Kunratice est un quartier de Prague situé dans le sud de la capitale tchèque, appartenant à l'arrondissement de Prague 4, d'une superficie de 810 hectares. En 2008, la population était de 8089 habitants. La première mention écrite de Kunratice date du XIIIe siècle. La ville est devenue une partie de Prague en 1968.
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Kunratice is a municipal district and cadastral area in Prague. It is located in the southern part of the city. As of 2021, there were 10,091 inhabitants living in Kunratice.
The first written record of Kunratice is from the 13th century. The village became part of Prague in 1968.
In 1990, a bronze bust of T. G. Masaryk, the work of sculptor Vincenzo Makovský from 1935 was restored in the central square of President Masaryk.
1.6 km
Sapa, officially TTTM Sapa, sometimes called Little Hanoi, Little Saigon, or Prague's Hanoi, is the largest Vietnamese enclave in the Czech Republic, located in the Libuš and Kunratice districts. It was created within the area of a former meat-packing plant and poultry farm around 2000 and is often referred to as a "city within a city" by the media. After Ukrainians and Slovaks, Vietnamese are the largest ethnic minority in the country, with Sapa being the so-called Czech "Vietnamese capital". Sapa offers many restaurants, food stands, specialized grocery stores, a warehouse club called Tamda Foods, tutoring and childcare services, space for social events, and a Buddhist temple. The total area is 35 hectares, and as of 2012, around seven thousand people lived and worked there.
1.6 km
Kunratický les is a forested area of three square kilometres in Prague. It is located in Kunratice district. The forest is separated from other forested areas by urban settlements.
Kunratický les is visited by 678,000 people per year who use the forest for recreation, sports activities or tourism.
1.7 km
Libuš is one of the municipal districts of Prague. It is located in the southern part of Prague in the administrative district of Prague 4 and consists of the cadastral areas of Libuš and Písnice.
Both Libuš and Písnice were once independent villages near Prague. Libuš was attached to Prague in 1968 and Písnice in 1974; now they are both part of the Prague City in Prague-Libuš municipal district.
The history of Libuš goes back probably to the 13th century, but it is not documented. The first written information is from 1321, when Prague citizens gained power over the Libuš fort. Better information begins in the 17th century, when there was a pub on the road from Prague to the south.
Area: 5.24 km2
Population: 9,702
1.7 km
Prague-Libuš is a district in Prague, Czech Republic. It is situated in the southern part of the city, in the administrative district Prague 12. The cadastral area Libuš is part of this district.
En 1990, un buste en bronze de TGM, l’œuvre du sculpteur Vincenzo Makovský de 1935 (deux fois enlevé en 1940 et 1950) a été restauré sur la place centrale du président Masaryk.