bg Karlovy Vary

Café Kaiserpark

- Slovenská 5A -
The first Café Kaiserpark, which was a popular destination for many spa guests, was built with a commercial function somewhere in the mid 19th century as a one-story building and served as a café for the visitors of the Kaiserpark. On the premises, there were several buildings, some of which were demolished somewhere at the beginning of the 19th century to make way for a newly constructed two-story building as part of the Café Kaiserpark. Some years later, the salon of the café was demolished to make way for a new salon.
The old café and old salon building somewhere at the end of the 19th century
After the and the establishment of the First Czechoslovak Republic, the name change into Café Geysirpark, as a result of the forced renaming that'ss related to the anti-Habsburg laws of Czechoslovakia adopted after 1919. After the and the expropriation and expulsion of the German-Bohemian population from Karlsbad, nowadays Karlovy Vary, the area was abandoned and the original buildings were demolished. In the 1960s, Interhotels operated a autocamping here, and later on, they built the so-called Russian Village in its place.
The new café building together with the old salon building in 1912
The roof of the first buildings, which were built Romanticism and Eclectic architectural styles, were embellished with , and . The facades of the salon building featured an in addition to several . The wrought iron roof of the covered seating area, which was drained by beautiful , is supported by a lot of pillars to which wrought iron supportive , adorned with foliage and , were attached.
The first salon of Café Kaiserpark in 1898
The new café building was built in the Heimatstil architectural style, while the new salon, which funtioned as a large , was built in the Art Nouveau style. The roof and domes of both buildings, including the dormers, the incorporated pointed , and even the , were crowned with a lot of , one of which had a attached to it. The new café building contained a lot of beautiful woodwork, including the bargeboards and wooden corbels that supported them and the eaves. Above the windows, either a straight pediment or a could be seen. The building also had various , some of which were supported by corbels, while other were placed on top of a semi-hexagonal , but all of them were incorporated with and globes. The new salon building featured some beautiful and large mushroom-shaped windows that were surrounded by lovely floral decorations.
The new café in 1925 and terrace with sunshades