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The Royal Palace with the equestrian statue of king Carol I in front The Golescu mansion in 1866 The Golescu mansion around the start of the 20th century The old Royal Palace as it appeared before 1926 showing the main wing added to the Golesecu mansion The Royal Palace from the air during Communist times, with the multipurpose hall 'Sala Palatului' behind The Royal Palace today as National ...
Palatul Telefoanelor in Bucharest is an Art Deco style building and until 1956, was the tallest building in Bucharest at 52.5 metres (172 feet). [ 2 ] The worldwide Great Depression that began with the Wall Street crash of 1929 also affected Romania , strongly impacting the Romanian economy .
Palatul, înalt de 52,5 m, a fost construit între anii 1929 - 1934 într-un stil specific zgârie-norilor americani, având caracteristici reprezentative ale stilului Art Deco. Până în anii '70 a fost cea mai înaltă clădire din Bucureşti. Construcţia a înregistrat şi o premieră, ea fiind prima clădire înaltă cu schelet metalic ...
The Palace of the Chamber of Deputies (Romanian: Palatul Camerei Deputaților) (now the Palace of the Patriarchate (Palatul Patriarhiei), also known as the Palace of the Great National Assembly (Palatul Marii Adunări Naționale) during the Communist regime), is a building in Bucharest, Romania located on the plateau of Dealul Mitropoliei.
It was designed by architect Duiliu Marcu (1885–1966), who had designed many major buildings in 1920s and 30s Romania, including many major government projects in the 1930s and 40s. The Victory Palace is a stylised monumental classical design, with an arcaded ground level, a long colonnade of slim piers on the main front, and two recessed top ...
Palatul_Domnesc-Casa_Golescu,_1866,_JR_Huber.jpg (600 × 378 pixels, file size: 78 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Palace of Culture (Romanian: Palatul Culturii, Hungarian: Kultúrpalota) is an edifice located in the centre of Târgu Mureș (Marosvásárhely), Romania.The building houses the Mureș County Library, the Mureș County Museum, and the State Philharmonic of Târgu Mureș.
Crețulescu Palace (Palatul Crețulescu in Romanian, alternative spelling "Kretzulescu" or "Krețulescu") is a historic building near the Cișmigiu Gardens on Știrbei Vodă Street nr. 39, in Bucharest, Romania. It was built for the Crețulescu family in 1902–1904 by Romanian architect Petre Antonescu (1873–1965). [1]