That is almost 72,000 sqm of a plot, designated for development and subsequently to
■ live in family houses with a garden,
■ living in apartments with parking,
■ working in business/office spaces with parking,
■ and live & relax in in a beautiful of the OBORA forest park.
The village of Radeč used to stand in the place of today’s Obora, from which came the prominent peasant Radečskys family from Radeč. The fortress is explicitly mentioned here only in 1581. In 1623 Radislav Albrecht of Wallenstein bought the court and the village and founded an extensive field for stallion breeding on the lands belonging to Radeč. The fortress was turned into a farm building, belonging to the stud farm as part of the yard. After the confiscation of the estates of Albrecht of Wallenstein, the game reserve near Radeč was donated to the Emperor Ferdinand III. The Habsburgs owned the game reserve until 1824. During the building modifications at the end of the 17th century, a simple one-storey Baroque chateau, the seat of the estate’s officials, was perhaps built on the site of the original Radeč fortress. During the 17th century, the original name of the village Radeč fell into oblivion and was replaced by a new name Obora. In 1824, Josef Dresler, a Prague businessman, bought Obora. He had the castle repaired and rebuilt, and the building received an Empire-style façade on the main frontage.
In 1893, the chateau was bought by the factory owner Mr. Konrád Blaschke from Josef Dresler’s descendants. During the 1890s, he had the courtyard and the chateau modernized. In 1926, the court and the chateau were bought by Mr. Josef Horák, and in 1948 it fell as a confiscation to the Czechoslovak state. An agricultural school was later established in the chateau and the adjacent courtyard. After its abolition in the mid-1970s, the chateau and the courtyard were taken over by the Hořice State Farm and the chateau was used for residential purposes. In the 1990s, the farm was returned to Mr. Horák’s descendants, and due to the poor technical conditions of the property, an officially ordered demolition was carried out. Thus, the architectural monument, reminiscent of the glory of the local stud farm, disappeared.
The current owner, a descendant of Mr. Horák, influenced by the strong history and genius of the Obory loci, decided to get rid of the rubble of the original buildings and create a new history of this exceptional location. In cooperation with the architectural office, they created a vision of the CHOMUTICE OBORA opportunity in the form of the elaboration of a zoning study, which is printed in the zoning plan, and a feasibility study.
The demolition works are almost complete, and the land of OBORY CHOMUTICE is therefore ready for purchase by an investor, developer or construction company, for subsequent construction.