Tag: neo-Romanian

  • The Cerchez family of architects

    The Cerchez family of architects

    We’re more likely to come across the name of Cerchez, in the history of Romanian architecture, than other names of architects. The name of Cerchez family of architects stems from three families of Armenian origin. Bearing this name were no less than five major architects. Not only were they artists, but also, hey were men of their times: the brothers Grigore P. Cerchez and Nicolae P. Cerchez, brothers Grigore G. Cerchez and Artaxerxe Cerchez and their fifth brother, Hristea Cerchez.

    Speaking about the two pairs of brothers, here is professor with the Ion Mincu Architecture and Urbanism University and president of the Architects’ Union of Romania, Ileana Tureanu.

    ” Brothers Grigore and Nicolae Cerchez were born in mid-19th century, that is in 1850. They did their studies in France, in Paris, and founded the Society of Romanian Architects in 1891. In other words, they are some of the founding fathers of national architecture. Everybody mentions Grigore Cerchez’s name when they refer to the Palace of the Architecture School. Yet not everybody knows that Grigore P. Cerchez is Bucharest Municipality’s chief engineer over 1874 and 1879 and he is the one who drew up all the plans and took the entire action for the systematization of Dambovita River in Bucharest.

    He is the author of the first systematization plan for the city of Bucharest, in 1833. So he came after he had schools built, he laid the foundation of a scientific and systematic development of the city of Bucharest. He became director of Romanian Post and in that capacity, he brought specialized architects in the field, such as Alexandru Clavel of France. He brought younger colleagues and friends and he had Romanian Post headquarters built in all of Romania’s major cities. Quite a few of Romanian Post buildings were built under his supervision. They are blueprint projects, projects that were tailored to this or that urban context. For the second half of the 19th century, we’re speaking about an urban vision in its own right.”

    The first generation of the Cerchez brothers significantly involved in the modernization of Bucharest and in its transformation from a utterly oriental city into a city that was close to the European standards. Ileana Tureanu once again.

    ”In the field of monuments restoration, he is the one who created the Romanian scientific doctrine. ‘The principle that guided me’, he used to say, was to preserve the building just as I’d found it, consolidating it and restoring it, bringing it to the shape it had when it was built, disposing of all the parts that were unskilfully added. Against a backdrop when Andre Lecomte du Noüy’s principles were totally different regarding the historical monuments, Grigore Cerchez laid the foundation of restoration.

    Grigore Cerchez’s brother was Nicolae P. Cerchez, a year younger, both born in Moldova, in Vaslui County, who was also a very important figure in the era. He went towards political involvement and social involvement. He was a deputy in Parliament, he was a senator, and he was able to help his brother complete the programs I mentioned. He was the vice-president of the Romanian Automobile Club at the beginning of the 20th century, and took care of public spaces. He was also an entrepreneur. At the Royal Palace he designed the exterior arrangements, he designed the School of Veterinary Medicine and the Agricultural Pavilion for the exhibition of 1906, a building that received awards.”

    The second pair of Cerchez brothers was no less determined to continue the modernization. Another Gregory and his brother Artaxerxes wrote history. Ileana Tureanu:

    “The second family was also Cerchez. We don’t have any data that they were related, but it was probably something. After 20 years, another Grigore Cerchez appears, Grigore G. Cerchez, also the brother of Arta Cerchez. The two brothers did not go to school in France, like the first ones, but in Germany, in Karlsruhe. Both one and the other, but especially Grigore G. Cerchez, were, in parallel with design and execution, involved in the public square, held public functions at City Hall, and were present in all major city development initiatives, starting with coordination of the 1906 exhibition in Carol Park. Grigore’s brother was Arta Cerchez, who made a less neo-Romanian architecture.

    He started the Eforie Casino and the Movilă Casino in Techirghiol. It was a modern and powerful architecture. He also designed the racetrack. Arta Cerchez won the Sanitary Merit award, first class, for the buildings made in the Carmen Sylva resort. He was, in a way, an initiator of spa resorts.

    He is the one who initiated the study for the history of Romanian architecture. He was extremely vehement. His articles in Architecture Magazine can be picked up and reread today, and are just as valid, powerful and incisive. And one of the reasons why Arta Cerchez considered that Romanian architecture was adrift is that the history of Romanian architecture is not known. And then, he made the decision to launch a national competition for the writing of the history of Romanian architecture, and he would pay the winner out of public money.”

    The fifth Cerchez, Hristea or Cristofi, also left his mark on Bucharest, a representative building built by him being Vila Minovici, located in the north of the city.

  • Architect Paul Smarandescu

    Architect Paul Smarandescu

    The origins of this style are to be found in
    the second half of the 19th century. Its founder is Ion Mincu, an
    original architect who combined in his projects traditional architecture,
    Brancoveanu-style elements and but also elements of Western architecture,
    creating an unique style. This style was mainly developed after WW1 by a number
    of architects who changed and improved it as they designed a series of
    buildings that in time became iconic for Bucharest, such as the present
    headquarters of the Bucharest Town Hall. Paul Smarandescu is another renowned
    Romanian architect whose career was entirely dedicated to the neo-Romanian
    style.






    Born on June 26, 1881 in Bucharest, Paul
    Smarandescu designed public buildings and also private residences. With details
    on that, here is art historian Oana Marinache.






    Oana
    Marinache: He worked as an
    architect for the Ministry of Religious Denominations and Public Instruction
    for several years, then for the Ministry of the Interior. Concurrently, he
    activated in the private sector, building hundreds of residences, most of them
    in the neo-Romanian style. Benefitting from private orders coming from
    personalities in the army, the medical sector or from representatives of the
    boyar families, Paul Smarandescu succeeded in erecting sumptuous residences, to
    propagate and open even more the taste for the neo-Romanian style, especially
    in Bucharest. Paul Smarandescu is a member of the second generation of Romanian
    architects. He began his studies at the end of the 19th century and
    early into the 20th century. He initially studied with the Romanian
    School of Architecture, founded by Ion Mincu and others. Then he felt the need
    to go and further his education in Paris for three more years. He returned with
    a French architect’s diploma in 1906, then he was employed by the ministries I
    just mentioned. So he is among the first who implemented the principles of the
    Romanian school of architecture, principles advocating for the return to
    vernacular architecture, to the regional, specific architecture, which also
    meant renouncing the French academic style and no longer bringing in eclectic
    elements, which were also French.






    Paul Smarandescu designed sumptuous villas,
    but also more modest residences, in keeping with the commissioner’s income.
    Generally, they were one or two-storied buildings, with beautiful stone-carved
    decorative elements, tailored especially for those who wanted their houses to
    be built in the Neo-Romanian style, which, after the Great Union, was
    considered the representative Romanian style.






    As architect of several public institutions,
    Smarandescu also designed lodgings for various public sector employees, such as
    the buildings around Gara de Nord, tailored for employees and top managers with
    the Romanian Railway Company. Among the private residences designed by
    Smarandescu are a couple of mountain villas, especially in Sinaia, but also one
    designed for his daughter, on the Black Sea Coast, in Balchik, at present a
    locality on Bulgaria’s territory.






    Of the imposing buildings created by the
    architect there is the Agricola Insurance Company Palace, lying on Victoria
    Boulevard, but also the Universul Palace near the Cismigiu gardens, which
    during the interwar period used to house some famous publications of the time.
    With details on that, here is art historian Oana Marinache once again.

    Oana
    Marinache: In the public
    space, I should like to mention two restored buildings. The so-called oldest
    house of Bucharest: the Melik house. What we see now, in fact, is the version
    restored by Paul Smarandescu, completed around 1928. Also, he restored a little
    church, the Church consecrated to Saint Sophia, in Floreasca district. It is an
    example of small scale religious edifice. As regards the Universul Palace, it
    is a mix of utilitarianism and the need to erect a tall building, capable of
    housing a number of newspaper offices. Perhaps the plot of land there required
    a vertical construction, dominated by an imposing tower which reminds us of
    America’s sky-scrapers. As regards the decorative elements, there are also
    items of the Neo-Romanian style. Many of Paul Smarandescu’s projects have this
    watch-tower which had a practical function as well, that of offering a
    beautiful bird’s eye view of the entire area, since many of the buildings were
    located in green areas. Also, Smarandescu’s Neo-Romanian style includes many
    wooden elements, such as wood inwrought with decorative elements inspired from
    traditional architecture.






    Paul Smarandescu died in 1945 and did not
    see how his buildings were nationalized and neglected by the communist regime.