No substantial development has taken place in the Brdy mountains since 1925. The lack of man-made changes has left the local flora and fauna to flourish undisturbed. The national forestry company (České lesy) was responsible for maintaining large areas of the mountains, and still is in the central parts, while northern areas have seen
restitution to legal ownership. There are several major roads running across the mountains, some of them restricted to vehicles with valid military or forestry permits. There are a few buildings remaining in these mountains, usually in lateral areas or at the most elevated points. As well as several hunting lodges, used by prominent visitors, hunters and forestry workers, these facilities include: • a
Cold War military bunker, turned into an Atomic Weapons Museum. • the 194 m tall Cukrák transmitter, a
broadcasting and transmitting tower on the hill Cukrák, close to
Prague. • , a
baroque chapel of Mary Magdalene and
monastery on the cliff above the town of
Mníšek pod Brdy. • an abandoned
Surface-to-Air Missile S-200 (
SA-5 Gammon) base known as Klondajk, with three long-range SAM launchers spread over several square kilometers near the town of
Dobříš. • a
geodetic tower 638 m above sea level at Studený Vrch, near
Hostomice pod Brdy, formerly used for military exercises, and currently under the ownership of the
Czech Tourist Club. • a Czech
air traffic control radar complex, 683 m above sea level on the hill Písek, near
Jince. • a
Meteorological radar belonging to the
Czech Hydrometeorological Institute (CHMI), 862 m above sea level on Praha mountain, monitoring precipitation over Bohemia. This radar is a part of the European
NEXRAD network. • a prototype concrete
bunker, built in the 1930s at one of the shooting grounds to test weapon efficiency and bunker design, later featured in the Czech film
The Elementary School. • a monument to prominent local forester and administrator Gangloff, near Třemšín pod Brdy. ==Potential future developments==