Ostrava

Ostrava (Czech pronunciation: [ˈostrava], locally: [oˈstrava] (listen); Polish: Ostrawa, German: Ostrau) is a city in the north-east of the Czech Republic, and the capital of the Moravian-Silesian Region. It is 15 km (9 mi) from the border with Poland, at the meeting point of four rivers: the Odra, Opava, Ostravice and Lučina. In terms of both population and area Ostrava is the third largest city in the Czech Republic, the second largest city in Moravia, and the largest city in Czech Silesia. It straddles the border of the two historic provinces of Moravia and Silesia. The population is almost 300,000 people. The wider conurbation – which also includes the towns of Bohumín, Doubrava, Havířov, Karviná, Orlová, Petřvald and Rychvald – is home to about 500,000 people, making it the largest urban area in the Czech Republic apart from the capital, Prague.

Ostrava

Ostrawa
Ostrau
Masaryk Square - Ostrava's historical centre
Flag
Coat of arms
Ostrava
Location in the Czech Republic
Coordinates: 49°50′8″N 18°17′33″E
Country Czech Republic
RegionMoravian-Silesian
DistrictOstrava-City
Founded1267
Government
  MayorTomáš Macura (ANO)
Area
  Statutory City214.23 km2 (82.71 sq mi)
Elevation
260 m (850 ft)
Population
 (2020-01-01[1])
  Statutory City287,968
  Density1,300/km2 (3,500/sq mi)
  Metro
983,000[2]
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
702 00
Websitewww.ostrava.cz

Ostrava grew in importance due to its position at the heart of a major coalfield, becoming an important industrial centre. It was previously known as the country's "steel heart" thanks to its status as a coal-mining and metallurgical centre, but since the Velvet Revolution (the fall of communism in 1989) it has undergone radical and far-reaching changes to its economic base. Industries have been thoroughly restructured, and the last coal was mined in the city in 1994. However, remnants of the city's industrial past are visible in the Lower Vítkovice area, a former coal-mining, coke production and ironworks complex in the city centre which retains its historic industrial architecture. Lower Vítkovice has applied for inclusion in the UNESCO World Heritage List.

Ostrava is home to various cultural facilities including theatres and galleries. Various cultural and sporting events take place in Ostrava throughout the year, including the Colours of Ostrava music festival, the Janáček May classical music festival, the Summer Shakespeare Festival and NATO Days. Ostrava is home to two public universities: the VŠB-Technical University and the University of Ostrava. In 2014 Ostrava was a European City of Sport. The city co-hosted (with Prague) the IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship in 2004 and 2015.

Coat of arms

The city's coat of arms features a blue shield with a rearing silver horse standing on a green lawn. The horse wears a golden saddle and a red coverlet. At the top right of the shield there is a golden rose with green leaves and a red core. The horse in the coat-of-arms wears no bridle. The oldest known depiction of this coat-of-arms is on a seal dating from 1426. The first coloured version dates from 1728. The horse is often interpreted as a symbol of Ostrava's position on a major trade route, or as a figure taken from the coat-of-arms of Ostrava's first vogt (reeve), while the golden rose probably comes from the family coat-of-arms of the bishop of Olomouc Stanislav Thurzo. This explanation is supported by most modern literature.

Another theory suggests that the Bishop granted Ostrava the right to use the horse in its coat-of-arms out of gratitude for the assistance that the town provided to the people of the Bishop's estate in Hukvaldy when the estate was being looted and pillaged. Apparently the help came so quickly that the pillagers did not have time to attach bridles to their horses before making their escape. There is also a legend which tells of a siege of Ostrava during which the besieged townspeople released unbridled horses to run in circles around the town. This is said to have confused the attacking armies so much that they fled.

City logo

In 2008, Ostrava's new marketing logo was unveiled. Designed by Studio Najbrt, the logo "OSTRAVA!!!" is used in public presentations of the city both in the Czech Republic and abroad. The three exclamation marks are meant to symbolise the dynamism, energy and self-confidence of Ostrava and its people.[3] The light blue colour of the city's name is based on the heraldic tradition, while the exclamation marks are a contrasting darker blue.

History

The Church of St. Wenceslas (Kostel svatého Václava) is one of the oldest and most important cultural and historical monuments of Ostrava.

The first written mention of Slezská Ostrava (Silesian Ostrava) dates from 1229, when it was described as a settlement. The first mention of Moravian Ostrava (Moravská Ostrava) in 1267 describes it as a township. Ostrava grew on the banks of the Ostrá River (now the Ostravice River) from which it took its name. The river still still divides the city into two main parts: Moravian Ostrava (Moravská Ostrava) and Silesian Ostrava (Slezská Ostrava). The settlement occupied a strategic position on the border between the two historic provinces of Moravia and Silesia and on the ancient trade route from the Baltic Sea to the Adriatic Sea known as the Amber Road. Its location helped the town to grow and flourish.

However, Ostrava began to decline in importance after the Thirty Years' War, and it was occupied by Swedish forces from 1621 to 1645.

Marian Column (1702) at Masaryk square

A turning point in Ostrava's history came in 1763 with the discovery of extensive deposits of high-quality bituminous coal on the Silesian bank of the Ostravice River. In 1828, the owner of the local estates, Rudolf Jan, thw archbishop of Olomouc, established an ironworks, which was named after him as the Rudolfshütte. Later, the ironworks passed into the ownership of the Rothschild family and became known as the Vítkovice Ironworks. The company became the driving force behind Ostrava's industrial boom. By the second half of the 20th century, the city was nicknamed the country's "steel heart".

After the Second World War, the town's German-speaking population was was expelled. At a massacre at an internment camp, 231 German-speaking citizens were killed.[4] The liberation of Ostrava by the Red Army led to the city entering its greatest period of expansion. Initially, the new housing projects were on a relatively-small scale focusing on the Poruba district and featuring architecture in the Socialist realism style. Later, however, the authorities built larger-scale developments of prefabricated apartment blocks in Poruba and created a series of satellite estates to the south of the city (Ostrava-Jih). The city centre was gradually depopulated, and its people were moved out to the suburbs, as part of a long-term plan to destroy the city centre entirely and to turn the land over to coal-mining.

Miloš Sýkora Bridge over the Ostravice River and Silesian Ostrava Town Hall

The 1990s brought a rapid decline in the city's traditional industrial sectors: iron, steel, chemicals and coal-mining. The last coal was mined on 30 June 1994, which was accompanied by major investments to rectify ecological damage done by decades of heavy industry. The projects ultimately brought major improvements in the city's environment and quality of life. Ostrava became an important tourist centre that offered easy access to the nearby Jeseníky and Beskydy Mountains.

As well as hundreds of hectares of recultivated former mining land, the city also has numerous natural landscape features of interest, many of which are protected nature reserves. They include the Polanka Forest (Polanský les) and the Polanka Meadows (Polanská niva), both of which form part of the Poodří (Odra Basin) protected nature reserve.

A rare geological feature found in the city is the granite erratic boulders. Originally from Scandinavia, they were left behind after the last Ice Age, when the ice sheets retreated. Another feature is the Ema slag heap, an artificial hill made of mining waste (slag) that offers panoramic views. The waste is still burning deep beneath the surface, which gives the slag-heap its own microclimate.

On 10 December 2019, a shooting at a hospital in Ostrava left eight people dead, including the perpetrator.

Geography

Ostrava is situated at the meeting point of four rivers: the Odra, Opava, Ostravice and Lučina. Due to its location in a broad river basin known as the Moravian Gate, Ostrava is mostly low-lying, with a highest point of 280 m above sea level), and has a Central European climate with typical flora and fauna. It differs from most neighbouring regions by the high concentration of industry, dense population and the geographical conditions of the Ostrava basin.

Ostrava is 20.5 km across from north to south (Antošovice–Nová Bělá), and 20.1 km across from east to west (Bartovice–Krásné Pole). The total length of the city's road network is 828 km (514 mi).

Climate

Climate data for Ostrava
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 0.4
(32.7)
2.8
(37.0)
7.7
(45.9)
13.5
(56.3)
18.9
(66.0)
21.9
(71.4)
23.6
(74.5)
23.4
(74.1)
19.4
(66.9)
14.0
(57.2)
6.7
(44.1)
2.0
(35.6)
12.9
(55.1)
Average low °C (°F) −5.6
(21.9)
−4.1
(24.6)
−0.8
(30.6)
3.0
(37.4)
7.3
(45.1)
10.6
(51.1)
11.9
(53.4)
11.6
(52.9)
8.7
(47.7)
4.7
(40.5)
0.9
(33.6)
−3.2
(26.2)
3.7
(38.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 26.7
(1.05)
30.2
(1.19)
34.0
(1.34)
52.4
(2.06)
91.2
(3.59)
104.4
(4.11)
91.1
(3.59)
91.8
(3.61)
58.8
(2.31)
42.3
(1.67)
44.6
(1.76)
34.3
(1.35)
701.8
(27.63)
Average precipitation days 7 7 7 8 11 11 11 10 8 7 9 8 104
Source: World Meteorological Organisation (UN)[5]

The city has an oceanic (Köppen: Cfb) or humid continental (Dfb) climate, according with the isoterm 0 °C/-3 °C, the second most common in the Europe (the average temperature in month most cold is -1 °C).[6][7] The climate features hot, humid summers and relatively mild winters, with an average annual temperature of 10.2 °C (January: -1.2 °C, July: 23.5 °C) and average annual precipitation of 580 mm.

Administrative divisions

Local authorities of Ostrava
Cadastral Districts of Ostrava

The city, with a total area of 214 km2, is divided into 23 local authorities. On 14 September 1990, Ostrava's City Authority decided to divide the city into 22 districts, effective 24 November that year. On 1 January 1994, the district of Plesná separated from the Poruba district and become a separate local authority. Some of the local authorities are further subdivided into smaller units.

Mayors

Jan Prokeš

The first mayor of Moravian Ostrava and the last person to hold the office before 1918, while the Czech lands were part of Austria-Hungary, was Hermann Zwierzina. One of the most influential mayors in the city's history was Jan Prokeš, who was one of the main driving forces behind Ostrava's rapid expansion and helped to modernize its infrastructure. His achievements are commemorated in the name of the square outside the New City Hall – Prokeš Square (Czech: Prokešovo náměstí).

The city's mayor during the Nazi occupation, Emil Beier, merged Moravian Ostrava and Silesian Ostrava to form a single administrative unit.

Postwar mayors of the city include Zdeněk Kupka, Evžen Tošenovský (who was elected mayor for three successive terms from 1993 to 2001 and went on to become the president of the Moravian-Silesian Region), and Petr Kajnar. The current mayor, elected on 6 November 2014, is Tomáš Macura.

Transport

Ostrava is the transport and logistics hub of the north-eastern part of the Czech Republic.

Air

25 km (16 mi) south of the city centre is an international airport, Leoš Janáček Airport Ostrava, which links the city with several European destinations (IATA code: OSR; ICAO code: LKMT). It is the first airport in the Czech Republic to have its own rail link. It handles scheduled flights several times a week to London and Warsaw. In the summer season there are also numerous charter flights, mainly to destinations in the Mediterranean region.

Roads

Railway station Ostrava-Svinov

The road infrastructure of the region is centred on the D1 motorway, which runs from Prague via Brno and Ostrava into Poland. Ostrava is 360 km (220 mi) from Prague by motorway, 170 km (110 mi) from Brno, 90 km (56 mi) from the Polish city of Katowice, and 310 km (190 mi) from Vienna. Other major roads which pass through Ostrava are the Class I roads 11, 56, 58, and 59, as well as the E75 and E462 trans-European routes.

Trams, trolleybuses and buses

Ostrava trams in their traditional blue and white livery at the "Nová Ves vodárna" stop

The city has a dense public transport network consisting of trams, buses and trolleybuses. The first trams, introduced in 1894, were powered by steam engines. The network was rapidly expanded, and in 1901 it was electrified. New tram lines were built mainly to the south and east of the city centre, where they would not have to cross the narrow-gauge railways linking Ostrava with Karviná and Bohumín.

In 1934 the railway line in Vítkovice (operated by the Vítkovice Ironworks company) was also electrified. In the late 1940s and early 1950s the various companies providing tram services in Ostrava were merged to create the Ostrava City Public Transport Corporation (Czech: Dopravní podnik města Ostravy). During the communist era new tram lines were built to link the central parts of the city with the new satellite estates (Poruba) and factories (Nová Huť). After the Velvet Revolution in 1989 most tram-building projects were stopped, though a new section running along Místecká Road was opened in the late 1990s.

Trolleybuses were introduced in 1952, as in other Czech towns and cities after the Second World War. Initially there was one trolleybus route which encircled the city centre. The network was gradually expanded in the 1950s and 60s, replacing the narrow-gauge railways. A route to the Fifejdy housing estate was built in the late 1970s. The last expansion of the trolleybus network came in the mid-1990s, when a route was built out to the suburb of Koblov. 17 tram lines currently operate in Ostrava. There are 52 bus lines and 14 trolleybus lines.[8]

Rail

Ostrava is also a major railway hub, sited on Railway Corridors II and III and serving as an important centre for cargo and passenger transport between the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia. The city's largest railway stations are the main station (Ostrava hl.n) and Ostrava-Svinov. These stations are important railway junctions. The main line linking Ostrava with Olomouc, Pardubice and Prague is served by three railway companies: Czech railways, RegioJet and LEO Express.

Water

There are plans to link the Odra River in Ostrava to the proposed canal connecting the Danube with the Odra (Oder) and Labe (Elbe).[9]

Environment

Ostrava's high concentration of heavy industry created various environmental problems in the city, particularly in relation to air quality. Measurements performed by the Czech Hydrometeorological Institute show that levels of atmospheric benzopyrene and dust particles are among the highest in the country.

The Ostravice River

Although Ostrava still has to contend with environmental issues, the situation has improved over time. In 2015 ArcelorMittal, one of the biggest polluters in the region, implemented 13 major ecological investment projects worth CZK 3 billion. One new installation filters out 61 tonnes of dust per year. The City of Ostrava is also involved in a range of projects focusing on environmental improvements, including a web portal, www.zdravaova.cz, which enables citizens to monitor current air quality indicators, and a project funding short "health breaks" for children from high-risk areas.

One of the most pressing environmental problems currently facing the city concerns the oil lagoons at the site of the former Ostramo chemical plant. In 1996 the Czech government took over the site and drew up plans for a cleanup. The state-owned company Diamo was created to implement these plans. The situation has been the subject of government-level discussions, and Finance Minister Andrej Babiš visited Ostrava in March 2015. The situation is currently under review by the Ministry of Finance, which is drawing up conceptual documentation and will then announce a public tender for the cleanup work.

Air condition in Ostrava is currently very poor, with high concentrations of benzopyrene.[10] The pollution is so serious that it has been described in folklore; local people refer to "Černá Ostrava" (Black Ostrava) and have several songs about it.

Culture

Inside the Antonín Dvořák Theatre

Performing arts

Ostrava has four permanent theatres: the National Moravian-Silesian Theatre (with two permanent venues, the Antonín Dvořák Theatre and the Jiří Myron Theatre), the Petr Bezruč Theatre, the Aréna Chamber Theatre and the Ostrava Puppet Theatre – which hosts the international Spectaculo Interesse festival every odd-numbered year and the Theatre Without Barriers festival every even-numbered year.

Colours of Ostrava

Ostrava is home to the Janáček Philharmonic Orchestra, and hosts a number of international annual or biennial classical music festivals, including Janáček May, the St Wenceslas Music Festival and the Ostrava Days new music festival. Since 2002 Ostrava has been the venue for the annual multi-genre music festival Colours of Ostrava, which features an international line-up of artists and attracts crowds of tens of thousands.

Other cultural events in Ostrava include the film and theatre festivals One World, Ostrava Camera Eye (Czech: Ostrava Kamera Oko), the International Outdoor Films Festival, and the Summer Shakespeare Festival (held on an outdoor stage at the Silesian Ostrava Castle). Folklore festivals include the Harmony (Czech: Souznění) international festival of Advent and Christmas traditions and crafts, Folklore Without Borders, and the Irish Cultural Festival.

Museums and galleries

Ostrava has several museums and galleries:

  • The Ostrava City Museum, a museum located in the 16th-century old city hall building on the main central square, housing permanent exhibitions on the city's history, landscape and people.
  • The Ostrava Science and Technology Centre, an interactive museum about the world of technology aimed at all ages, including simulators for driving a train, flying a plane, or working as a steelworker or an astronaut. The Science and Technology Centre comprises two parts: the Small World of Technology, and the Large World of Technology (14,000 m2), which is divided into four different "worlds" within one building.
  • The Toy Museum, a toy museum including examples from over 60 countries, including some toys from the mid-19th century.
  • The Railway Museum, featuring model trains, and a collection of original documents from the period of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
  • The Brewery Museum, focused on the history and technology of brewing.
  • The Firefighting Museum, housed in an Art Nouveau (Secession) building in the Přívoz district previously used as a fire station. The exhibition includes a video showing firefighting techniques.
  • Keltička's Forge Museum, a permanent exhibition of blacksmithing and coal-mining. The building used to be the home of a blacksmith named Keltička (commemorated in a small memorial outside the building). According to the local legend it was Keltička who first discovered Ostrava's coal deposits. The museum maps the early beginnings of Ostrava's coal mining industry, including a collection of miners' helmets and lamps from the 17th century and a range of other exhibits.
  • The Professor F. Pošepný Geology Pavilion, which includes over 15,000 exhibits of minerals, rocks and fossils.
  • The House of Art (Czech: Dům umění), a gallery of fine art housed in a building from the early 20th century.
  • The PLATO (Ostrava City Gallery), an exhibition space with no permanent collections, which provides a space for exhibitions of contemporary Czech and international art.
  • The Zither Museum, a collection featuring examples of the musical instrument.
  • The Mining Museum at Landek Park, featuring a guided tour of the former Anselm coal mine with a guide who was a miner there, including a descent into a simulated mine tunnel.
  • The Mill Museum, a museum of mills and milling in the Ostrava region.
  • The Michal Colliery museum, a museum in a former coal mine presenting the city's history of mining. The guided tour leads along the same route taken by the miners when they started their shift, but it is not possible for visitors to the museum to go underground. The museum is a National Cultural Monument.
  • Ostrava Planetarium

Other tourist attractions

  • New Town Hall
    Ostrava’s New City Hall (Czech: Nová radnice) has the tallest tower of any city hall in the Czech Republic, with a viewing platform 73 metres above ground providing a panoramic view of the city.
Masaryk Square
Jiráskovo square (Kuří rynek)
  • Comenius Gardens (Czech: Komenského sady) is a park in the city centre named after the Renaissance-era Czech writer and educator Jan Amos Comenius, and the site of a statue honouring the Soviet soldiers who liberated Ostrava in 1945.
  • The Miniuni World of Miniatures, located at the Black Meadow (Černá Louka) exhibition grounds, features miniature versions of famous buildings from around the world, including the Pyramids, Eiffel Tower, and Big Ben.
  • The fairytale clock at Ostrava's Puppet Theatre features figurines which perform a show at two-hour intervals from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. The performance lasts two minutes. It depicts a battle between Kasper the clown and the Grim Reaper, and it also features four other characters – an angel, a king, a queen, and a devil.
  • The Silesian Ostrava Castle, close to Masaryk Square, once stood on higher ground, but over time it has sunk by 16 metres due to mine tunnels collapsing underneath it. The castle is located at the confluence of the Lučina and Ostravice rivers. The castle is the venue for the summer Shakespeare festival, among other events.
  • Stodolní Street is the city's entertainment district, with more than 60 bars, clubs, restaurants and cafés.
  • Masaryk Square (Czech: Masarykovo náměstí) is located in Ostrava's historical centre and has a plague column with a figure of the Virgin Mary (1702) and a Baroque statue of St Florian, the patron saint of firefighters. There is a series of commemorative paving stones that starts outside the Laso shopping mall, as well as the Schönhof building, known as "the house with seven doors", and the Reisz building designed by the Viennese architect Wunibald Deininger.
  • The Karolina Triple Hall (Czech: Trojhalí) is an urban space located next to the Forum Nová Karolina shopping mall. These large historic buildings – formerly part of the Karolina coking plant – have been transformed by the architect Josef Pleskot into a new venue for sports, entertainment and culture.
  • Ostrava Zoo is the second largest zoo in the Czech Republic and home to more than 400 different species of animals. In 2014 a new safari park was built, and in 2015 the zoo opened a new pavilion illustrating the process of evolution.
  • Lower Vítkovice preserves a historic blast furnace and has a glass elevator to the newly built viewing platform at the top, with panoramic views of Ostrava and the surrounding countryside. There are guided tours describing Vítkovice's history. The blast furnace, the former power station, compressor hall and coal mine are open to the public. The former gas holder has been repurposed into a multi-functional hall called the Gong.
  • Ema slag-heap, on the right bank of the Ostravice River, is an artificial hill created by piling up slag, or waste material from coal mines. Its top is 315 metres (1,033 ft) above sea level. It has a subtropical micro-climate because the waste material is still burning deep beneath the surface. White smoke comes out of cracks in the ground. Snow never settles here, and flowers grow all year round. A yellow-marked hiking path leads to the top, from where there are panoramic views of the city.
  • The city has developed a mobile app called The Salomon Code, which helps users learn about Ostrava's history based around the story of Baron Rothschild.

Architecture

Much of Ostrava's architectural heritage is in the city centre, which is a protected heritage zone. The most notable structures in this historic core are theatres, banks, department stores and other public buildings dating from the turn of the 20th century, at the time of Ostrava's greatest boom. The central Masarykovo náměstí (Masaryk Square), named after the first President of Czechoslovakia Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, features the historic old city hall building and a Marian plague column from 1702. Nearby Smetanovo náměstí (Smetana Square) features the Antonín Dvořák Theatre and the Functionalist Knihcentrum bookstore. To the west are a series of grand, imposing bank buildings and the Elektra Palace on Nádražní Street, while to the north is the New City Hall with its landmark viewing tower, overlooking the large open space of Prokešovo náměstí.

The city centre also has two notable religious buildings – the 13th-century Church of St Wenceslas and the Cathedral of the Divine Saviour, the second largest church in Moravia and Czech Silesia. Ostrava's central district contains works by architects including Karel Kotas, Josef Gočár, Ernst Korner and Alexander Graf.

Poruba is a large district of Ostrava in the western part of the conurbation, noted for its distinctive 1950s Socialist realist architecture. Inspired by the grandiose buildings of Soviet cities, Poruba also incorporates historical pastiche features drawing on ancient, Renaissance and Classicist models. The main entrance to the part of Poruba built at this time is through a grand triumphal arch.

The Vítkovice district was for several decades the centre of the local iron and steel industry. The influx of workers led the company to build housing for its employees, plus civic amenities, a town hall and a church. The historic parts of the district are built in the company's distinctive style featuring red-brick façades.

Other districts of the city with a distinctive architectural heritage include Přívoz (with its grand Secession buildings) and the Jubilee housing development (Czech: Jubilejní kolonie) in Hrabůvka, built as a workers' housing complex in the 1920s.

Churches

  • Lutheran Church of Christ (Ostrava)
  • Church of St Anne (Ostrava)
  • Church of St Bartholomew (Ostrava)
  • Church of St Cyril and Methodius (Ostrava-Pustkovec)
  • Church of St John of Nepomuk (Ostrava)
  • Church of St James the Greater (Ostrava-Plesná)
  • Church of St Joseph (Slezská Ostrava)
  • Church of St Joseph (Ostrava)
  • Church of St Catherine (Ostrava)
  • Church of Christ the King (Ostrava)
  • Church of St Nicholas (Ostrava)
  • Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary (Ostrava-Michálkovice)
  • Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary (Ostrava-Třebovice)
  • Church of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary (Ostrava)
  • Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary (Ostrava-Radvanice)
  • Church of the Virgin Mary the Queen (Ostrava)
  • Church of the Virgin Mary the Queen of the Holy Rosary (Ostrava)
  • Church of St Paul (Ostrava)
  • Cathedral of the Divine Saviour (Ostrava)
  • Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary (Ostrava-Přívoz)
  • Church of St Wenceslas (Ostrava)

Education

Heyrovský Secondary Industrial School and High School
VŠB-Technical University of Ostrava
VŠB-Technical University of Ostrava – Ceremonial Hall

Secondary schools

  • 1st International School of Ostrava
  • Diocese High School, Ostrava
  • Episcopal Grammar School
  • EDUCAnet Private High School, Ostrava
  • Hladnov High School
  • Olga Havlová High School
  • Ostrava-Hrabůvka High School
  • Ostrava-Zábřeh High School
  • Janáček Conservatory and High School, Ostrava
  • Pavel Tigrid Foreign Languages High School
  • Matiční High School, Ostrava
  • Business Academy and Higher Social Care Vocational College, Ostrava-Mariánské Hory
  • Business Academy, Ostrava-Poruba
  • Private Business Academy, Ostrava
  • Dana and Emil Zátopek Sports High School
  • Secondary Transport Vocational School and Secondary Apprentice College, Ostrava-Vítkovice
  • Secondary Waldorf Vocational School, Ostrava
  • Secondary Industrial School for Electrical Engineering and Information Technology, Ostrava
  • Heyrovský Secondary Industrial School and High School
  • Secondary Industrial School, Ostrava-Vítkovice
  • Secondary Civil Engineering Industrial School, Ostrava
  • Secondary Electrical Engineering Industrial School, Ostrava
  • Secondary School, Ostrava-Kunčice
  • Prof. Zdeněk Matějček Secondary School
  • Secondary School for Services and Business, Ostrava-Poruba
  • Secondary Catering School, Ostrava-Hrabůvka
  • Secondary Civil Engineering and Timber Processing School, Ostrava
  • Secondary Teleinformatics School, Ostrava
  • Secondary Art School, Ostrava
  • Secondary Gardening School, Ostrava
  • Secondary Health Care School and Higher Health Care Vocational College, Ostrava
  • Vítkovice Secondary Industrial School and High School
  • Wichterle High School

Higher vocational colleges

  • AHOL Higher Vocational College
  • Higher Social Care Vocational College
  • Jan Amos Komenský Higher Vocational College
  • Higher Health Care Vocational College

Universities

Library

  • The Moravian-Silesian Research Library, with a historical and cultural department, is located in the town hall at Prokešovo Square.

Schools teaching in foreign languages

  • 1st International School of Ostrava
  • Ostrčilova Bilingual School
  • Hello s.r.o. – High School, Primary School and Nursery School
  • Monty School – Primary School and Nursery School
  • Hladnov High School and Language School, Slezská Ostrava
  • Pavel Tigrid Foreign Languages High School, Ostrava-Poruba
  • PORG Primary School and High School

Judicial institutions

Ostrava's Regional Court is based in a historic building on the Ostravice embankment (Havlíčkovo nábřeží) in the city centre. Its jurisdiction extends to the whole of the Moravian-Silesian Region. The District Court is based in a new building on U Soudu St. in the Municipal District of Poruba. Its jurisdiction covers the territory of the City of Ostrava. The district courts of Ostrava and Brno are the largest in the country in terms of the number of judges.[13] In addition to these courts Ostrava is also home to regional and district Public Prosecutor's Offices, as well as a branch of the Olomouc-based Supreme Public Prosecutor's Office.

Sport

Vítkovice stadium

Ostrava has several sports clubs in various sports, and has hosted many major national and international sports events. In 2014 the city was one of the European Cities of Sport. Ostrava is home to a number of top-level sports clubs, including FC Baník Ostrava (football), HC Vítkovice Steel (ice hockey), NH Ostrava (basketball), 1. SC WOOW Vítkovice and Remedicum Ostrava (floorball), Arrows Ostrava (baseball and softball), and VK Ostrava (volleyball).

Sports venues in the city include athletics facilities, football pitches and stadiums, ice rinks and ice stadiums, multi-purpose sports halls, tennis courts, squash clubs, indoor and outdoor swimming pools, among others. The most important facilities are operated by the City-owned company SAREZA. The company's outdoor swimming pool in Ostrava-Poruba is the largest facility of its kind in Central Europe.

Ostrava has opportune conditions for cycling, with its generally flat terrain and an extensive network of cycle routes. There are also several popular leisure and recreation areas in the region surrounding Ostrava; the Beskydy and Jeseníky Mountains (about 30 km (19 mi) and 60 km (37 mi) from Ostrava respectively) are popular with skiers in the winter season, and hikers, cyclists and anglers from spring to autumn. A special "cyclebus" shuttles between Ostrava and the Beskydy Mountains from May to September, enabling cyclists to transport their bikes on a special trailer. In the winter there is a similar service for skiers known as the "skibus".

There are also several golf courses in the region, including the Šilheřovice golf club in the grounds of the local château, and courses in Čeladná, Ropice and Ostravice. About 30 km (19 mi) from Ostrava is another golf course in Kravaře.

Ostrava has a long tradition of hosting top-level European and world championships. The Golden Spike international athletics meeting has been held in the city every year since 1961. In 2004 and 2015 Ostrava co-hosted (with Prague) the IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship at the Ostrava Aréna.

Major sporting events to have been hosted in Ostrava include:

  • 1986: Volleyball Women's World Championship
  • 1987: World Weightlifting Championship
  • 1990: Men's Handball World Championship
  • 1992: Bodybuilding European Championship
  • 1993: World Junior Ice Hockey Championship
  • 2001: Men's European Volleyball Championship
  • 2003: UEFA Futsal Championship; World Junior Figure Skating Championship
  • 2004: UEFA Futsal Championship; World Junior Latin Dance Championship; Ice Hockey World Championship
  • 2005: UEFA Futsal Championship; World Latin Dance Championship
  • 2006: Teamgym European Championship; Men's World Bodybuilding Championship
  • 2007: First Round, World Group, Davis Cup; IIAF World Youth Championship in Athletics
  • 2008: Men's World Floorball Championship – group stage
  • 2009: Freestyle Motocross World Championship
  • 2009: U20 European Rugby Championship – Group B
  • 2010: Basketball World Championship for Women
  • 2011: European Athletics U23 Championship
  • 2013: Women's World Floorball Championship
  • 2015: Davis Cup, Ice Hockey World Championship
  • 2018: IAAF Continental Cup Ostrava 2018
  • 2019–2020: 2020 World Junior (U20) Ice Hockey Championship

Notable people

  • Max Winter (1903–1996), original owner of the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League in the US.
  • Jaromír Šindel (born 1959), ice hockey player
  • Ivan Lendl (born 1960), tennis player
  • Petr Mrázek (born 1992), ice hockey player
  • Dieter F. Uchtdorf (born 1940), member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of the Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints

Twin towns – sister cities

Ostrava is twinned with:[14]

Notes

  1. "Population of Municipalities – 1 January 2020". Czech Statistical Office. 30 April 2020.
  2. European Spatial Planning Observation Network (ESPON) Study on Urban Functions Archived 2009-07-28 at the Wayback Machine, p.37.
  3. "Logo of the City of Ostrava". Ostrava.cz. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  4. Ermittlungen in Ostrau eingestellt. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (dpa), 26. November 2010.
  5. "World Weather Information Service – Ostrava". United Nations. Retrieved 21 January 2011.
  6. "Ostrava, Czech Republic Köppen Climate Classification (Weatherbase)". Weatherbase. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  7. "Ostrava, Czech Republic Travel Weather Averages (Weatherbase)". Weatherbase. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  8. "Ostrava Public Transportation Website". DPO. 28 November 2016. Archived from the original on 15 January 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  9. "Pruplavni spojeni dunaj odra labe". Ministerstvo pro místni rozvoy ČR. Archived from the original on 22 January 2008.
  10. http://portal.chmi.cz/files/portal/docs/uoco/isko/grafroc/16groc/gr16cz/png/oIV2-1.png
  11. "Folklorní festival Májová Plesná". Moravskoslezský Kraj.
  12. "Májová Plesná 2015". Statutární město Ostrava.
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 29 May 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. "Mezinárodní vztahy" (in Czech). Statutární město Ostrava. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
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