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The Town Hall, built between 1854 and 1858, accommodated not only the city council and the mayor’s office but also the Grand Hotel of Sepsiszentgyörgy, a hotel and casino, as well as elegant shops
The organization of the public cemetery became an important municipal task following the First World War.
Károly Kós prepared designs not only for the already completed “rooster church” but also for the parsonage and the residences of the church employees.
This two-storey villa, located in one of Cluj’s garden suburbs, is distinguished by the unusual undulating profile of its main façade.
The L-shaped, single-storey small school was planned to be located behind the “rooster church” designed by Károly Kós.
László Debreczeni, Transylvanian art historian and architect, wrote the following about the project:
The small wooden bell tower rests on four robust rubble-stone pillars set into the wall of the ancient earthwork fortification, near the Gothic monastic church of Kolozsmonostor, today part of the
This small church shows many parallels with Kós’s drawing entitled Hungarian Church in Kalotaszeg, published in Old Kalotaszeg.
Near Kászonjakabfalva, on the gently rising, pine-covered slope of an isolated valley, this two-storey stone-and-timber house was built over a mineral-water spring and carefully composed into the s
During the 1920s, Kós designed numerous small villas similar to the Csulak Villa.
Above Cluj, on the “Felek ridge,” lies the village of Felek, an old Romanian settlement of historical character.
Workers’ housing was constructed in several parts of the city. For example, along the main thoroughfare at the northern edge of the city, five single-storey workers’ dwellings were built.