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'Although the Pheasant House was modelled upon its counterpart in the Berlin zoo, our own architects have followed their Hungarian inspirations in choosing a style from the home country of wood
The Church Construction Committee that was formed in 1883 in this town on the Danube north of Budapest originally commissioned László Gyalus to design their new Catholic church.
'...in the corner we find the somewhat lower Ostrich House, with its lively colours and the surrounding runs, suitably spacious for these enormous birds.
“And then in autumn (1913), I obtained my most significant architectural commission up to this point, and in an entirely peculiar way as well, the duties as designer and construction overseer f
This was a single-story building with a symmetrical ground plan. The entrances opened from separate terraces on either side of the central section that projected outward from the main façade.
This is a single-story pavilion with a T-shaped ground plan.
This was the largest hospital pavilion, with a symmetrical arrangement and an upper story.
The distinctive elements of the main façade of this two-story building were the two Voysey-style gables that symmetrically framed the recessed central section containing the main entrance.
According to the plans, this was intended as the crowning element and entrance to the hospital complex.
‘So that the artificial rock does not appear so barren, we set a small Norwegian House upon its southern slopes, aligned with the grand avenue of trees.
In 1922, Károly Kós pointed out the plight of two churches in the Kalotaszeg region that were destined for demolition in his article entitled “Ancient Churches” in the pages of Vasárnap (S