Construction of a hydroelectric station on the river Váh represented one of the greatest public-works projects of interwar Czechoslovakia, as well as one of the first instances in which an architect was invited to collaborate in a predominantly technical work. It is likely that the influence of Merganc has made the power station the intriguing work of architecture that it is, particularly the Constructivist towers of the two fascines, as well as the building of the generator and the adjoining distribution block in Ladce. In its simplicity and strict functional determination, the architectural design is, despite its utilitarian purpose, a uniquely poetic technical work. The channel-based hydroelectric system uses two Kaplan turbines and requires around four minutes for closure. As one of the oldest power stations on the Váh, it is now a registered technical heritage site.
Bibliography:
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SMRČEK, F.: Stavba kanálu na Váhu. Praha, SNTL 1958.
AMBROŽ, Václav: Vodné diela na Slovensku. Poznámky o ich architektúre a začlenení do krajiny. Projekt 20, 1978, 1, s. 14 – 17.
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