Description
The Hungarian Parliament Building on the Pest bank of the Danube — designed by Imre Steindl, completed 1904, the third-largest parliament building in the world at 268 metres long — is one of Europe’s great architectural statements of national identity. The building’s exterior — a combination of Gothic Revival, Baroque, and Renaissance elements applied to an essentially French Second Empire plan — is executed in Zollikofer limestone and adorned with 90 statues of Hungarian kings, warriors, and coats of arms. At night, the full exterior floodlighting creates a warm amber luminosity that is reflected in the Danube’s fast-flowing surface. This photograph was made from the Fisherman’s Bastion on the Buda Castle hill at 9pm in December — when the river flow is reduced and the reflection quality is at its annual peak — using a 135mm lens to frame the Parliament facade and the illuminated Széchenyi Chain Bridge in a single composition across the river.
