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Japanese Pavilion

- Koupaliště Rolava -
The one-story Japanese pavilion of the former Karel Josef Knoll Porcelain Factory, which was built for commercial purposes, stood not far from the factory on an island that was located in Rolava Lake. The pavilion was constructed in the period between 1885 and 1886 to attract spa guests, potential customers, and buyers of porcelain. The decorations in were done by the artists Hermann Zimmermann and Wilhelm Jessl according to the designs of Adolf Miessner. The pavilion, which was built by the order of the merchant and entrepreneur Karel Knoll, was ceremonially opened on June 5, 1886.
The interior of the pavilion
There was a bus connection from the center of the spa town, which took interested parties here within a few minutes. The pavilion was so unique in its time that it was dismantled in 1900 and loaned to the World Exhibition in . Later on, the ownership of the pavilion was transferred to Karel Knoll's sons Adolf, Karel, and Ludvík. From 1938 and in the subsequent war years, the pavilion was no longer maintained. The attractive parts and materials of the building disappeared over time and the remaining rotten wooden structure was demolished in 1953.
Advertising banner for Knoll's porcelain factory and the Japanese pavilion.
The symmetrical building, which is built with wood and other materials consisting of earthenware, , and hard porcelain, is obviously built in the Japanese architectural style. The roof was the most visually impressive component, which featured several that were all adorned with painted dragons and crowned with a .
An old postcard from 1910 in which the building is depicted
Underneath the spires, you could admire three eaves on top of each other, a common feature of a , which were all covered by roof tiles. The facades of the building are embellished with made out of earthenware plates. The building was also embellished with floral and geometric motifs, as well as all sorts of birds, including peacocks, which are painted on panels.
One of the entrances to the Japanese Pavilion around 1900