The most important theme of the project was to formally turn to Bělohorská Street, and in turn open up to the park. The house has a very urban attitude towards Bělohorská Street. Bělohorská Street is significant as a series of stacked hospital palaces, modernist apartment buildings, and finally the Pyramid Hotel. The proposed housing is to become another in a series of palaces. The palaces are significant for their horizontal composing. This signifies the importance of the function of the individual houses. For an ordinary apartment building this palace-like expression would be inadequate. However, this is a mixed-function house, and it is the premises describing the facade of Bělohorská Street that are accessible to the general public. The proposal certainly responds urbanistically and expressively to the Pyramid Hotel opposite. Thus, rather than simply being a quality solution to the site, it perhaps sets a higher ambition to integrate the Pyramid Hotel into its context. Just because we don't like it doesn't mean we should ignore it. "Right or wrong, it is your Pyramida". The Pyramid Hotel creates unnecessary non-urban space in front of it. The proposal attempts to balance the proportions of this space by addressing it with its tallest seven storey façade. This creates a trio of tall buildings that between them define a new space or plaza. The Pyramida Hotel, the tower apartment building at the corner of Bělohorská and Pod Královkou Streets, and the housing for the elderly designed by me. The proposal thus becomes the antithesis of the Pyramida Hotel, and thus an imaginary gateway to Břevnov.
The house, on the other hand, opens up towards the Dlabačov Park. This is not only because of the views and contact with nature, but rather because I perceive a certain picturesque or softness of the place at the southern entrance to the plot. Thus, the house has the ambition to be a soft extension of the park rather than its hard end. It is a semi-open block , the footprint of the house resembles a U. The last side that closes the block I understand as a row of existing mature trees. The centre of the block and also one motif of the opening is the existing steel staircase, which both dominates the courtyard but is also integrated into the house by extending and passing through the house via a long horse staircase connected to Bělohorská Street. The design retains the existing tram turntable line. The tram bypasses the central part of the house, which is therefore designed to be the most bulky. The two side wings are carried on columns. At the intersection of Za Strahovem and Šlikova Streets, the house does not form a corner, but is slightly angled towards the existing mature trees. It creates a mint informal clay plaza. Similarly, the house behaves on the corner of Gymnastická and Bělohorská streets, where it allows the valuable existing beech tree to stand out and thus also creates a space in front of the house, specifically in front of the supermarket at this location.
The solution of the street profile of Bělohorská Street is based on the current study.