bg Szeged

Iván Reök Palace

- Magyar Ede Tér 2 -
The construction permit of the three-story building, which was built with a residential building, was submitted on July 2, 1906, to the city planning committee. The construction of the building, which was built according to the plans of the Hungarian architect , was completed in November 1907. The construction was commissioned by the water engineering engineer and royal chief engineer Lajos Iván Reök, who was born on May 25, 1855, in . He was born into a noble family from Greifenberg, as the son of István Reök of Greifenberg and Terézia Mária Omazta of Rozvácz. Iván completed his basic studies in , then obtained an engineering diploma at the University of Technology on November 20, 1875. He later continued his university studies in and graduated there in 1877. From 1884 until 1893, he was a member of the Public Architecture Council assigned to Szeged in connection with the constructions that started in Szeged after the great in 1879. From 1881, he was the head of the Royal Hungarian Process Engineering Office in Szeged. From 1896, he was a member of the Szeged-Belvárosi Kaszinó, from 1899 he was a royal chief engineer.
Iván Reök
On January 27, 1881, Iván Reök got married to the noble Ida Berta Kelemen, who was born on July 8, 1861, in , whose parents were István Kelemen, a lawyer and landowner from Szeged, and Franciska Török from Szil. Four sons and three daughters were born from their marriage between Iván Reök and Ida Berta Kelemen, István, Margit, Béla, Gyula, Iván, Andor, and Maria. Iván Reök passed away on February 7, 1923, in , at the age of 67, and his wife Ida Kelemen passed away on March 1, 1945, in Budapest.

Iván requested one studio apartment per floor for his sons and two multi-room apartments per floor for his daughters. A restaurant was opened in the corner of the ground floor, while the other rooms were rented by industrialists, merchants, landowners, military officers, and university professors. After the , the huge apartments were cut up and turned into shared rentals.
Iván Reök and his family
The lovely Art Nouveau building is lavishly decorated with all sorts of ceramics consisting of purple flowers. Flowers are also used in the decorations of the wrought iron parts in the balustrades of the many . The balconets that are placed on top of most of the , as well as one of loose standing balconets, are covered by an . The alluringly shaped top gable on the western side of the building shows a golden-colored naming the building.
The building is shown in an old postcard