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This is a list of Hungarian architects 18th century. József Jung (1734–1808) 19th century. Emil Ágoston (1876–1921) Ignác Alpár (1855 ...
The first modern Hungarian architect Béla Lajta (1873-1920) started from Lechner's aspirations, who, at the same time as the experiments in Western Europe and America, sought new ways. The Rózsavölgyi business house is the first modern Hungarian building.
In 1918, the Hungarian government passed laws enabling women to study at universities, so in 1919 Pécsi returned to Hungary to complete her education at Királyi József Műegyetem (Budapest University of Technology and Economics). She graduated on 8 March 1920, her twenty-second birthday, the first Hungarian woman to qualify as an architect.
In 1958 the Ignác Alpár memorial prize was established by the Society of Architects, which is awarded annually for significant achievements in building. There is a statue of Alpár in front of the Vajdahunyad castle by Ede Telcs. He is depicted wearing the robes of a master architect from the Middle Ages.
Buildings and structures by Hungarian architects (6 C, 1 P) H. Hungarian Baroque architects (1 P) Pages in category "Hungarian architects"
Mihály Pollack (né Michael Pollack; 30 August 1773 — 3 January 1855) was an Austrian-born Hungarian architect, key figure of neoclassical architecture. His main work is the Hungarian National Museum (1837–46). Michael Pollack, later known as Mihály Pollack, was born in Vienna in 1773.
Imre Ferenc Károly Steindl (29 October 1839 – 31 August 1902) was a Hungarian architect.. Steindl (sometimes called in German Emerich Steindl or Emmerich Steindl [1]) was the designer of the Hungarian Parliament Building, an associate professor and correspondent of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
The building is today considered the first complete statement of Hungarian Szecesszió (Art Nouveau) architecture, and it formed a counterweight in the Hungarian half of the Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy to the work of the Secession developed later in Vienna around Otto Wagner, Joseph Maria Olbrich, Gustav Klimt, and others.