Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Public nudity is generally legal in the entire country with the notable exception of the Canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden where public nudity, including naked hiking, carries a fine of up to 200 Swiss francs. Nude hiking is mainly popular in the sparsely populated alpine regions among nudists, less so in the low lands.
Nightclubs in Budapest, Hungary. Pages in category "Nightclubs in Budapest" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
The KitKatClub has served as an example in many countries for open-minded parties of new generations, where a sex-positive attitude merges with electronic music. The Ministry of Freedom club in Budapest [12] also traces its image back to the KitKatClub, considering it the most important role model in terms of dress code and the experience of sexual freedom.
Váci utca is one of the main shopping streets in Budapest. Among the retailers located here are: Zara, H&M, Mango, ESPRIT, Douglas AG, Swarovski, Hugo Boss, Lacoste and Nike. The street opens to Vörösmarty Square. The street is known for clip joints. Some of these pretend to be strip clubs, but others present themselves as ordinary bars.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Fortepan was created in 2010 by Miklós Tamási and Ákos Szepessy, who met while attending the Kaffka Margit High School in the late 1980s. Sharing an interest in old photographs, they started to collect discarded prints and especially negatives from family collections, which they found at flea markets, in the streets of Budapest during "lomtalanítás" (Budapest's annual junk clearances held ...
Bauhaus in Budapest: walk in Napraforgó Street, row of 22 Bauhaus villas, Pasarét and Újlipótváros; Buda Castle with the Royal Palace, the Funicular, Hungarian National Gallery [5] and National Széchényi Library, [6] Matthias Church, Holy Trinity Column (a plague column) and Fisherman's Bastion
[d] In 1969 Anna Koós, Péter Halász [11] [12] and Stephan Balint [7] [13] from the University Theatre of Budapest created an independent theatre group called Kassák Haz Studió. [1] In 1972 they were censored by the Hungarian authorities for "political and esthetic radicalism", [ 14 ] and banned from performing in public. [ 1 ]