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The Exhibition Hall (Műcsarnok) project was presented as part of the 1930 exhibition of Transylvanian artists. In this case, the architect acted simultaneously as client and designer.
This simple terraced house, containing identical apartments on two levels, was designed to accommodate teachers of the local college.
This exceptionally important villa, built almost entirely of solid log construction, was tragically destroyed by fire in 1986.
After 1919, the student population of the Székely Mikó College increased significantly, making the conversion of the gymnasium a necessity.
Kós’s competition entry for the commercial school organised the building on three levels, using a strictly rectangular ground plan oriented perpendicular to the street.
From the mid-1930s onward, rural and agricultural architecture became the central focus of Kós’s work, followed in the 1940s and 1950s by his teaching activity at the agricultural school in Cluj an
Based on the surviving drawings, this large-scale building on the plot at 23 King Matthias Square, a site characteristic of Cluj’s historic urban core.
The buildings designed for the small Kalotaszeg community respond directly to local needs and economic possibilities.
Kós Károly’s original design is striking in that the building simultaneously presents two contrasting façades: an asymmetrical eastern front characteristic of his work, and a symmetrical western fa
The single-storey building standing in the garden behind the Calvinist girls’ secondary school (1926) contained dormitory rooms, a small basement, and a tower room, which most likely served as a re
The collection of artefacts that would form the basis of the Kalotaszeg Museum began in 1933, comprising 678 objects with a total value exceeding 100,000 lei.