Architectural Heritage 28 results
  • Raichl House

    The architect’s palace in Szeged is larger and more imposingly executed, yet it is more modest in comparison with its counterpart in Subotica, failing to reach its outstanding unity of style and the elaboration of its details.
  • Water Tower in St. Steven Square

    The tower, which can hold 1004,8 m3of water, was designed by Szilárd Zielinski.
  • Alsóvárosi Church

    The Franciscan church dedicated to Our Lady of the Snows and the cloister nearby are precious architectural heritages of Szeged.
  • Protestant Church

    The building designed by Frigyes Schulek, completed in 1884, is also called the 'Cockerel church' owing to the figure decorating its tower.
  • Attila József Education and Information Centre

    The education and congress centre of the University of Szeged.
  • Deutsch Palace

    It was designed by Mihály Erdélyi with majolica ornaments in green, blue and orange and built between 1900 and 1902.
  • Serbian Orthodox Church

    The Serbian Orthodox Church stands on the northern side of the square, close to the bank of the River Tisza.
  • Reök Palace

    The architect Ede Magyar was thirty in 1907, when he constructed Reök Palace, an exemplary piece of Hungarian secession.
  • Votive Church

    After the Great Flood (1879) destroying the city, the people of Szeged made an oath to build a majestic catholic church.
  • Schäffer Palace

    The current sight of the Schäffer Palace confronts us indeed with how much Szeged’s cityscape ...
  • Upper Elementary Girls’ School (Tömörkény)

    It is a late Art Nouveau, 2-storey building in whose facade, formed as an arched ridge, the stylish and moderate application of brick-facing and striped ornaments deserves our attention.
  • City Hall

    The present City Hall is the third building in the same place with the same function. The first building of a modest design was raised in 1728. It was followed by the second one with the same area as the present hall, designed by István Vedres at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries.