KARPUCHINA GALLERY

About the Project

Designing a contemporary art gallery with young artists and curators in the historic centre of Prague is, for many architects—especially those just starting out—a dream project. To create open, pure spaces for expressive art. To let go of ambition, suppress ego, and simply provide a backdrop for contemporary works.

Clean walls and the original floor sealed with a layer of resin that reflects light—or paintings. At the opening, one of our professors from university came and said: “It’s crooked and slippery.” That might best sum up the entire project. Its beauty lies in the fact that it’s a reconstruction, and the gallery spaces must adapt to the existing building. The only new walls are freestanding exhibition panels in the basement. The gallerist gave us full creative freedom—our only limitations were time and budget. That allowed us to leave plaster exposed, retain the original floors, and focus entirely on the space. And from a spatial point of view, there was one key challenge: getting a 2×2 metre painting into the basement storage. On a limited budget, most of the funds were allocated to this very task. A new door—the only intervention to the façade—acts not just as a visual feature but as the first “threshold” the artwork must cross.

Technical information
  • + Staré Město, Prague 1

  • + Study: 2019/2020

  • + Realisation: 2020/2021

  • + Area: 230 m²

  • + Authors: Ing. arch. Petra Ciencialová, Ing. arch. Kateřina Průchová

  • + Photo: Radek Úlehla

+ Realisation

The Karpuchina Gallery renovation was named one of the 50 best projects in the 2022 Grand Prix of Architects.

Inside, we widened the passage to the staircase so the painting could be “turned” and face the next challenge: the stairs. Narrow and doglegged, with awkward soffits and sudden corners, the stair posed a real problem. That’s why another “opening” was introduced—this one being the only significant cut into the load-bearing structure. It serves a dual purpose: enabling the transport of large artworks and bringing natural light from the upper floor into the exhibition basement. The painting made it. The final obstacle? A low door into the storage room. To solve this, we designed a narrow trench in the floor, covered by an open metal grate. The artwork has reached its place—passed through all the hurdles—and now simply waits for its new owner.

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