The Local Development Ministry, which in 2005 supported Prague Hall's decision on the road widening, has to deal with it again as a result of the court verdict.In August, the UNESCO committee for world heritage recommended to Prague that the two high-rise buildings planned in Pankrac be lower than what the investor plans.A number of local civic associations have opposed the project and UNESCO has even warned the Czech Republic that by permitting the skyscrapers' construction it runs the risk of Prague being deleted from the world heritage list.According to Marie Janouskova from the Civic Initiative in Pankrac, another group opposed to the planned skyscrapers, the Hungary apologises for occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1968 ...
UNESCO recommends that planned skyscrapers in Prague be lower ...
UNESCO praises Prague for care of its historic core ...
UNESCO to Revise List of World Heritage Sites ... investor, the ECM company, will have to rework the whole project or give it up now."Neither the skyscrapers nor other buildings planned in Pankrac can gain the zoning or construction permit.
Under the construction law, it is impossible to permit a construction of a building without the related transport conditions being settled," Janouskova said.ECM recently told CTK that if it were forced to reduce the planned buildings' height, this would cause complications to it. In the higher of the two buildings, more than a hundred luxurious flats have been booked already. The other building is to be a hotel, ECM spokeswoman said.The court banned the road widening in reaction to a complaint from Arnika, an environmentalist association, which called it a breakthrough verdict today.Arnika says it is impossible to widen the roads in Pankrac in a situation where the existing roads exceed the limits in terms of exhalations and noise.
(Ceske Noviny)
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