Saturday, 9 May 2026

Communist relics in Prague

No, I'm not talking about someone middle aged whose dad never quite accepted that Stalin wasn't a man of the people. This article is about what's left of Prague under the Communist era. SPOILER: it's not very much. Some of the ideas are mine; some come from other people, especially Mark Baker. I give a verdict on each section as I finish it. As usual, I digress a little on my journey.

Anděl

As you might guess, Anděl metro station in Prague is named after an angel. Like The Angel, Islington (light blue, costs £100), it's named after a pub, in this case U Zlatého Anděla (literally "By The Golden Angel", but that's Czech pubs and restaurants - it's "The Golden Angel"). Photo by Jan Čech from 1972. 



Here's a video of it being blown up to build the station.



You might think that they called the station Anděl after the pub. You'd be wrong. Also, if they had done, I wouldn't be talking about it as a possible relic. They called it Moskevská, after 'friendship with Moscow'. [Conscience: is that all?]

No, it's not all. Like many of Prague's stations, Moskevská/Anděl is double ended. If you use the end nearest the modern shopping centre, as most people do, there are a few artefacts to see which we discuss later. However, at the bus station end, you see a surprise.

























































So we have a station dedicated to the friendship between Moscow and Prague. As ever, Moscow comes first, and we have a station built in the style of the Moscow Metro (more later). However, there is a station in Moscow (still) named Prazhskaya and designed by Czech architects in the style of Metro C.

We do have a disclaimer which justifies the station to keep its original design, as below.














Google translated this for me:














Needless to say, after the fall of Communism, the station was renamed to Anděl. I'm pleased that the history of the station has been preserved, though.

Verdict as a relic: Pass.

Holes in the Wall

[Critic: Ian is talking about ATMs as relics? What?]

What indeed. Not that sort of holes in the wall.

Remember I said that Moskevská had been renamed to Anděl? You won't be surprised to hear that it wasn't the only station be rewarded with/burdened by that fate. In total, 13 stations had different names after the Velvet Revolution. In most places, the new names were shorter than the old ones. Here's Anděl, with its new letters for the station name:

 












And here's Chodov, previously Budovatelů (Builders, but meant as 'the builders of Communism').













Look closely at the wall in each case. Can you see holes? Put your glasses on. Use the zoom on your phone. Squint? Still can't see them? OK, I'll help.





















You can see the holes for the old sign (Chodov) and letters (Anděl).

Verdict as a relic: Pass.

Moscow Stations

Obvious starter for ten: here's a picture of Anděl/Moskevská.











































[Critic: OK, Ian, that's one station designed to look like a station in Moscow.]

OK, critic, here's another. This is Gants Hill on the London Underground.



























It's known as a Moscow station because that's where its designer, Charles Holden, found his inspiration. What strikes me is that it's the only tube station in London where the concourse is between the platforms. Yes, there are (frankly, dangerous) island platforms at Clapham North and Clapham Common, but Gants Hill is the only station on the London Underground which has a functional central concourse.

What does this have to do with Prague? As with most of my digressions, there's a reason for going there, although I may have forgotten what it was when I've completed the digression. On this occasion though, thankfully not.

Nearly all of Prague's metro stations have island platforms. Is this an eastern bloc thing?

There's a relevant fact here. It's colder in Prague than it is in London, but the metro in Prague closes very rarely due to the weather. Why? Almost all of the Prague metro is underground. This makes it easier to build stations like Anděl. It's not so easy and probably more expensive when your station is above ground, and it doesn't happen at small Prague main line stations.

Here's a notable example in Prague, at Vyšehrad, with platforms either side of the track.


































It might have been difficult to build an island platform here - the metro is in the bottom part of the Nusle Bridge.














Going back to the main point, do we see the predominance of island platforms only in the former eastern bloc? Let's go to Vienna. (Critic: you like Vienna, don't you?) Vienna is Central Europe, to the east of Prague geographically, but has always been part of the west politically. What do we see for the station designs?



































Vienna is a mix of island platforms and non-island platforms. 

Verdict as a relic: Fail. But you did see a picture of Gants Hill on the way, so all is good.

Letná

Letná is a park on the top of the hill overlooking the Vltava. You can see a lot of Prague from Letná, as below.


 










At the top of the hill, there is a plinth with a metronome. 


Unsurprisingly given the inclusion in this article, this was not always the case in recent history. 
































HZ, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

One has to suspect that the placement was quite deliberate: look back at what I could see from the plinth where the monument to Stalin was placed. All the people on the ground could look up and see the ghost of Stalin presiding over them. Why 'the ghost'? Stalin was already dead when what became known as 'the meat queue' was completed in 1955.

A year later, the Soviet bloc began to distance itself from the 'man of steel', and the monument was demolished in 1962. As for the metronome, it was completed in 1991. Here's a picture of the metronome from below, for comparison:




















Dennis G. Jarvis, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Verdict on the plinth and supporting walls as relics: Pass.

Žižkov Television Tower

Here's a picture of the Žižkov Television Tower taken recently:



























Zoom in to see the babies climbing the tower. These are Babies by David Černý. They were first here in 2000, and are now a permanent part of the tower. They don't exist exclusively on the tower: here's a picture of one of the triplets at the Kampa Art Gallery:


























Even with the babies (or perhaps because of them, depending on your opinion of the babies close up, the tower was reported as the second ugliest building in the world (see here: in Czech, but your browser should translate). However, the addition of the babies was generally believed by locals to make the tower less ugly.

My first thought when seeing the TV Tower as a suggestion for a relic was 'but there are telecommunication towers in lots of places'. I've been up two others - in Berlin and Toronto. My grandparents went up the GPO Tower in the early 1970s, but by the time I lived in London (the mid-1990s), the tower had been closed to tourists for over a decade. This is the same grandmother that I caused to swear for possibly the only time in her life by visiting Norway. I called her on the telephone.

Nan: "Where are you?"
Ian: "Oslo."
Nan: "I pronounce it 'Ounslow."
Ian: "No Nan. Oslo. In Norway."
Nan: "Oh bloody hell."

But I digress. Let's look at some cities, and when their telecommunication towers were opened.
















Prague 1992? You mean after the fall of the Berlin Wall? [Conscience: calm down, Ian. It was planned during the Communist era.]

Seriously though. It's not a Communist thing, with earlier towers than Moscow opening in Stuttgart and London. In other words, if this is a Communist relic, then so is half of Western Europe. [With apologies to Ian Hislop.]

Verdict as a relic: Fail.

Cosmonauts at Háje

As Anděl emerged from Moskevská, Háje emerged from Kosmonautů. A lot of Praguers will have heard of Háje without ever having been there, as it's the south eastern terminus of the 'C' metro line. Why name a station after cosmonauts? An example of reminding the Central Europeans of Soviet superiority? While Stalin in Letná may well have been just that, this 1979 statue outside Háje station by Jan Bartoš represents Czech cosmonaut Vladimír Remek and Russian cosmonaut Alexey Gubarev, who went into space together on Soyuz 28 in March 1978. The station opened soon after the statue was unveiled.

What strikes me here is that there's nothing on the plinth describing what the statue is. You will not be surprised to know that was not ever thus, and the original text laid praise to the Soviet and Czechoslovak cosmonauts (in that order, as noted previously). 

What's interesting though is that neither I, Google nor a number of AI engines could find a picture of the original text. That's not to say that one doesn't exist, simply that if it does, it's somewhat elusive. 

So why not simply remove the statue? I refer the honourable ladies and gentlemen to a statement I made some lines ago - a lot of Praguers will have heard of Háje without ever having been there, as it's the south eastern terminus of the 'C' metro line. This is very different to being watched by Stalin from Letná, or by Lenin on the way to the airport. 






Verdict as a relic: Pass.

Housing Estates

I spent all the time I was writing this article, which was far too long, resisting the inclusion of housing estates. It was only when I was passing this estate in Bratislava when I decided to have another look at it.









Here's a similar Prague estate.









The reason for my reticence in including housing estates was that Western countries had social housing too. Here's Trellick Tower, in West London.

Trellick Tower front view (colour brightness adjust)

Ethan Nunn, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

You may know Trellick Tower better from its use by Channel 4, with the / and - of the 4 joining the lift shaft. Although I can't find an example. Did I dream it?

The difference is that the estates in Prague and Bratislava aren't social housing. It was where people lived, because the state said so. So today, these places aren't threatening, in the way something equivalent might feel to outsiders in the west. They're just a part of living here, and house a range of different types of people.

The only equivalent in terms of planning I can think of in the UK is Thamesmead. It's part of south-east London you can't get to by Tube or the DLR, and therein lie many of its issues. It was built as a community for everyone, but with the building quality being frankly awful, and the DLR being promised only now, 60 years too late, no wonder it didn't live up to what it was meant to be.

Never seen Thamesmead? I suspect you have. Here's a scene from 'A Clockwork Orange' filmed in Thamesmead.  

Verdict as a relic: Pass.

Postscript: Prazhskaya 

Prazhskaya station in Moscow retains its original name. This is what the station looks like:












Antares 610, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

It feels to me a bit like going to work - here's my picture of Chodov station on Metro C:




















So we sell Prague by emulating a station in the suburbs a lot of Praguers would rarely visit? Strange. Here's two better choices from the city centre on Metro A:
















But, strangely, Prazhskaya can be recognised as 1980s Prague, so qualifies as a relic, if not of Prague.

Conclusion

I could have taken you to the statue of Lenin in West Prague, but there's nothing there. Of the old metro station names, only the holes remain other than at Anděl. What's left of Communism in Prague? Not a lot. It disappeared quietly.