NATO in loo row at Ceausescu Palace
Read this story from the BBC this morning: Romania Caught Short in Loo Row.
The architect of the building, Anca Petrescu, who is still alive, rightly called this "humiliating."
Measuring 270 metres by 240 metres, and stretching 86 m above ground and as much below ground, the excessive building features nearly 500 chandeliers (many huge) and some 200,000 square metres of carpeting (all according to wikipedia).
Here's the rub: "Constructing the Palace and Centrul Civic required demolishing much of Bucharest's historic districts, including two neighborhoods with 19 Orthodox Christian churches, 6 synagogues and Jewish temples, 3 Protestant churches (plus eight relocated churches), and 30,000 homes."
All that for the People's Home which didn't consider basic people's necessities I see. Has any other building in the world destroyed so much history in one go? Perhaps a spot like the Colosseum in Rome did or, more likely, some of Stalin's monster buildings? Civilizations have had a history of building on top of each other, but the Ceausescu building managed to wipe out quite a large swath of its history in one go.






1 moments of dialogue:
http://ghepardoo.blogspot.com/2008/04/nato-summit-in-bucharest.html
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