Significantly damaged but a rare landmark still standing after the devastation wreaked on Buda Castle in the last months of World War II, the National Archive Building had been designed by Samu Pecz but never completed according to his wishes.
Work had begun on this stately construction shortly before World War I and Pecz died before an entire section was finished. The National Archive Building was unveiled in 1923, a year after his death.
The wing planned by Pecz in the original blueprint will now be built, ensuring the continuous expansion of the archives. There will also be a visitor and information centre, and a small park set up outside.
The warehouse and research hall on Lángliliom utca in Óbuda will be transformed into a modern complex, warehouses providing storage and protection of archival records. The design was created by award-winning architect, Attila Turi.
Here, a nationwide research centre on family history will make research faster, easier and more efficient. This is where you’ll find the Hungarian registry from the 1600s to 1980.