Ad
related to: housing estates in bratislavaHomeToGo, a search engine for holiday rentals worldwide - Inc
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Prague-Hostivař, the Košík housing estate. Panelák [a] is a colloquial term in Czech and Slovak for a large panel system panel building constructed of pre-fabricated, pre-stressed concrete, such as those extant in the former Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic & Slovakia) and elsewhere in the world.
The Panorama City Towers, also known as the Panorama City and the Panorama Towers, are a residential complex of skyscrapers in Bratislava, Slovakia. [3] The buildings are equally didived into 34 floors, while they slightly differ in height, standing at 112.6 metres (369 ft) tall (Tower 1) and 112.2 metres (368 ft) tall (Tower 2), both being topped out in 2015 and inaugurated in 2016. [4]
The first stage of construction of the original Sever housing estate took place in 1980s, when military apartment houses were built, and in the 1990s other apartment buildings were completed [2] According to data from 1999, it spread over an area of 5.5 hectares and there were 1,756 apartments in which 5,600 inhabitants lived.
Housing complex Unitas are open gallery–type apartment complex designed by architects Fridrich Weinwurm and Ignác Vécsei. Built in the beginning of the thirties by the city of Bratislava for the underprivileged. It comprises seven objects in a row estate, with austere architectural forms, so characteristic of Weinwurm's puristic work. [1]
Irish real estate development company Ballymore Group purchased the land of the Eurovea area in 2002 for 550 million Slovak korunas (€18 million). [2] Construction of Eurovea Phase I started in July 2006, the Sheraton Bratislava Hotel opened in February 2010 with the rest of the complex opening in March 2010.
The Nová doba (New Times) Estate is a residential complex at Vajnorská Street in Bratislava, Slovakia. It was built in 1932 according to the plans of architects Fridrich Weinwurm (1885–1942) and Ignác Vécsei (1883–1944).
Large housing estates of concrete panel buildings (paneláks) now dominate the streets of Prague, Bratislava and other towns. The largest such housing estate in Central Europe can be found in Petržalka (population about 130,000), a part of the Slovak capital of Bratislava.
JTRE (J&T Real Estate) is a European real estate developer based in Bratislava, Slovakia. [1] The firm has completed over 50 projects in 9 countries with a combined value of approximately €1.6 billion, [2] [3] and it is active in many market segments—including mixed-use, office, residential, hospitality, logistics, retail, and industrial projects.