While the art of turning churches into cafés, libraries or even techno clubs is nothing new within a country such as the Netherlands, Czechs have always been a bit more conservative. This church, however, stands out.
With a bizarre architectural style that stands in contrast to the city's baroque buildings, this former church looks as though it belongs in the Baltics rather than Central Europe. Founding of the church can be traced back to the Germans living in Olomouc (Olmütz). A subset of this community following the Protestant faith had long lacked their own place of worship. The first chance they got was during the formalization of a new Olomouc urban plan, when the old fortress walls were torn down and new plots of land redistributed to its usually wealthy inhabitants.
With the Second World War having come and gone, the Germans were forced out of the city and their church fell into the hands of the Communist authorities. The reformists opted to turn the church into a harbor of knowledge, providing storage for the millions of book owned by the nearby Scientific Library. If one were to wander through the church, he’d be literally sinking underneath tonnes and tonnes of Kant’s, Palacky’s and Voltaire’s.
Recently, the church has provided Olomouc the first glimpse into how the modern and the old can complement each other, turning the shell of the church into a modern 150-seater aula, holding photography expositions and cultural happenings, hosting a small café and providing hourly guides to anyone interested in the structure. For those architecturally and literary inclined among you, this place is easy to fall in love with.