- Source: Ferenc Pfaff
Ferenc Pfaff (born as Franz Pfaff, Mohács, 19 November 1851 – Budapest, 21 August 1913) was a Hungarian architect and academic.
Career
Pfaff received his degree in 1880 after studying under Imre Steindl at the József Nádor Technical University in Budapest. Early in his career, he designed a number of smaller buildings, among which is the Roman Catholic church at Svábhegy.
However, he is best known for his career as an architect with the Hungarian Railways. Joining in 1887, he later became director of building works right across the Hungarian lands within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In the following two decades he would design some 20 large, and numerous smaller railway stations, mainly in the Renaissance eclectic style. These buildings were often modest but notable for their fine sense of proportion and scale. He also redesigned a number of existing stations, notably in Croatia (Zagreb and Rijeka) and in Hungary (Győr, Kassa and Miskolc).
Railway stations
Arad
Bratislava main railway station, 1905
Carei
Celldömölk
Cluj-Napoca
Chop
Debrecen
Füzesabony, 1893
Gyimesbükk (Ghimeș-Făget)
Győr (remodelling)
Jimbolia
Kaposvár
Karlovac
Košice (remodelling)
Leopoldov
Miskolc Gömöri railway station, 1899
Miskolc Tiszai railway station, 1901 (remodelled)
Osijek
Pécs, (1900)
Rijeka, 1890
Satu Mare, 1899
Szeged, 1902 – restored in 2006 according to his original plans
Timișoara Iosefin, 1897
Vršac
Zagreb Glavni railway station
Other buildings
Szeged, MAV Directorship, 1894
Budapest, Transport Museum, 1896
Budapest, Svabhegyi Roman Catholic church, 1886
Budapest, Stefania Palace, home to 1885 national art exhibition, then until 1945 City Museum
Budapest, Exhibition hall
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Piala Dunia FIFA 1954
- FIFA 100
- Penghargaan Piala Dunia FIFA
- Grup 3 Piala Dunia FIFA 1982
- Final Piala Champions Eropa 1960
- Daftar pencetak gol Piala Dunia FIFA
- Piala Champions Eropa 1959–1960
- Ferenc Pfaff
- Miskolc Tiszai railway station
- Pfaff (surname)
- Chop railway station
- List of Hungarian architects
- Košice railway station
- Bratislava main railway station
- Győr railway station
- Szolnok railway station
- Szeged