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  2. Vilmos Freund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vilmos_Freund

    Vilmos Freund (22 August 1846 – 26 June 1920) was a Hungarian Jewish architect. ... In Budapest, he first appeared in the design competition of the new Parliament ...

  3. Emery Roth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emery_Roth

    Emery Roth (Hungarian: Róth Imre, died August 20, 1948) was a Hungarian-American architect of Hungarian-Jewish descent who designed many New York City hotels and apartment buildings of the 1920s and 1930s, incorporating Beaux-Arts and Art Deco details.

  4. Kálmán Giergl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kálmán_Giergl

    Kálmán Giergl (born as Koloman Giergl, 29 June 1863 in Pest, Hungary, Austrian Empire – 10 September 1954 in Verőce, Hungary), was a Hungarian-German architect and a significant figure in the Austro-Hungarian eclectic architectural style. A member of the Györgyi-Giergl artistic family. The New York Palace Klotild Palaces

  5. Flóris Korb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flóris_Korb

    New York Palace, with Hauszmann & Giergl (1891–95) Croatian Art Pavilion at the Millennium Exhibition in Budapest (1896), with Giergl [2] Klotild Palaces, Budapest (1899–1902) hu:Klotild paloták; Kiraly Apartments, Budapest (1900–01) Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest (1904–07) Clinic buildings, Mari and Ulloi ut, Budapest

  6. Alajos Hauszmann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alajos_Hauszmann

    1890–1894 New York Palace, Budapest; 1893 General Hospital, Kolozsvár (today Cluj-Napoca) 1893–1896 Royal Hungarian Palace of Justice, Budapest (Kúria, today: Ethnographic Museum) 1893–1897 Governor's Palace, Rijeka; 1902–1909 Royal Joseph Technical University, central building, Budapest; 1904 City Hall, Nagyvárad (today Oradea)

  7. Anantara New York Palace Budapest Hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anantara_New_York_Palace...

    The New York Café was renamed the Hungaria Café in 1954. In 1957, Hungarian sculptors Sándor Boldogfai Farkas, Ödön Metky, and János Sóváry carved replicas in the café of the damaged allegorical sculptures of Thrift and Wealth, America and Hungary. The New York Café was returned to its historic name in 1989, with the fall of communism.

  8. First Hungarian Reformed Church of New York - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Hungarian_Reformed...

    The First Hungarian Reformed Church of New York (Hungarian: New York-i Első Magyar Református Egyház) is located on East 69th Street in the Upper East Side of the New York City borough of Manhattan. It is a stucco-faced brick building, completed in 1916 in a Hungarian vernacular architectural style, housing a congregation established in 1895.

  9. Joseph Urban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Urban

    Caricature by Rudolf Swoboda (c. 1900) Joseph Urban set design drawing for Ziegfeld Follies of 1919. Joseph Urban was born on May 26, 1872, in Vienna.He received his first architectural commission at age 19 when he was selected to design the new wing of the Abdin Palace in Cairo by Tewfik Pasha.