All architecture for Batadorp was provided by Moravian
architects from Zlín. The houses were built in standardized models of several
types. The houses in Best were most likely designed by Antonín Vitek and J.
Polácek and were possibly adjusted to suit the specific situation by
Rossmanith. The style of building is rational and modernist with frugal facades
and a square plasticity in the spirit of Functionalism. The different types vary
in details. All houses can be characterized as: a cubist treatment of the
whole, flat roofs with a pronounced wide trim, symmetrical facades and the use
of reddish brown brick. The houses do not follow the garden city esthetic and
make no reference to local vernacular architecture.
One of the old factory building,
now Bata Industrials, that flank the factory village on the eastside.
The buildings do not conform to
the English garden city esthetic. This is fairly typical of factory villages in
Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium. The Unwinesk vernacular esthetic wasn't
by default used for the buildings, although winding streets and the use of
closes is prevalent. The planned closes of Batapolis were never executed, but
there are two curved streets present in Batadorp.
Apart from the semidetached
houses for the labourers the Batapolis concept also included houses for middle
management and large villas for the higher echelons. Here one of the large freestanding
houses built for management in a modernist
style (so-called brick cubism). All buildings are built in the same style with
variations in details.
Batadorp is a very recognizable
factory village. All buildings were designed along the same principles with
varying details in the doors and additions such as circular windows, a bench
next to the front door and the size and shape of the canopy ledges (luifel)
above the front door.
The typical flat roofed workers
houses are constructed of brick. Modernism in the Netherlands is not joined to
a Bauhaus esthetic. It is more typically concerned with providing better and
more user friendly dwellings with the latest amenities such as a fitted
kitchen, an indoor toilet, running water, a window that opens in every room, a
boiler, etcetera.
The 1980s buildings contrast
sharply with the older houses. They have pitched roofs and are arranged in
often long rows of adjoined houses (i.e. not a terrace as such, but houses
linked by the garage or a side extension; this is a very common model in the
Netherlands).
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