CHYBIK + KRISTOF affirm their social engagement

The new design for Brno’s Zvonařka Central Bus Terminal revisits the station’s defining role in the city’s social fabric while preserving its Brutalist structure. Self-initiated by the architects, the project reaffirms their longstanding engagement for social change.

CHYBIK + KRISTOF ARCHITECTS & URBAN DESIGNERS have announced the forthcoming ground-breaking of their redesign of Brno’s Zvonařka Central Bus Terminal in the Czech Republic. Self-initiated by the architects in 2011 and with reconstruction to begin, the project involved preserving the existing Brutalist heritage structure while addressing the need to rethink a decaying public space into a functional entity adapted to evolving social needs. Stressing the station’s central role in the city and region’s social fabric, the project affirms CHYBIK + KRISTOF’s continuous engagement in establishing architects’ responsibility as catalysts for positive social change.

Designed in 1984 and built in 1988 in response to insufficient capacity of bus stations across the city, the Zvonařka Central Bus Terminal has continuously acted as the region’s main bus station for intercity transport. Originally conceived as an extensive transportation hub, only two of its five initially projected construction phases were completed. Following the Czech Republic’s 1989 Velvet Revolution, which prompted the first non-communist government since 1948, the station was privatized, resuming its role as a bus station and foregoing construction plans and visions of its future. Established as a Brutalist  heritage site, its high maintenance costs led to little upkeep, driving to its gradual deterioration.

In 2011, CHYBIK + KRISTOF, having recently established their studio in Brno, a city for which they shared  a deep connection, grew aware of the station’s decaying conditions. Eager to advance a positive  alternative to a seemingly irrecoverable space, they reached out to its private owners with an elementary  study and redesign proposal. Published and widely shared on social media, the proposal drew  considerable media and public attention. In a process strongly facilitated by the architects, a conversation

was prompted between local private stakeholders and public authorities – one revolving in part on the  attainment of the sufficient funds to bring their vision to life. Accounting for the complexities of the project  and after a four-year-long collaborative exchange, the needed funding was attained in 2015, notably  through the project’s recognition as a European funds project, thereby securing a prominent share of the  investment.

Engaged in preserving the symbolic local heritage embodied by the Brutalist structure, CHYBIK +  KRISTOF create a contemporary redesign, receptive to the station’s primary role as a central  transportation hub – through which over 820 regional, national and international connections and 17,000  passengers transit each day. Following the original square floorplan, the redesigned main hall is an open  structure devoid of walls. Acting as a two-sided roof, the inner space houses the individual bus stops  while the outer area serves as a parking space for buses. Envisioning it as an intrinsically public space,  CHYBIK + KRISTOF replace the existing stands – temporary structures added in the 1990s – with an  information office, ticketing and waiting areas as well new platforms and an orientation system accessible  to the disabled. The architects’ design gives prominence to light as easing access, evoking comfort and  promoting safety. By removing the temporary stands, they open up the terminal onto the city, providing  a second entry to the station at street level. While they repaint the main worn-down structure in white  and install new light fixtures, they preserve and proudly bring to light the wall art on temporary stands  throughout the station, previously concealed between them. Drawing a clear path to buses and various  services, CHYBIK + KRISTOF transform the building into a dynamic social hub, channeling an unrestricted  flow of locals and passengers alike.

Reflective of unclear, evolving and at times conflicting urban visions, the Zvonařka Central Bus Terminal  is one of many similar residual spaces, preserved yet poorly maintained, and often entirely disconnected  from their surroundings. As both architecture and design professionals and users of the urban space,  CHYBIK + KRISTOF adopt the critical lens for which architects are well equipped – one that renders  them both sensitive to and critical of an environment and brings them to consider the inherent  relationships, nuances and synergies between the envisioned and the built, the public and the private, the function and the experience. Affirming what has grown into a deep-seated social responsibility over  the past decade, they consider the project through not only its function, but also a studied understanding  of its impact on the social fabric. By involving diverse actors – architects, public entities and private  partners, local and external – they once again demonstrate architects’ central role as active exponents  for change and instigators of a dialogue. In an attempt to correct past shortcomings, they see architects  today as obliged to bring forth a holistic approach that moves beyond the mere construction process  towards user-centered design which adheres to the environmental and social fabric.

Part of a generation of architects who founded their practice in the aftermath of the 2008 economic crisis,  CHYBIK + KRISTOF have continuously sought to self-initiate and take on projects responding to distinct  social need. Advocating for architects to initiate and engage with positive social change, founding  architects Ondřej Chybík and Michal Krištof state:

“Architects today share the obligation to address critical social and environmental issues.  Beyond punctual functional concerns, our profession is tasked with acknowledging and  deconstructing the shortcomings at the roots of our urban and social structures, thereby  raising public awareness and promoting societal engagement. We see the Zvonařka  Central Bus Terminal as embodying the three founding blocks of architects’ social  responsibility. First, architecture responds to a functional need that must be clearly and  efficiently addressed. Second, this need is expressed by the user of a space, whose  experience of the latter must remain at the center of all concerns. Thirdly, and most  importantly, architects intervene in a fragile ecosystem, one in which sociopolitical  dynamics, economic factors, historical legacies, environmental concerns, to cite only a  few, come together. It is essential, if not only ethical, to take all into account. Ultimately,  by revisiting the past, engaging with the present and projecting to the future, architects  can, and must, be catalysts for change.”

With completion due in 2021, this initial redesign acts as the first stage of a broader reconstruction and  urban renewal project, with changes to the surrounding areas to follow.