Brno - The first eight apartment buildings with a total of 167 apartments in the new district of Pod Hády in Brno are awaiting approval in March. Construction of the second phase, which includes an additional 442 apartments and a municipal kindergarten, will begin in February. The entire project will have over 1000 apartments upon completion. This was stated to ČTK by Dalibor Lamka, the CEO of the development company Trikaya.
"The first phase of the Pod Hády district, whose construction commenced on a brownfield site of the former Ergon factory in the autumn of 2023, includes 167 apartments in eight buildings. Currently, about a month before the approval, 85 percent of the units have already been sold. Some apartments, specifically 57 in two buildings, have been offered as cooperative housing," said Lamka. The first phase also included a central square, and the ground floor of the apartment buildings features spaces for shops and services.
Even before the approval, construction of the second phase will begin, which will initially create 136 apartments in eight buildings grouped into two blocks. After their completion, the second part will start, including another three blocks with a total of 306 apartments and also 577 parking spaces in the underground. "The second sub-phase will also include a new municipal kindergarten. However, a private Forest Kindergarten Pampeliška will open as part of the first phase in September 2026," added the CEO of the developer.
In the project under the Hády quarry on the outskirts of Brno, which the developer has been preparing for 13 years, a residential district with more than 1000 apartments, shops, sports facilities, a kindergarten, senior housing, and a central square is set to be created. The residential buildings will feature green roofs and photovoltaic panels. Recycled materials from the demolished Ergon factory are to be used in the construction.
The design of the district was created by the architectural studios Kuba&Pilař and Makovský & partners. The rooftop gardens with viewpoints and green spaces between the buildings were designed by the studio Flera, led by landscape architect Ferdinand Leffler. The total investment will exceed four billion crowns.
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