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A Romanesque church dating from the 13th–14th centuries, rebuilt several times over the centuries. It acquired its present form in 1720. Its restoration was directed by Kós Károly in 1936.
In 1935, the leadership of the Roman Catholic Girls’ Club in Cluj purchased a plot of land at Lake Gyilkos.
On the main square, a new town hall was erected in the interwar period in a Neo-Byzantine style. Károly Kós prepared several alternative proposals for the transformation of this building’s façade.
According to contemporary sources:
Ellenzék, 7 October 1941, p. 40.
THE JÓZSEFHEGY OBSERVATION TOWER TO BE BUILT ACCORDING TO THE PLANS OF KÁROLY KÓS
All things considered, the architect prepared three design variants for the residential house of Dr.
The small, two-room rural houses adopted the traditional local floor plan and were constructed of adobe.
In December 1940, Károly Kós prepared a competition entry for a Calvinist church complex in Szeged.
Kós prepared similar plans for Magyarbikal (1942) and Köröstárkány (1957). Both the building and the enclosing wall were constructed entirely of rubble stone.
The small, simple holiday house located directly next to the Sztána railway station is characterized by its stone walls and steep roof planes, which not only echo the nearby Varjúvár but also defin
The two-storey building that had stood on the same site, with semicircular windows on the ground floor, was demolished by the Calvinist Church in 1992–1993, and the Reménység Háza (House of Hope) w
Dr. Andor Joós was commissioned with the execution of the church. Ultimately, the church was constructed according to his plans.
The restoration of this two-storey medieval urban house—traditionally regarded as the birthplace of King Matthias—represents a pioneering example of the historically accurate conservation of mediev