Hungarian State Opera House
The Hungarian State Opera House opened in 1884 on Andrássy Avenue to the designs of Miklós Ybl. The Neo-Renaissance building is one of the high points of 19th-century Hungarian architecture, inaugurated in the presence of Emperor Franz Joseph I.
Although it does not rival the monumental scale of the opera houses of Vienna or Paris, it is ranked among the continent’s finest theatre buildings for its proportions and acoustics. The horseshoe-shaped auditorium seats around 1,300 people, while its richly decorated interiors—with frescoes, gilded details, and marble surfaces—reflect the representative ambitions of the era. Sculpted figures of famous Hungarian composers, including Ferenc Erkel and Franz Liszt, also appear on the main façade, further reinforcing the building’s national character.
At the opening performance, Ferenc Erkel’s opera Bánk bán and excerpts from Hunyadi László were performed. Since then, the Opera House has remained one of the centers of Hungarian musical life and a defining institution of Budapest’s cultural identity.
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Feszty Bar at the Opera House #5034 -
Opera House Entrance Ceiling #5072 -
Opera House Auditorium #5052 -
Opera House exterior detail #9018 -
Opera House Lobby #5073 -
Detail of the Opera House auditorium #5058 -
Main staircase at the Opera House #5030 -
Opera House facade at night #5024 -
Main Staircase at the Opera House #5032 -
Detail of the Opera House auditorium #5056 -
Royal Staircase at the Opera House #5051 -
Opera House exterior detail #5066 -
Opera House Dome #5063 -
Statue of Franz Liszt on the facade of the Opera House #5067 -
Side staircase ceiling in the Opera House #9011 -
The upstairs gallery of the Royal Staircase in the Opera House #5048 -
Opera House Auditorium #5054 -
The Sphinx at the Opera House #5070 -
Opera House Auditorium #5055 -
Red Salon at the Opera House #5042 -
Opera House Auditorium #9016 -
Opera House exterior detail #9021 -
Main staircase ceiling at the Opera House #9012 -
Opera House exterior detail #9009