CTP has launched operations at the first phase of CTPark Plzeň Kasárny, completing the initial stage of transforming the former Zátiší barracks in Plzeň into a modern business park.
The redevelopment of the former brownfield property delivers more than 50,000 sqm of commercial space to the region. The business park has secured its first wave of tenants, attracting companies across the healthcare, fitness, automotive, and industrial sectors. Construction on the project is ongoing, with Phase 2 scheduled for completion in summer 2026.
The former Zátiší barracks served as a military base from the 1930s but fell into disrepair after 1989. CTP decided to transform the brownfield into CTPark Plzeň Kasárny, with flexible spaces for manufacturing, research and development, logistics, offices, and showrooms with public-facing facilities and services. The project, designed by Studio Acht led by architect Václav Hlaváček, maintains Plzeň's industrial legacy while applying modern construction methods. The project is targeting Breeam Outstanding certification.
"CTPark Plzeň Kasárny is one of our most interesting projects in the Czech Republic. Besides the revitalisation of the brownfield itself, we are creating a location that merges work, services, and public spaces into a functioning whole," explains Kristýna Dinebierová, a CTP Business Developer in the Czech Republic.
Several clients have already launched operations at CTPark Plzeň Kasárny. Avenier, a leading Czech distributor of vaccines and treatments, opened a distribution centre equipped with the latest technologies to meet the highest standards for pharmaceutical logistics. MITO LIGHT, a Czech technological company specialising in red-light and infrared therapy using LED panels, uses the complex as a warehouse, distribution centre, showroom, and as its corporate headquarters. The list of park tenants also includes German company KRIWAN Group, which develops and manufactures industrial electronic systems.
The project incorporates energy recuperation, green roofs that improve the local microclimate, and solutions to trap and use rainwater. Outdoor spaces offer greenery, water elements, and a connection to a bike path adjacent to the park. The greenery is part of a landscape design by Dutch studio Baljon Landscape Architects. At completion the park will be home to more than 200 mature deciduous trees selected for their resilience to demanding urban climate conditions.