Czech Streets 7 Updated (BEST ✧)
The new update introduces clickable POIs. As you navigate, you can interact with:
This turns a passive viewing experience into an educational journey. czech streets 7 updated
Brno has aggressively expanded its “obytné zóny” (residential zones with walking pace limits). Czech Streets 7 Updated adds 45 new residential zones across Žabovřesky and Královo Pole. These zones are often poorly signed in the real world, but the updated digital map now color-codes them in light green, warning drivers of the mandatory 20 km/h limit and ambiguous right-of-way rules. The new update introduces clickable POIs
Additionally, the long-awaited completion of the Velký městský okruh (Great City Ring Road) phase 4 is now fully integrated. This changes traffic flow from the S1 to the D1 bypass, reducing the need to cut through city center streets. This turns a passive viewing experience into an
The “Czech Streets” series began in 2019 as a modest photo‑journalism project that set out to capture the everyday pulse of the Czech Republic’s urban landscape. From the bustling boulevards of Prague to the quieter alleys of Brno, each installment has aimed to:
Over the past seven years we’ve published six volumes, each one bigger, bolder, and richer than the last. And now—Czech Streets 7—the most ambitious update yet—has finally dropped.