Juhász Gyula - Szántó András: Hotels - Our Budapest (Budapest, 1999)

The Britannia’s garage the basement rooms of the hotel. The murals depicting historical scenes, the stained glass windows, the clinker wall-covering and the leather-backed chairs exuded “some kind of rural atmosphere”. Novelist Ferenc Móra spoke of the Britannia as his second home. Soon enough, a room named for the writer was added to the estab­lishment. Inscribed into the scorched wooden panelling orna­mented with folk motifs and illustrated with painter Jenő Haranghy’s colour pen-and-ink drawings were twelve quotations from Mora’s works. It was here, too, that a portrait of the writer painted on glass was exhibited. In the mid-thirties, the elimination of a number of shops on the street front left sufficient space for the opening of a café. The walls of this were decorated with Jenő Ha­ranghy’s tapestries. Opening a cellar underneath a neighbouring building in Szondi utca, the proprietor built Budapest’s first under­ground hotel garage, accommodating thirty cars. By 1937 an impressive dome-topped hall with a capacity of five hundred persons had been created. This was of particular significance due to the fact that when the ban­queting hall of the Hotel Royal was converted into a cin­ema, there were hardly any halls in Pest of a similar size where large-scale events could be held. The walls between marble fire-places purchased at auctions from aristocratic palaces were decorated with Shakespearean illustrations by Haranghy. (No wonder the hotel was jok­ingly referred to as the Haranghy museum!)The lighting of the glass dance floor also lit the garage underneath. 32

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