Transylvania Barracks

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StatusDemolished
Coordinates45°45′15″N 21°13′53″E / 45.75417°N 21.23139°E / 45.75417; 21.23139
Year built1719–1729
Transylvania Barracks
Cazarma Transilvania
Transylvania Barracks in the interwar period
Interactive map of the Transylvania Barracks area
General information
StatusDemolished
LocationTimișoara, Romania
Coordinates45°45′15″N 21°13′53″E / 45.75417°N 21.23139°E / 45.75417; 21.23139
Year built1719–1729
Demolished1961–1965
Height
Height20 m
Dimensions
Other dimensions483 m in length
Design and construction
EngineerNicolas Doxat (purportedly)[1]

The Transylvania Barracks (Romanian: Cazarma Transilvania; German: Siebenbürger Kaserne; Hungarian: Erdélyi laktanya) were built between 1719 and 1729 by order of Count Claude Florimond de Mercy, commanding general of the Banat of Temeswar. At 483 meters long, they were the largest barracks in Timișoara and one of the longest buildings in Europe.[2] They were demolished between 1961 and 1965, and the Civic Park was built in their place in 1971. Today, only a small part of the Transylvania Barracks remains, used by the National Theatre as a second stage.

History

References

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