

Functionalist Apartment with Pink Piggy
When an architect renovates his own home, does the process become a space for unrestrained imagination—or one filled with constraints?—or one filled with constraints? This old apartment in the Czech Republic may offer one possible answer. Being his own customer is in many ways more challenging than fulfilling a brief formulated by a client. There is no alternative but to accept the responsibility for all decisions and expose himself to the risks that architects normally carefully debate with their clients.
This apartment is located in a building from the late 1930s, an honest embodiment of architectural modernism, a classic Prague tenement house from that era, with a tiled facade and small apartments, designed by architect Ladislav Šimek and built by his brother Jaroslav. And the saying "the shoemaker's children go barefoot" implies, the reconstruction of the apartment into its final form took almost 10 years. The questions the architect asked himself during the process of renovation were mainly focused on the conflict between preserving the strong spirit of the place and the degree of embodying the imprint of his own identity and invention. Which should be the winner? How to find a balance? Can anything prevail? Isn't the conclusion that the owner naturally succumbs and adapts to the soul of the existing building, which he only slightly supplements or modifies with his work and presence?














