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Zlín - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zlín

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zlín
Zlín town hall
Zlín town hall
Official flag of Zlín
Flag
Coat of arms of Zlín
Coat of arms
Coordinates: 43°13′59″N, 17°40′01″E
Country Czech Republic
Region (kraj) Zlín (Zlínský)
District (okres) Zlín
First documented 1332
Area
 - town 118.85 km²  (45.9 sq mi)
Elevation 230 m (754.6 ft)
Population (2006-04-17)
 - town 79,538
Postal code 760 01
Website: www.mestozlin.cz

Zlín (IPA: [zli:n]), named Gottwaldov (IPA: ['gotvaldof]) during 194990, is a city in the Zlín Region, southeastern Moravia, Czech Republic, on the Dřevnice River. The development of the modern city is closely connected to the Bata Shoes company. Due to Bata's managerial excellence Zlín became famous for the company's extraordinary social scheme developed after the First World War and its modernist urbanism.

Contents

[edit] History of Zlín

The first written record of Zlín dates back to 1322. Zlín became a town in 1397.

[edit] Zlín and Tomáš Baťa (1894-1932)

The Baťa’s Skyscraper from 1938
The Baťa’s Skyscraper from 1938

The town grew rapidly after Tomáš Baťa founded a shoe factory there in 1894 (approx. 3,000 inhabitants). Baťa's factory supplied the Austro-Hungarian army in World War I. Given the remarkable economic growth of the company and increasing well-being of its workers, Baťa himself was elected the mayor of Zlin in 1923. Baťa designed the town as he saw fit until his death in 1932 (approx. 35,000 inhabitants). Baťa engaged leading architects in order to develop a modern city, which even today remains of the best examples of constructivism.

His son Thomas was forced to leave by the Nazis in 1939 and again after the war when the Baťa company was nationalized. (He left for Canada where he founded another model community, named Batawa).

[edit] Expansion of the Company and the City

As a result of the Great Depression many have predicted an early end to Baťa’s economic success. Yet, the company expanded even more rapidly. Zlín became the center of a fast growing international company, a place where its global business strategy was set and managed there. The Batamen (as Baťa’s foreign workers were called) worked across the globe. The city became the centre for activities ranging from Malaysia, where caoutchouc rubber was bought; through India where, in the city of Batanagar, a shoe factory was constructed; to Argentine from where hides were imported. New shoe factories were founded abroad, among the most important "Zlín satellites" (as they were called) were:

All these new projects were being managed along with steady growth of the number of Baťa’s employees based in Zlín. When a Czechoslovak communist senator announced in a 1932 speech called "Moscow or Zlín?" that Baťa (as a prototypical capitalist symbol) would go bankrupt in few years, he could not be further from truth.

[edit] Postwar Era

Zlín was merged in 1948 with several surrounding communities to form Gottwaldov, named after the first communist president of Czechoslovakia, Klement Gottwald. In 1990 the whole city was renamed Zlín.

[edit] Architecture in Zlín

[edit] Urban Utopia

Letná discrit
Letná discrit

The astonishing feature of the city’s architectural development was a characteristic synthesis of two modernist urban utopian visions: the first inspired by Ebenezer Howard’s Garden city movement and the second tracing its lineage to Le Corbusier’s vision of urban modernity. From the very beginning Baťa pursued the goal of constructing the Garden City proposed by Ebenezer Howard. However, the shape of the city had to be ‘modernized’ so as to suit the needs of the company and of the expanding community. Zlín’s distinctive architecture was guided by principles that were strictly observed during its whole inter-war development. Its central theme was the derivation of all architectural elements from the factory buildings. The central position of the industrial production in the life of all Zlín inhabitants was to be highlighted. Hence the same building materials (red bricks, glass, reinforced concrete) were used for the construction of all public (and most private) edifices. The common structural element of Zlín architecture is a square bay of 20x20 feet (6.15x6.15 m). Although modified by several variations, this high modernist style leads to a high degree of uniformity of all buildings. It highlights the central and unique idea of an industrial garden city at the same time. Architectural and urban functionalism was to serve the demands of a modern city. The simplicity of its buildings which also translated into its functional adaptability was to prescribe (and also react to) the needs of everyday life.

The urban plan of Zlín was the creation of František Lydie Gahura, a student at Le Corbusier’s atelier in Paris. Le Corbusier’s inspiration was evident in the basic principles of the city’s architecture. On his visit to Zlín in 1935, where he was appointed to preside over the selective procedure for new apartment houses. Le Corbusier also received a commission for creating the plan for further expansion of the city and the company. His plan represented a paradigm shift from his earlier conceptions of urban design. Here he abandoned an anthropomorphic, centralized city model in favor of the linear city format. The change in Le Corbusier’s thinking was also reflected by the abandonment of the à redents residential pattern in favor of free-standing slab blocks. His Zlín plan, however, was never fully adopted.

[edit] Architectural Highlights

  • The Villa of Tomáš Baťa was an early architectural achievement in Zlín (the construction was finished in 1911). The building’s design was carried out by the famous Czech architect Jan Kotěra, professor at Prague's Academy of Fine Arts. After its confiscation in 1945 the building served as a Pioneers’ house. Being returned to Tomáš J. Baťa, the son of the company’s founder, the building houses the headquarters of the Thomas Bata Foundation.
  • The Grand Cinema (Velké kino) was built in 1932 and became the largest cinema in Europe (2580 seated viewers) in its time. The cinema also boasted the largest movie screen in Europe (9 x 7 meters). This technological marvel was designed by the Czech architects Miroslav Lorenc (1896-1943) and František Lydie Gahura (1896-1958).
  • The Baťa’s Skyscraper (Baťův mrakodrap, Jednadvacítka) was finished in 1938 and became the company‘s headquarters. This tallest Czechoslovak building (77.5 meters) was designed by architect Vladimír Karfík. The building has recently undergone an expensive renovation and is currently the headquarters of the Zlín Regional Government.

[edit] Education

[edit] Twin cities

[edit] Trivia

  • The Playwright Tom Stoppard was born Tomas Straussler in Zlín in 1937 where his father Eugene - Evžen - was a physician under the forward-looking Bata doctor, Bohuslav Albert. The Strausslers left for Singapore in 1939.
  • Ivana Trump - Donald Trump's ex wife - was born in Zlín
  • The Broadcaster Sir John Tusa was born in Zlin in 1936 where his fatherwas a company executive. In 1939 the family came to England where his father became the Managing Director of Bata's East Tilbury factory,

[edit] References

  • Frampton, Kenneth, 2001. Le Corbusier. London and New York: Thames and & Hudson World of Art.
  • Meller, Helen, 2001. European Cities 1890-1930s. History Culture and the Built Environment. Chichester (UK): John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

[edit] External links

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Coordinates: 49°13′59″N, 17°40′01″E

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