Where is ceska lipa




















It is the district seat and the largest city of the district in the Liberec Region. Together with Liberec, it is a part of the Nisa Euroregion. Education is offered by several local high schools. Several sports facilities for entertainment were recently built and others renovated. The modern urban development of the city was influenced by industrial production and uranium mining in the region.

Residential neighborhoods consisting of prefab housing in large were built on the outskirts while the city center was preserved and enunciated as an urban heritage zone.

Home to pretty treasures, Ceska Lipa is Czech Republic's best kept secret. The nearest major city to Ceska Lipa is Prague. Moreover, Ceska Lipa hotel map is available where all hotels in Ceska Lipa are marked. You can easily choose your hotel by location. Many photos and unbiased Ceska Lipa hotel reviews written by real guests are provided to help you make your booking decision.

Luxury hotels including 5 star hotels and 4 star hotels and cheap Ceska Lipa hotels with best discount rates and up-to-date hotel deals are both available in separate lists.

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No middlemen. No added fees. The majority of the inhabitants of the town, situated close to the German border, were of German nationality and most of them were expelled when the war ended:. Following the year , the city was fast resettled.

There were 12 people in the s and 17 people at the end of s. From the previous number of inhabitants, which was 12 , only 1 had Czech nationality and most of them came during the First Republic. Almost all of the German inhabitants were expelled, unlike in the nearby cities of Novy Bor and Kamenicky Senov, which allowed glass manufacturers to stay.

Just like in the other re-settled regions of Czechoslovakia, the newly arrived inhabitants of Ceska Lipa came in search of work and had no emotional attachment to the place.

The town started to decline. But the biggest change was yet to come: in the s the Czechoslovak government decided to launch uranium mining in the nearby region of Ralsko. Ladislav Smejkal again:. The towns of Liberec and Ceska Lipa were chosen to accommodate the new work-force that came to the region from all over the country. We can still hear people speaking all the various Czech and Slovak dialects here in Ceska Lipa. In a very short time, the number of inhabitants rose from 17, to almost 40, To accommodate the large numbers of new-comers, vast housing estates cropped up all around the city's historical centre during the s and 80s and blotted its unique view of the surrounding hills.

Moreover, the development of infrastructure lagged behind and there weren't enough restaurants, shops or leisure centres. Many of the historical houses in the city's centre were pulled down at the time, a trend which continued up until the early s. A large part of the water castle suffered the same fate:. It was one of the first buildings to be blown up. Unfortunately that's how it ended and we are lucky that at least part of it survived, unlike other buildings, such as the two mills or the so-called Venice of Ceska Lipa - a picturesque quarter built on an island and surrounded by water.

Huge shopping centres, which were called Prior and Uran at the time - were erected on the free space. Large supermarkets built in place of the historical buildings, often right in the main square, is a typical feature of communist architecture.



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