Prakfalvi Endre: Architecture of Dictatorship. The Architecture of Budapest between 1945 and 1959 - Our Budapest (Budapest, 1999)

One building of the Fiastyük utca housing estate IN VŐLEGÉNY utca Four hundred and fifty-six flats were to be built on the area, which number would have fallen short of specifica­tions in terms of economy. The number of flats was there­fore raised (i.e. the floorspace of the individual flats was re­duced). Here is how the aggregate number of flats planned can be broken down: of the 515 flats, 141 were single­room apartments (of which 88 had limited conveniences), 308 had two rooms and 66 three. The estate was given a household and a haberdasher’s store, a tobacconist’s, a hairdresser’s, a cobbler’s and a dress mender’s shop, a “Patyolat” laundry and a fast-food-cum-on-licence estab­lishment. Each flat was to be equipped with a tile stove, a “Neptun” water-heater in the bathroom, a washbasin, a WC and a kitchen basin. Preparatory work was impeded by the lack of roads. The construction was started with small machinery (ten “Brunn” cranes, a pneumatic mortar pump, two mortar mills, six concrete mixers, conveyor belts, and vibrators); a short column crane was brought in at a later stage. There was a shortage of labour, and the workforce, further diminished at harvest-time, was supple­mented with student workers. Furthermore, the account observes that the hurried pace at which the work was done 44

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