Bulevardul Magheru
Together with Bulevardul Bălcescu, Magheru connects Piața Romană and Piața Universității squares and was in the 1930s and 1940s Bucharest's most modern part. This is one of Europe and world's most representative modernist boulevards, where the architecture in vogue in the 1930s is prevalent.
Part of the major thoroughfare than runs through the middle of Bucharest, it is continued to the south of C. A. Rosetti Street by Nicolae Bălcescu Boulevard and then by Ion C. Brătianu Boulevard, and toward the north by Lascăr Catargiu Boulevard and Șoseaua Kiseleff.
Bulevardul Magheru is one of the most expensive shopping streets in Europe.
Notable buildings and structures
Some notable buildings on Bulevardul Magheru are listed below, in the order in which they were built.
- Ciclop Parking Garage , built in 1923 by Constantin Iotzu , now abandoned
- Hotel Lido , built in 1930
- Patria Cinema, housed in Horia Creangă's modernist 10-story ARO building, built in 1931
- Gas and Electricity Society Palace, built in 1935
- Scala Cinema, built in 1937
- Scala building, built in 1937, destroyed during the 1977 earthquake, rebuilt after that
- Casata building, built in 1938, destroyed during the 1977 earthquake, rebuilt after that
- Hotel Ambasador , built in 1939
- Nottara Theater , founded in 1947
- ITB building, built in 1959
- Eva building, built in 1961
- ONT building, built in 1961
- Piața Romană metro station, opened in 1988
The Dimitrie Sturdza House is just off the boulevard, on Arthur Verona Street.
See also
Gallery
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The boulevard in the late 1930s
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The boulevard in 1958
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The boulevard in 2017
References
- ^ "Bucharest main boulevard Magheru among the most expensive in European commercial rents top". Hotnews.ro (in Romanian). 5 November 2008.
- ^ Lupsa, Filip (August 22, 2023). "Povestea blocului "Scala" din București. Cum au fost condamnați la moarte locatarii săi la cutremurul din 1977". b365.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved June 16, 2024.