The reconstruction of U Myšáka cost CZK 30 million. (KRISTINA ALDA)
On the weekend I went to check out the recently reconstructed, eagerly anticipated U Myšáka sweetshop on Vodičkova, which reopened after more than 20 years of disrepair. What a disappointment.
Architect Jan Špaček’s reconstruction of Prague’s most famous cukrárna can be easily summarized in three words: kitsch, kitsch, kitsch.
What had once been a cozy but dignified space – period photographs depict art deco details, low-lit nooks, and comfortable couches – is now a muddled mess that is perhaps trying to be hip. It is certainly trying to be something.
Walking through the reconstructed interior is like following someone’s good intentions go awry. Things start out promisingly enough when you enter through the pressed copper door, which is one of the few original details left. Dark wood paneling lines the walls in the front part of the room (reconstructed originals), marble ledges with rounded corners run along the walls, and the floor – also original – is polished and gleaming with a jaunty but subdued geometrical pattern.
I couldn’t stop wondering what happened, as I made my way up the shop’s marble staircase (also original). Had the project run out of money? Did the design team suddenly decide to go on an acid binge? Was everyone in on some joke I wasn’t getting?
Things were even worse in the cafe upstairs: more of those cardboard-cutout chandeliers, garish swirly-patterned black and white wallpaper and large-scale period photos showing what the rooms used to look like. Rather than helping establish a connection to the original interior, the photos show how poorly the reconstruction efforts did at recreating the atmosphere of the old cafe.
Špaček, who is also responsible for the reconstruction of Cafe Slavia, was perhaps aiming for a whimsical effect, using bold patterns, high-contrast tones and exaggerated shapes. But the result is cheaply theatrical rather than playful, and yet, at over CZK 30 million, the reconstruction was anything but cheap.
If only the result was modern or, better yet, timeless. But it looks as dated as a late 90s Britney Spears music video. Unlike Britney, it could make your eyeballs hurt.
This doesn’t mean that U Myšáka is not worth a visit. The cakes and sundaes on offer here are by all accounts delicious. But maybe bring along a blindfold.