Town house No. 30
an authentic Baroque house
Opening hours:
Opened only as a part of certain events
This single-story Baroque town house is notable for its gate and semi-hipped roof. The arrangement of the house is based on the Gothic tradition. The interior has preserved a two-leaf, frame door with forged exterior hinges (18th century) and a box-style lock. There is a small yard behind the house, surrounded by authentic farming buildings from the second half of the 19th century (stables, barn). The façade facing Zelenodolská Street has been restored.
Alexandr Berndorf has identified the site as the location of the house of Tomáš Sládek (1589) and the hat maker Jiří Rabštejnský (1654). When the house belonged to the butcher Matěj Ripl, it burned down in 1714. The current building was probably erected after the fire. In 1868, under the owner Jan Bláha, a new barn was built by Vojtěch Boháč, a master builder, on the opposite side of the yard. In 1937, the then-owner Josef Maršík replaced the thatched roof with asbestos cement roofing.