Statue Park

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  • Bathori utca, 22
    Budapest, Hungary 1054
    +36 1 424 7500
idared
idared
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Statue Park

Statue Park

Getting to the Statue Park is a 90-minute excursion (transfers from strassenbahn/tram to bus) to the hills out of town. The marketing is excellent, but the site itself is quite disappointing. Even with several large, impressive statues, there is not enough to hold your interest more than 30 minutes. The sparse landscaping of the park and bathrooms gives it a real Soviet-era feel. I spent 5 hours total for a visit. Only go if you have a week or so in Budapest. Also note that it's very muddy, so be ready for some dirty clothes if you go in the rain.

From journal Easter Weekend 2005 in Budapest

Statue Park

  • March 16, 2005
  • Rated 3 of 5 by PDT from Cheltenham
Statue Park

There are 40 statues arranged around a gravel park. The statues, busts, and plaques were moved there from the city after the communists lost power, when the Hungarian people did not want the reminders of the past. A great idea in lieu of them being destroyed!

The statues range from Communist favourites like Lenin and Marx to figures from WWII and the uprising of 1956

The park makes an interesting diversion from the city. To get there, get a tram to Etele Ter and then take the Volan bus. Every city map has an advertisement for this place, so just show that to the person at the ticket office and they'll know what you want. Alternatively, you can get the expensive bus from the city centre, BUT the journey is half the fun and the former is cheaper.

See www.szoborpark.hu.

From journal Valentine's in Budapest

Editor Pick

Szoborpark - Statue Park

  • September 8, 2003
  • Rated 5 of 5 by drumzspace from Napa, California
Szoborpark - Statue Park

Not really a "museum", per se, but a collection of the Soviet/Communist statues that once dotted Budapest. Since the fall of the iron curtain they have thankfully been preserved and relocated to a fairly remote field just outside of Budapest. Although lacking in much detail or information about the statues and what they meant in their Hungarian context, the park still provides a truly unique experience to visitors.

Please note: for this solo traveler, it was a bit of a task to get there. After taking the tram to the south of Buda, one must take a bus, which entails purchasing a ticket from non-English speaking people. Which means one must try to speak Hungarian. Which means giving one's self an anyeurism. Bring the pamphlet and show it at the ticket window if you think communication will be a problem.

From journal One Week In Budapest

Editor Pick

Tonnes of Statues - Szoborpark

  • July 25, 2003
  • Rated 5 of 5 by SaraP from London
Tonnes of Statues - Szoborpark

Part gallery/part park/part monument - the ultimate slapdown for proud Soviet history - a park housing 42 statues and friezes saved when the Soviet regime fell and now set out in an open-air museum.

The exhibits range from a colossus of a muscled sailor striding forth, shirt wide open and red flag clutched in his fist and proudly flying, to a frieze of townspeople including family, little old lady and courting couple, to the usual stern Lenins and Marxes.

On arrival you pass through a pseudo-classical gateway to the ticket desk and a bescarfed-woman behind the desk jumps up and switches on some stirring Soviet marching museum to get you in the mood. Then into the park -- past statues of all shapes and sizes, artfully placed to show you how the USSR wanted to embrace all its people (so hard that it choked some of them) and how it wanted to be remembered. Apparently, when the walls fell throughout the former Soviet vassals states and the populace began to revile its former masters, vengeance was taken out in no small part on the statues which were quickly pulled down and smashed up. The mayor, presumably sensing a portion of history going down the drain, put a temporary stop to it and asked people to nominate local pieces which they would want to see preserved.

And so they did -- the park opened in 1993 and is certainly one of the highlights of my visit. The only mystery is why it's so far out of town.

Most striking are the Goliaths - as well as the monumental giant sailor, caught forever charging forward (based on a 1919 revolutionary poster) is the stiff upright uniformed Red Army soldier who formerly guarded the golden victory symbol or "Liberation" monument at Gellert-hegy. Most moving of all is a statue towards the back, a male figure caught as he falls to his knees, head back and throat exposed, one arm held up, perhaps in supplication or perhaps in an attempt at self-protection...

On your way out (allow yourself an hour to mooch -- it's not big but you'll want to contemplate the enormity of what it tells you about the past), the music will be whisked on again, this time to remind you of your need for souvenirs -- these range from your very own CD of these Soviet marching classics to candles shaped as busts of Lenin (or, rather more tackily, can containing the "last breath of Socialism"). Also a variety of historic postcards and a good aeriel shot.

Open daily 10am (Winter w/es); entrance 600F (c£1.75/$3). Getting there is something of a test of ingenuity and endurance - touristbus twice a day (arriving with 25 others somewhat breaks the solemnity) - £6/$10 incl entry or a red 173 bus (outside Palazsi Udvar) to Edele ter and change to a Volan for Diosd - 130F single.

From journal Best of Budapest

Editor Pick

Szoborpark - Statue Park

  • February 25, 2002
  • Rated 4 of 5 by idared from Budapest, Hungary
Szoborpark - Statue Park

All around the country, and all around Budapest you can see mementos of the almost half century long communist era among the modern buildings and normal daily living facilities. Closed formerly state-run department stores with their socialist-realist design, and 50's typography. Rundown apartment buildings in the city with bullet holes on the facade that haven't been renovated beacasue the residents don't have the funds even for daily living, no to mention renovations or decoration. But Budapest also offers something unique, a piece of history preserved in its orginal state, for the world to see and draw the conclusions.

The Budapest Szoborpark is an open-air museum of communist statues that used to stand on the streets of Budapest. They were collected after the Some of the statues have a dramatic history, some are more peaceful memories from a bygone era. The museum is by far not a complete collection of communist relics, for example there is no Stalin statue at all (the only Hungarian Statue of Stalin was destroyed by the revolutionaries in 1956), but it is an interesting place to walk around and see the monumentality and expressivity of the statues. There are statues of Lenin (see photo), Marx and Engels, soviet soldiers, soviet military chiefs and more. As you walk around, imagine driving to your job every day and passing on of these monumental statues on your way to remind you of the leader that you *must* honour and accept, no matter how much terror he brings to your country. The museum is an introduction to the spirit behind the Iron Curtain.

For more photos and instuctions on how to get there see their official site.

From journal Communist Budapest

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