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King Matthias’s Cluj birthplace blends Gothic charm, royal memory, and layered restorations. Though not a museum, it quietly preserves a rare link to Central Europe’s past.

The Dauerbach Palace is one of the representative urban palaces of 19th-century Timișoara.

The City Hall of Satu Mare (Szatmárnémeti) is one of the most representative public buildings in the historic city center and a key symbol of municipal authority. Its architectural form and prominent location reflect the city’s late 19th- and early 20th-century civic development, when Satu Mare emerged as a modern urban center of the Partium region.
Apollo Palace is an important Secession-era residential and commercial building in the historic center of Oradea. It is a characteristic monument of the city’s turn-of-the-century development and reflects the growing representational ambitions of bourgeois apartment palaces. The building is an important component of the central streetscape. Its massing and façade design belong to the period’s modern urban architecture. Its original function was primarily residential with commercial activity on the lower levels. Today it is regarded as a notable part of Oradea’s built heritage.

Moskovits Palace is one of Oradea’s known Secession-era apartment buildings. It is a monument of the city’s turn-of-the-century development and an important part of its architectural heritage. The building takes its name from the Moskovits family, associated with the city’s bourgeois milieu of the period. The palace is best understood as an urban residential and commercial building. Its façade and detailing fit well within Oradea’s rich Secession heritage. Today it remains one of the notable buildings of the historic center.