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This building provides a compact and highly practical example of a residential house situated in a small-town environment—particularly when compared with Sztána and Kászonjakabfalva—and constructed
The building is located at the northern edge of the village, along the main road. It represents the renovation and modification of an existing rural wooden church.
The design of the parsonage is almost identical to the 1926 plans of the Hincz House, published in Erdélyi Helikon in 1928.
The two-storey school building stands on a quiet street in the city centre.
Like the Csulak Villa in Sepsiszentgyörgy, the Imre Villa translates the English house into the stylistic language characteristic of Kós’s work already before 1914.
Kós’s original sketch design of 1929 represents a clear and highly stylized synthesis of his earlier architectural ideas.
Károly Kós submitted the first version of the design to the client on 28 February 1928.
The small school building with the teacher’s residence resembles the design of the same type published in The Art of the Dwelling House.
The building, originally intended as a dance hall, also functioned as a cinema. It is largely single-storey, with a rectangular ground plan oriented perpendicular to the street.
In January 1933, the young Unitarian congregation of Brașov approached Károly Kós through the mediation of Kálmán Kovács, a teacher from Cluj, regarding the design of a new church.
On the slope above Varjúvár, a detached studio-farmstead was built in the mid-1930s.
The small chapel, conceived with a timber-beam structure and a shingled roof, would have stood on a stone plinth.