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Villa Klinger (Budapest), plan of the ground floor

Lajos Kozma (architect)

Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest

Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest
Budapest, Hungary

Built in Herman Ottó Street in 1933‒1934, next to a two-home villa designed by Kozma in 1931, this house was commissioned by István Klinger, a dentist, for his dentist son and his wife. Commanding a beautiful view of Sváb Hill and János Hill, the modelling of this detached house shows Kozma at his best. The three-storey villa stands on a steeply sloping plot, and has its ground floor level with the street, while the basement communicates with the garden. Parts ‘missing and added’ play a powerful role in the modelling of the volume of the house, which comprises storeys with different floor plans but has the overall effect of a cube. The most spectacular feature of the house was a wide terrace, forcefully projecting from the wall plane, almost floating, thanks to the reinforced concrete cantilever beams that supported it. It was shaded by a striped sunshade that could be extended with a scissor mechanism. Kozma would employ the rhythmic succession of beams as a decorative solution in other buildings as well.
by Éva Horányi in: Éva Horányi (ed.) Modern Buildings by Lajos Kozma. 2006. Budapest, p. 98.

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  • Title: Villa Klinger (Budapest), plan of the ground floor
  • Creator: Lajos Kozma (architect)
  • Creator Lifespan: 1884-1948
  • Date Created: 1933
  • Location Created: Budapest
  • Subject Keywords: applied arts, furniture, desing, Modernism, architecture
  • Type: drawing
  • Rights: CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0, Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest, 2024
  • External Link: Lajos Kozma, furniture by Lajos Kozma
  • Medium: tracing paper
  • Art Genre: applied arts
  • Art Movement: Modernism
Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest

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