Josef Danda (2 January 1906 â 15 March 1999) was a Czech architect. He was a specialist in railway construction and one of the authors of the Praha hlavnànádraà ¾ÃÂ, the most important railway station in the Czech Republic.
Danda was born on 2 January 1906 in KoleÃÂ. He graduated from the Faculty of Architecture in the Czech Technical University in Prague, then went through an internship at several important studios. He also worked for a time in Paris with Le Corbusier and devoted most of his professional career to designs for transport, especially railway buildings.
After the Second World War, he became the most important expert on railway architecture in Czechoslovakia.
In the 1930s, he designed the functionalist railway station in Teplice nad BeÃÂvou, he created the station building in Tà Âinec in 1957. In 1958, in cooperation with Karel à Âepa, he designed the Pardubice main railway station (from protected as a monument in 1987), interpreted today as the last wave of pre-war functionalism. He designed the station building in Klatovy in 1959.
Between 1956 and 1962, he became the author of the new construction of the Cheb railway station. The building was built on the site of the bombed-out original Art Nouveau building as a distinct vertical following the pre-war functionalism influenced by the contemporary , inspired by the Expo 58 exhibition in Brussels (two mosaics in the hall by Jaroslav Moravec, stained glass entrance by ZdenÃÂk Holub and a metal sculpture by Jaroslav à  ajn on the façade of the building). The new Chebská nádraà ¾Ã was created, in addition to transport needs, also as a showcase of socialism on our western border, despite this, its top-notch architecture is an ornament and a defining urban element to the present day.
In the 1960s, he designed the station in VÃÂtkovice (1967), in 1968 the station building in Lovosice and the interior of the station in Most.
In the years 1972âÂÂ1979, a new check-in hall of the Prague Central Station was built. He was its co-author alongside Jan BoÃÂan and Alena and Jan à  rámek.
He died on 15 March 1999 in Prague-HornÃÂ PoÃÂernice, at the age of 93. He was buried at the .