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Coffeeshop Company - Reök-palota

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Szakál-Szeri
June 30, 2016
The New York Times columnist, Alexandra Shelley dedicated a whole paragraph to Ede Magyar, the young architect who designed Szeged’s Reok Mansion and several other buildings in town: His bravado continues to enliven the town: It's in the half-naked tin women clinging with stiff arms to the cupola of the Ungar-Mayer House on Dugonics Square; in the alabaster girls – modeled after famous ballerinas – offering flowers to anyone entering the Goldschmidt Palace; in the unevenly crenelated roof line, the undulating balconies, the pale purple and pastel-green waterlilies melting into the ivory facade of the Reok Mansion. Its corner curved like a ship's prow, the mansion breasts into a small square. The newly restored, fresh, clean building that reminds some of an artfully decorated wedding cake makes us feel as if Shelley’s above description wasn’t from 11 years ago, but from just yesterday. Although not open yet, the citizens of Szeged often stop by the Reok Palace to revel in the harmony of its colors, and to marvel on the beauty of its wrought iron balustrades made by Pal Fekete, according to the drawings of Ede Magyar.
The New York Times columnist, Alexandra Shelley dedicated a whole paragraph to Ede Magyar, the young architect who designed Szeged’s Reok Mansion and several other buildings in town: His bravado continues to enliven the town: It's in the half-naked tin women clinging with stiff arms to the cupola…
Placering
56 Tisza Lajos krt.
Szeged