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Main Prague pedestrian streets - Czech Republic 4k Walk ???????? HDR ASMR


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In today's Czech Republic 4k Walk, we will move through the main Prague pedestrian streets. We will start on the Vltava embankment, near the National Theatre, walk along Národní Street, and here are these streets: 28. Října and Na Příkopě.

28. října Street in the Old Town of Prague connects the intersection of Jungmannova, Národní, and Perlová streets with Wenceslas Square. It is named in honor of October 28, 1918, when the first Czechoslovak Republic was established. There are 3 entrances to the Můstek metro station. On the corner with Na, Můstku Street is a four-story Baroque building dating from the second half of the 14th century, the oldest house on Wenceslas Square.
In the Middle Ages, there were walls and a moat around the street, and after the demolition of the walls, "Ovocná Street" was established in the 19th century. It was given its current name in the 20th century.
https://goo.gl/maps/2EXhw2cLCfpx4v9g6

Na příkopě ("On the moat") is a street in the center of Prague, Czech Republic, connecting Wenceslas Square with Republic Square. It separates the Old Town from the New Town. It is a place of representative buildings, including the headquarters of the Czech National Bank, old palaces, and luxurious shops.
Na Příkopě street leads to the site of the former 10-meter-wide and 8-meter-deep moat from 1234, which led along the medieval walls of the Old Town. Water flowed directly from the Vltava river, and the Old Town formed a closed island when the moat was filled. The moat was covered in 1760. After coating, chestnut trees were planted here, and the street was named Ve starých alejích (In old alleys). From 1845-70 the street was named Kolowratská třída, and since 1871 bears the name Na Příkopě. Because it was one of the few vast streets in Prague, it soon became a traffic artery. In 1875, the first line of the Prague horse-drawn tram was elected here in 1899. In 1919, Můstek became the first intersection in Prague controlled by a traffic policeman. In 1927, then the second intersection with the light signaling[4] (the first being the Hybernská-Dlážděná-Havlíčkova intersection). In the 1960s, traffic jams were getting worse. However, in 1978 the metro station was opened at Můstek, and Line B followed the street from 1985 for almost its entire length to Republic Square. A nearly century-old tram line was canceled in 1985, and the bustling urban street turned into a pedestrian zone. On the road appeared many new stores, and it became an important business center of the Prague promenade.
https://goo.gl/maps/PKaa2C5hZb54s6Uw7

Recorded in 4k 60fps HDR
Perception Philosophy © 2022
July 15, 2022
Czech Republic ASMR
Category
HOTELS PORTUGAL
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