Matits Ferenc: Protestant Churches - Our Budapest (Budapest, 2003)
■ The main jjapade of the church on the left of the main fayade fronting on Lajos utca. Right beneath the cap, there are three narrow windows on each side of the tower. The interior is segmented by a broken, reinforced-concrete framing which supports the ceiling, with wooden coffers filling the spaces between the individual beams. On the longer side of the rectangular, single-aisled hall-church there are both long and narrow windows to light the interior. Separated from the church body by a triple vaulting is the sanctuary, lit by small round windows on either side. A large wooden cross was placed above the Ruskica-marble altar of the sanctuary. The baldachin-topped pulpit to the right of the apse is clearly visible both from all the elm pews downstairs seating the majority of the 450 worshippers that the church can admit, and from the galleries along the east and south walls. In a manner uncharacteristic of Lutheran churches, a separate baptistery was designed by Friedrich, which lies to the right of the entrance. The decorative- looking Rieger organ, whose designs were made by Aladár Zalánfy in 1940, was 23