Husovice

Originally, it was a landowner's village, whose land soon began to come into the possession of the Brno townspeople, the nobility, and the church.

Around the middle of the 19th century, the village's rapid growth began, which led to the expansion of local buildings along all existing roads.

On the one hand, it is low-lying and, with some exceptions, flat southern part with a very dense regular urban development, in which there is the local Church of the Sacred Heart of the Lord, the trolleybus depot of the Public Transport Company of the City of Brno and the art nouveau building of the local Sokol in Dukelská Street, as well as several smaller shops.

The northernmost part of today's Husovice is represented by multi-story apartment buildings with flat roofs on the eastern side of Soběšická Street.

In addition to the Church mentioned above of the Sacred Heart of the Lord, the following buildings were declared cultural monuments: the Svatoboj theater on Cacovická Street, the burgher's house No.

In Husovice, there is a Roman Catholic parish established on January 1, 1911, and a congregation of the Evangelical Church of the Czech Brethren, which has its prayer room on Netušilová Street.

5, the now-defunct Baptist congregation had its prayer room,[7] between 1984 and 2015 the space was used by the religious community of the Czechoslovak Hussite Church.