Art Deco Ocean Waves – Rendering

A superlative wave ornament rendering, an allusion to the remote and exotic for Romanians southern seas, at the wall base of a mid-1930s Art Deco style house in Mantuleasa area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Neo-Romanian Style Gateway Featuring the Rope Motif

An exquisite Neo-Romanian style gateway assembly featuring the rope motif that originates in late medieval Wallachian church architectural decoration. The rope motif and the two solar discs present at the base of the gate opening are also ancient ethnographic motifs peculiar to the Romanian peasant art and domestic architecture. Late 1920s type house, Gara de Nord area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Art Nouveau Beer Restaurant in Provincial Romania

Art Nouveau style beer restaurant, Alexandria, Southern Romania (1900s postcard, Valentin Mandache collection)

The boom years of late 1890s until the great recession of 1907, have been very beneficial for Romania, which profited from its large grain exports to the industrial countries of Western Europe. The old small markets towns throughout the country, especially those from the wheat and maize producing areas where expanding at a fast rate and numerous new flamboyant private and public buildings in the then fashionable French c19th and also Art Nouveau styles were being erected. The town of Alexandria was one of those prosperous cities, located in the fertile plains of the Teleorman county, close to Bucharest and to the Danube ports that greatly facilitated the grain exports of the surrounding region. The bold Art Nouveau style beer restaurant from Alexandria’s public gardens, depicted in the old postcard above, is a reflection in architecture of that new found confidence and economic well being in fin de siècle Romania. The edifice is quite remarkable with its entrance modelled as a grandiose round window and audacious flowery roof eave edge ornaments. It would have been an imposing and unmissable presence in that provincial town and region of Ottoman Balkan tradition, the herald of the globalisation taking place in the Victorian era through commerce, industry and also architecture, where the Art Nouveau style was the last word in terms of modernity.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Art Deco Apartment Block with Rooftop Veranda

A small, but flamboyant Art Deco style apartment block in Bucharest with an ample rooftop veranda, dating from early-1930s; North Cismigiu area. (©Valentin Mandache)

I had just joy in discovering this small jewel of Bucharest Art Deco architecture. It is another proof of the level of skills achieved by the local inter-war era architects and the sophistication of their clients, a situation rarely encountered nowadays in the rough and ready post-communist Romania. The rooftop terrace is delightful, modelling the top deck of an ocean cruise liner, affording sweeping panoramic views of central Bucharest and also an excellent place to spend the pleasant summer and early autumn evenings peculiar to this part of South East Europe.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

The Glazed Entrance of a Bucharest Neoclassical House

A well designed neoclassical style with rococo overtones house with an ample glazed entrance area, dating from late 1890s, Calarasilor area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

This house was built during the “Little Paris” period of Bucharest’s architectural development that took place in the last decades of c19th until the Great War, when the French styles peculiar to the Second Empire era were adopted in a provincial manner on a large scale in Romania and especially in its capital (for a review of the architectural and real estate history of Bucharest see my article here). I was very impressed by the period glazed entrance presented in this photograph, which is of a considerable size and well preserved. Many Bucharest “Little Paris” era/ style houses are provided with quaint glazed conservatory type entrances, which are unfortunately as a rule in a very deteriorated state of repair (see an example by clicking here). This particular example is in my opinion among the best preserved in the city.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Florid Motif Art Deco Balcony

Florid motifs Art Deco style balcony, dating from mid-1930s, Gara de Nord area, Bucharest (©Valentin Mandache)

The exuberant florid motifs presented in the photograph above also dress the window and doorway openings of the Art Deco style house containing this interesting balcony. In addition to that, the floral decoration unfurls as a large, eye catching, frieze under the roof eaves. The overall effect is a very cheerful, exotic  appearance, where the main façade focus area is this balcony with its design that balances essential Art Deco – modernist outlines with rich florid decoration. It is a great pity that the current owner has replaced its original Art Deco balcony door with an ugly plastic frame double glazing structure. That shows the degree of ignorance and low quality cultural education among many of the Bucharest period house owners about the historical and architectural value of their property and the slow and inexorable damage suffered by the built heritage of Romania at the hand of its own, misguided, citizens.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

The Abstract Tower of A Neo-Romanian House

The abstract tower structure of a Neo-Romanian style house from mid-1920s, Icoanei area, Bucharest (©Valentin Mandache)

One of the main decorative structures of a Neo-Romanian style house is its tower, modelled after that of the fortified houses called cula, built by the yeomen of Oltenia region in the c17th-c19th. The tower usually occupies a great deal of space from that available for habitation and therefore only houses built on large enough plots, difficult to find in the perennially crowded Bucharest, were able to properly accommodate such a prestige structure.  The architectural solution was to design façade structures mimicking the tower, integrating in it verandas on the upper floor or large bay windows. Many Neo-Romanian houses built on small plots of land feature such tower abstractions, seamlessly and graciously protruding from within the façade. I found an excellent example of a Neo-Romanian house tower abstraction, shown in the photograph above, dating from mid 1920s, where I very much like the late Art Nouveau decorative elements that characterizes the Neo-Romanian style in its early phases of development.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Bucharest Art Deco Doorway of Elemental Design

Mid-1930s Art Deco style doorway, Cismigiu Bucharest (©Valentin Mandache)

Today being my birthday I would like to present one of my favourite architectural subject images. It is a Bucharest Art Deco style doorway, dating from mid-1930s, of a quite elemental design, which suggests the ziggurat outlines of the tall buildings of that era. I very much like its balanced triptych division and the sets of three svelte vertical bars of different length that form its decorative register, all conforming to the Art Deco “rule of three” inspired from the ancient Egyptian mythology. I think that the main reason why I appreciate so much this design is probably because in some ways it reflects my “cartesian”-inclined character and also my educational background that spans from engineering to economics and architectural history.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

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If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

The Mascarons of Bucharest: Photomontage and Slides

The mascarons of Bucharest: photomontage (©Valentin Mandache)

The architecture of Bucharest in the late c19th until the Great War was constituted in great part of locally interpreted French historicist styles that ranged from neoclassical, neo-renaissance, neo-rococo to Second Empire, which gave the Romanian capital the well known character of “Little Paris”. Some of the most conspicuous motifs of these highly decorative styles were the mascarons (grotesque or classical mithology-like ornamental heads) that embellished the top centre panoplies above windows, doorways or roof cornices. Bucharest is endowed literally with thousands of such picturesque mascarons that are also present less abundantly on Art Nouveau, Neo-Romanian and Art Deco style buildings. I made the collage and slide show presented in this post from just a very small sample of such Bucharest mascarons. Most of them are “Little Paris” style, but there are also some Art Nouveau, Neo-Romanian and Art Deco. There is also a living “mascaron”‘ among the masonry and plaster ones, I wonder if you can spot it! :)

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Revolving Art Deco Stairs

A very interesting design of Art Deco revolving type stairs inspired from the machinery, aesthetically idealised, of the 1920s and '30s mechanized industry. Eminescu area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Early Type Neo-Romanian Window

An early type (1910s) Neo-Romanian style window from Mosilor area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

The Neo-Romanian style features a number of types/ phases and directions of development throughout its history as an architectural order. What I call the early Neo-Romanian style is how it was imaged and presented by the architect Ion Mincu, the initiator of this style, and his students, in its first phase of development. This type was fashionable from the 1890s until the end of the Great War, when the style entered what I call the citadel type of the development (see a citadel type example by clicking here), subsequently evolving on a multitude of directions and fashions. One of the most obvious characteristics of the early Neo-Romanian style is the recycling of late medieval Wallachian church architectural motifs, which in their turn derive in large part from a rich Byzantine and Ottoman Islamic decorative register. The window example in the image above, which I photographed in the Mosilor area of Bucharest, belongs to that phase or type of development. The window panes resemble those of the Southern Romanian churches, together with the spiral grooves on the side columns or the heavy arch that spans them. The abundant grapevine frieze and the two stylised floral Greek type crosses flanking the arch are also taken from the church decorative panoply. I very much like the two white painted eagles from the top edges of the picture, which represent the heraldic sign of the old Principality of Wallachia, another symbol present on local church decoration stating the secular power of the princes, vassals of the the Sublime Porte, that once ruled over the lands of Southern Romania.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

The Carpathian Timber Trail that Built Istanbul and the Ottoman Empire

The images above show the river sector of the Carpathian Timber Trail from its origination in Piatra Neamt (1), following the Bistrita (2) and the Siret rivers to the Danube port of Galati (3). (Montage of four old poscards dating from 1890s - 1910s, Valentin Mandache collection)

The Carpathian mountains contained until the first part of the c20th some of the largest millennial forests left in Europe. As the region was part of the Ottoman Empire for more than four centuries, this resource was extensively used as building material for houses and palaces throughout the empire and also for building the sailing ships (ie the ship’s masts made from Carpathian pine were very much appreciated at that time) that kept the commerce going within that great polity that stretched from Budapest in Central Europe to the Mecca in the Middle East and to the Algiers in the North Africa. The exceedingly beautiful Istanbul timber mansions called yali that line up the Bosphorous and many of the timber sided houses of that great metropolis, the largest city of Europe then as now, are in ample part built from timber sourced in the Carpathians. The same can be said of houses in Thessalonic, Smyrna/ Izmir or many other Ottoman cities. I illustrated in the photomontage above, made from four old postcards from my collection, the river navigation sector of this long “timber trail” from the Carpathians to the Mediterranean (see the route marked on the map on the postcard above). This timber was mainly sourced in the Moldavian sector of these mountains, the Oriental Carpathians, and gathered in floating basins at navigable points on the local rivers, such as Piatra-Neamt, depicted in the sector “1” above, a main such location in northern Moldavia. From there the timber was assembled in bulky rafts, called pluta in Romanian, manned by plutasi, the local peasants that embraced the raffter profession, see the image sector “2” above, all the way down to the lower Danube ports, such as Galati in the sector “3” of the photomontage, where the timber was sorted and loaded on seagoing boats to the markets of Istanbul and other Ottoman port cities. This huge timber trade started in late c17th until the demise of the Ottoman Empire in early c20th. It continued to function serving the local needs in Romania until 1950s, when the river route and the profession of plutas were replaced by road and railway transport. In my opinion this Carpathian “timber trail” phenomenon is a very interesting chapter in the economic history of South East Europe and Eastern Mediterreanean, practically unknown even by the academic specialists,  which greatly contributed to the built heritage of the entire region.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Early 1930s Art Deco Corner Building

An early 1930s Art Deco style corner apartment building with large floral panels on its sides and corner pediment, crowned by two Mayan art inspired rooftop ornaments, which most probably was originally painted in much livelier colours. Sincai area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Immured Neo-Romanian Doorway: A Sign of Our Times

A former Neo-Romanian style doorway immured by the ignorant owners of this late 1920s house, under the indifferent eye of the authorities, a frequent occurrence in today Romania. Iconei area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

The doorways of the Neo-Romanian style houses are flamboyant architectural structures that enhance the aesthetic and money value of the property lucky enough to feature them. An example of an beautiful such doorway can be seen by clicking here. Unfortunately in Bucharest and Romania in general, a multitude of those property owners, are not educated enough to appreciate the great worth of their asset and try to preserve it. I posted some weeks ago an article about a well off, but ignorant owner, click for access here, who replaced an old Art Nouveau doorway with a new DIY store abomination, of which he or she was probably very proud. These people are also oblivious to the fact that they have a responsibility to the community and the nation as the custodians and carers of those historic houses. The authorities share in a great degree their low quality educational background and disregard of the collective identity and history, with the result that the architectural heritage of Romania is destroyed now on a massive scale by its own citizens. The example above with the immured Neo-Romanian style doorway only one of the  many such occurrences, right in the heart of Bucharest, close to embassies and high end properties. It just gives an idea of the scale of this epidemic phenomenon and the huge task ahead of educating the public about the value of its heritage and architectural identity.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contact page of this weblog.

Public Loo from the Art Deco Era

Images of one of the few surviving structures of the once often encountered 1930s Art Deco style Bucharest public loos, today non-functional and in a very deteriorated state. Dorobanti area, Bucharest. (©Valentin Mandache)

Bucharest is quite infamous nowadays because of its scarcity of public loos, a very inconvenient reality for the would be brave international tourist curious to see this large city from the Eastern extremity of the European Union. The situation regarding public convenience facilities was much better in the inter-war period when the local mayoralty’s urban planning activity was taking place on a well coordinated and highly qualified basis, in sharp contrast with the sheer incompetence of their contemporary post-communist counterparts. The images above shows an interesting Art Deco style public loo from that golden era, which although is in a very deteriorated state, it can be restored and serve again the public and tourists. In December last year I posted a similar article about another loo from the Art Deco era (click for access here), that one being at least painted over, but also still non-functional.

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I endeavor through this daily series of images and small articles to inspire appreciation of the historic houses of Romania, a virtually undiscovered, but fascinating chapter of European architectural history and heritage.

***********************************************

If you plan acquiring a historic property in Romania or start a renovation project, I would be delighted to advice you in sourcing the property, specialist research, planning permissions, restoration project management, etc. To discuss your particular plan please see my contact details in the Contactpage of this weblog.