bg Karlovy Vary

Felix Zawojski House

- Tržiště 9 -
The building, built with a residential and commercial function and four stories, was constructed in the period between 1899 and 1901 on the site of a Baroque house called Templ. It was built according to the project that was created by the Austrian architect and the construction was carried out by the architect and builder Karl Heller. The building was built for the master tailor Felix Zawojski, who was born in 1848, in , son of a Polish father and a Czech mother. Felix Zawojski trained as a tailor in and then worked as a journeyman in and . Over time, he sewed in the best salons in the world for the most distinguished clientele. He came to Karlsbad, nowadays Karlovy Vary, with his wife, the painter Maria Štempjerová, at the end of the 19th century to settle here and establish a tailoring factory. He bought this building to house a large fashion salon to promote his wares. The building contained the first lift in the city, and in the early 20th century, it was the most famous and the most fashionable fashion studio in Karlovy Vary whose customers were personalities such as the English King or the Persian Shah .
An old postcard in which the Baroque house called Templ can be seen
In 1911, Felix Zawojski and his family moved to and sold the house to the Czech Trade Union Bank, which subsequently opened its office there. In 1924, the shop windows of the elevated ground floor of the house were modified according to the design of the Czech architect . In 1925, the spa doctor and the first mayor of Karlovy Vary, Doctor Milan Mixa, had surgery in the building. He was born on September 17, 1875, in to the respected and cultured family of regional deputy and later Příbram mayor Blažej Mixa. He graduated from grammar school in Příbram, and in 1893, he accompanied his father, a diabetic, on a medical stay in Karlovy Vary. In the following years, he studied internal medicine at the Faculty of Medicine of Charles-Ferdinand University in . From the beginning of the spa season in 1905, he worked in Karlovy Vary, then as the only Czech spa doctor. As a spa doctor, he had an extensive clientele, mostly Czech and other Slavic patients were treated by him. During the , he worked in Prague and as a spa doctor in . In 1945, at the age of seventy, he returned to Karlovy Vary and, as the head of the Local Administrative Commission, organized the renewal of spa treatment. Doctor Milan Mixa died on March 21, 1959, in Karlovy Vary, at the premature age of 84.
Doctor Milan Mixa seated on the left
The building, built in the Art Nouveau style, features an on both the western and eastern sides, which are either supported with two or three . Both oriel windows feature an stating the name of the former owner and they are both embellished with . One of the oriel windows is topped with a dome crowned with a crown as a , and this same oriel window is flanked by balconies that are secured with a wrought iron railing and supported by wrought iron corbels. The building contains another balcony, as well as one wrought iron , and wrought iron-barred windows adorned with . The remaining ornamentation consists of motifs, whiplash lines, , and all kinds of beautiful floral and geometric decorations.
The western side of the building is shown in an old postcard