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Hostel Mitte (German center) is housed in a historic house built in 1659 in the center of Brno on Panska Street No. 11, in one of the few buildings that was not affected by extensive redevelopment in the late nineteenth century, during which the center was rebuilt and most older houses demolished. Apartments Mitte is housed in a historic house on Panska Street No. 7. The reception for Apartments and Hostel can be found in house number 7. The house of the Mitte hostel stands on the Renaissance foundations of the original burgher house from 1588, the main mass of the building dates from the Baroque reconstruction in 1659, its current appearance is the result of reconstruction and modernization from 2011. In Brno, originally a provincial Central European city, which was part of Austria-Hungary, the influences of the Czech, German and Jewish communities have always mixed. This was the end of the Second World War and today Brno is a Czech city, the second largest in terms of size (400,000 inhabitants). You have a minute to walk to the store, two minutes to the cinema, three minutes to the pub, four minutes to the main square, five minutes to the train and six minutes to the park. We have rooms named after people and events that have left an unforgettable literary, artistic, scientific or political mark in our region. Austerlitz, Tugendhat, Janacek, Godel, Kundera, Parnas, Haas, Fuchs, Ticho, Mucha, Kaplan. You can choose from a single room to a six-bed room, from the second floor to the fifth. At seven tables you can sit and refresh yourself in our small cafe, from where you can watch the bustle in the middle of today's Brno, in the living room with equipped kitchen you can plan visits to interesting places in Brno and the surrounding area. When you've had enough, you have a place to lay your head. The reception is open every day from 8.00 to 22.00, the cafe every day from 8.00 to 21.00, except Sunday when it is open from 9.00 to 20.00. Check out is set for eleven o'clock in the morning, when churches in Brno still strike at noon. He does so in memory of the legend in which the city defended itself against the siege of Swedish troops in 1645. Swedish General Thorstenson then declared that if he did not reach the city by noon, he would withdraw. However, this report was not kept secret from the exhausted defenders of the city, for whom every hour was good .