing It took the team three years to finalize the structure design 1963 1966 The construction itself took seven years to finish 1966 1973 2 Hotel and transmitter in one Jested mountain with the tower Jested model on display in the National Technical Museum in Prague Restaurant ramp The hyperboloid shape was chosen since it naturally extends the silhouette of the hill and moreover resists the extreme climate conditions on the summit of Mount Jested The design combines the operation of a mountaintop hotel and a television transmitter The hotel and restaurant are located in the lowest sections of the tower Before construction of the hotel two huts stood near the mountain summit one was built in the middle of the 19th century and the other was added in the early 20th century Both buildings had a wooden structure and both burned to the ground in the 1960s The tower is one of the dominant features of the North Bohemian landscape The gallery on the ground floor and the restaurant on the first offers views as far as Poland and Germany The tower has been on the list of Czech cultural monuments since 1998 becoming a national cultural monument in 2006 In 2007 it was entered on the Tentative List of UNESCO World Heritage sites 2 In 1969 Karel Hubacek was awarded the Perret Prize of the International Union of Architects UIA 2 Contents 1 Access 2 Construction 3 Description 3 1 Structure 3 2 Floors 3 3 Exterior 3 4 Interior design 3 5 Transmitter 4 Awards and accolades 5 Impact 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksAccess editThe monument is accessible by road and by the Jested cable car from the foot of the mountain 3 However since a crash in 2021 the system has been closed indefinitely 4 Construction editAfter the existing Jested lodge burned down in January 1963 a decision was made by Restaurace Liberec the company that used to manage the burned down lodges and the Prague Radio Communications Administration to build a new complex on the summit of Mount Jested which would accommodate a mountain hotel including a restaurant and at the same time would serve as a TV signal transmitter An architectural competition for the building design was announced It took place in February 1963 on the Liberec Stavoprojekt premises 5 Eleven architects teams took part in the competition including individual architects Otakar Binar Jiri Svoboda Pavel Svancer Ota Nykodym Karel Hubacek Jaromir Syrovatko Miroslav Ulmann Jaromir Vacek and teams Josef Patrny Jiri Hubka V Netolicka Milos Technik and Svatopluk Technik 6 Hubacek s design was the only one complying with both the requirements 6 All the designs were put on public display in the Liberec branch of Ceskoslovenska sporitelna The jury aka the council of Liberec district national committee on its 22 April 1963 meeting chose Hubacek s proposal as the winner 6 The building design created some technical problems for Hubacek and his team due to the climate conditions at the summit of Mount Jested 7 Experts from the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences the Czech Technical University in Prague and the Liberec Institute of Textile and Mechanical Engineering helped to overcome the technical difficulties The technological equipment and procedures that were put together were protected by the Czechoslovak patents 7 Some elements such as the laminated cladding the special pendulum or the transverse tuned mass damper introduced by Zdenek Patrman in collaboration with the academy experts have since been included in other structures e g the Cukrak transmitter tower 7 The ceremonial laying of the foundation stone took place on 30 July 1966 7 The general contractor was Pozemni stavby from Liberec 6 On 1 May 1971 the transmitter began its operation However the hotel interiors and the restaurant were completed two years later On 9 July 1973 the Jested Tower grand opening took place 7 The total construction was 64 million Czechoslovak crowns in 1973 6 Description editStructure edit The tower foundation consists of a circular reinforced concrete slab with a thickness of 1 metre and a diameter of 13 40 metres 8 The foundation is laid in the altitude of 1004 75 metres 9 10 The load bearing element of the structure consists of two concentric reinforced concrete cylinders with inner diameters of 4 4 and 12 5 metres and wall thickness of 30 centimetres each 10 11 the narrower is 42 4 metres high the wider external is 22 5 metres high 12 Individual floors are suspended on these columns on steel structures starting with the second floor 5 The columns were constructed by Prumstav Pardubice 12 The supporting steel structures for the floors and for the tower structure were manufactured in the Mostarna plant in the then state owned company Vitkovice Iron Works of Klement Gottwald A steel shell with a length of 44 metres of a variable diameter from 10 50 m to 1 62 m is attached to the inner column 10 The laminate support cylinder diameter of 1 90 m and a wall thickness of 16 to 12 mm attached to it originally had a length of 17 52 m which was extended another 3 metres during the 1997 reconstruction 10 13 nbsp Restaurant interior Floors edit In the basement of the building there are engine rooms and warehouses The first floor is shared by the administrative offices and the television transmission hall that is connected to the antenna systems on the ninth floor by means of an elevator and an emergency staircase built inside the central tube The rest of the first floor is occupied by the restaurant kitchen On the second floor there is an observation terrace a buffet and the main entrance hall with the reception desk The hall is dominated by a suspended staircase leading to an observation restaurant on third floor 5 On the fourth and fifth floor there are hotel rooms On the fourth floor there are 12 double rooms and one apartment Rooms on the fifth floor were originally used as flats for the hotel and transmitter employees but were later converted to hotel apartments The sixth and seventh floors house the transmitting technology There is a specially developed laminated cladding in the shape of a revolving hyperboloid 2 shielding against extreme weather conditions On the eighth and ninth floors the architect placed drinking water tanks and a backup battery power supply There is an elevator engine room on the tenth floor 5 Above it a special pendulum is installed movement of which absorb cross vibrations caused by the wind 2 nbsp Jiri Jiroutek Phenomenon Jested 01 Exterior edit At the third to the fifth floor levels i e the restaurant and hotel floors the outer shell takes on the shape of a conical rotating surface It consists of 64 conically placed panels The panel surface is made of anodized aluminium sheets At the restaurant level these panels are glazed over the entire width and complemented by a low window sill while at the hotel level there are smaller windows with rounded corners 5 Parabolic antennas of microwave transmitters are located on the seventh and eighth floors The building cover is made of trapezoid shaped laminated panels which are not joined by any metal elements as these would prevent the passage of electromagnetic waves The upper side of the elevator machine room on the tenth floor is fitted with a welded steel tube which forms a 48 meter high antenna mast Its surface is covered with metallized aluminum and a spiral staircase leads up inside the tube At the top of the mast there is a self supporting laminate extension of 18 meters attached During the 1997 transmitter reconstruction it was extended by another 3 meters The extension is there to protect the TV broadcast antennas against the elements On top of the extension there is a steel lid on which an annular pendulum weighing 800 kg is suspended by means of dampers 5 nbsp Glass emblems mounted on the concrete transmitter shaft Interior design edit The interior design including its furniture comes from Otakar Binar Cookware and some textile accessories were based on Karl Wunsch designs Glass makers Stanislav Libensky and his partner Jaroslava Brychtova also participated in the interior furnishing They originally planned inserting a tall glass pendulum in the publicly accessible space The pendulum would consist of two lenses representing the eternal movement Instead they decided to drill eight glass emblems into the concrete transmitter shaft According to the artists the shaft and its modification suggested the tower was growing up from the rock On the other hand for Karel Hubacek the glass emblems embodied fallen meteorites The author of the trellis located in the hotel corridor is Jaroslav Klapste The staircase walls and the hotel corridors are lined with ceramic tiles designed by Devana Mirova The entrance doors and the hotel reception walls are covered with wrought sheets by Milos Koska the tapestry hanging on the lounge wall was created by Vladimir Krecan 5 Transmitter edit On 1 May 1971 the transmitter equipped with Tesla III Zona 14 began broadcasting television signal 5 from the new tower In September 1973 broadcasting of the second Czechoslovak Television program was added After the Velvet Revolution the transmitter using a Tesla equipment was spreading signals of Czech Television CT1 and CT2 Nova and Prima and Czech Radio Radiozurnal Praha today Dvojka and Vltava and of private operators Radio Proglas Radio Contact Liberec and Europe 2 In connection with the broadcasting digitization in the Czech Republic in June 2009 the antenna systems in the laminate extension were updated 14 In addition to radio and television broadcasting Jested is also an important node for radio relay and optical links 14 Mobile operators T Mobile O2 Vodafone and Nordic Telecom have base stations BTS here 15 Awards and accolades editIn 1964 the Association of Architects of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic awarded the Jested Tower design on its annual Architectural Works 1962 63 exhibit In spring of 1969 at a time when the building had not yet been completed Karel Hubacek was awarded the Auguste Perret Prize for the creative use of technology in architecture by the International Union of Architects It is the most significant award ever achieved by a Czech architect 7 In 2000 the building was awarded the title The Most Important Czech Building of the 20th Century 16 In September 2005 in the iDNES cz Seven Wonders of the Czech Republic readers survey the tower ranked as second being defeated by the Dlouhe strane Hydro Power Plant 17 On 26 March 1998 the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic registered the building as an immovable cultural monument 18 In January 2006 the building was declared a national cultural monument 19 On 29 May 2007 it was added to the Indicative List of Cultural Property of the Czech Republic of which buildings are nominated for inclusion in the UNESCO World Heritage List 7 Impact editThe tower is the main symbol of the city of Liberec Its silhouette appears on the region flag and the coat of arms on the local university s logo and on the logo of the local first league football club FC Slovan Liberec The building is featured in the Czech movie Grandhotel based on the eponymous book by Jaroslav Rudis See also editList of towers Hyperboloid structure List of hyperboloid structuresReferences edit Czech architect Hubacek author of famous Jested hotel dies Czech News Agency CeskeNoviny cz 25 November 2011 Retrieved 27 November 2011 a b c d e Mountain top Hotel and Television Transmitter Jested whc unesco org UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 13 September 2019 Jested TV transmitter Liberec Region Retrieved 13 September 2019 The cableway Hotel Jested Retrieved 12 April 2023 a b c d e f g h Sial Svacha Rostislav Beran Lukas 1978 Muzeum umeni Olomouc SIAL architekti a inzenyri Firm Vyd 1 ed Olomouc Arbor vitae 2010 ISBN 9788087164419 OCLC 677863682 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d e Fenomen Jested Phenomenon Jested Phanomen Jested Jiroutek Jiri 1967 Vyd 1 ed Liberec J Jiroutek 2005 p 9 ISBN 8023951750 OCLC 85155680 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d e f g Sial Svacha Rostislav Beran Lukas 1978 Muzeum umeni Olomouc SIAL architekti a inzenyri Firm 1st ed Olomouc Arbor vitae 2010 pp 50 61 ISBN 9788087164419 OCLC 677863682 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Jested An Inventory of the Qualities of Post War Architecture PDF Era21 Era21 2005 ISSN 1801 089X OCLC 1050035976 a b c d Ceska komora autorizovanych inzenyru a techniku cinnych ve vystavbe Cesky svaz stavebnich inzenyru Svaz podnikatelu ve stavebnictvi v CR 2006 Casopis stavebnictvi casopis stavebnich inzernyru techniku a podnikatelu in Czech Brno EXPO DATA OCLC 320683918 Jested evidence hodnot povalecne architektury an inventory of the qualities of post war architecture Vorlik Petr 1973 Fragner Benjamin 1945 Beran Lukas 1978 Praha Vyzkumne centrum prumysloveho dedictvi a Fakulta architektury CVUT v Praze ve spolupraci s Narodnim pamatkovym ustavem 2010 ISBN 9788001044759 OCLC 607527802 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Art amp antiques vas pruvodce svetem umeni in Czech Prague Feive 2002 OCLC 320415723 Aoc architects Renovation of a hotel transmitter Jested aoc archi Retrieved 14 September 2019 a b c Podhorsky Marek 2009 Vysilaci veze 1 vyd ed Praha Freytag amp Berndt pp 58 63 ISBN 9788086236216 OCLC 670478495 GSMweb cz hledani BTS www gsmweb cz Retrieved 14 September 2019 Nova Jested byl zneuzit v reklame na mistrovstvi sveta lyzaru iDNES cz 27 February 2009 Retrieved 13 September 2019 Ctenari iDNES vybrali za div Ceska Dlouhe Strane iDNES cz 16 September 2005 Retrieved 13 September 2019 Pamatkovy Katalog pamatkovykatalog cz Retrieved 13 September 2019 422 2005 Sb Narizeni vlady o prohlaseni Horskeho hotelu a televizniho vysilace Jested u Liberce a nekterych movi Zakony pro lidi in Czech Retrieved 13 September 2019 Further reading editHeinle Erwin Turme aller Zeiten aller Kulturen Deutsche Verlags Anstalt Stuttgart Germany ISBN 3 421 02931 8 1997 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jested Tower Television Tower on Mount Jested at Structurae Hotel on Jested Archived 2012 10 29 at the Wayback Machine History and architecture of the Jested Tower 50 43 56 N 14 59 07 E 50 73222 N 14 98528 E 50 73222 14 98528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jested Tower amp oldid 1212817948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.