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Deco with elements of local traditions and folklore. Like the Czechoslovak “national style” of Rondocubism developed by Pavel Janák and Josef Gočár, Hungarian Art Deco was influenced by traditional national elements – although several buildings in Budapest from this period are more cosmopolitan in character. Splendid apartment buildings for the middle and upper class can still be found in most neighborhoods. Magnificent entryways and spacious lobbies are particularly noteworthy. The elegantly curved railings and radiator covers in buildings by architects István Medgyaszay (1) and József Málik (6) perfectly embody French Art Deco. In contrast, Functionalist buildings from the 1930s were authored by progressive architects familiar with the contemporary avant-garde, such as Farkas Molnár, Lajos Kozma, Béla Hofstätter, and Ferenc Domány (2). The latter two designed several monumental residential complexes notable for their rounded corners, long bands of windows, and massive angular dimensions. Pink marble and chrome on railings, lamps and doorbells (3) only add to the elegance of the entrance lobbies, which would surely charm even detective Hercule Poirot. Farkas Molnár (5) achieves even more expressive and daring details in his apartment buildings, with abstract patterns of polychromatic opaxite glass reminiscent of a László Moholy-Nagy painting (4)..

