Shared Visions, Local Realities: Industrial Architecture Model Exchanges
across the Habsburg Empire
Raluca-Maria Trifa
Ion Mincu University of Architecture and Urbanism, Bucharest
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Hungarian Historical Review Volume 15 Issue 1 (2026): 30-57 DOI 10.38145/2026.1.30
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Habsburg Empire experienced an accelerated process of urban modernization driven by industrialization and infrastructural expansion. These developments were shaped by the mobility of architects and engineers trained primarily in Vienna and Budapest, whose professional trajectories connected imperial centers with regional cities. Focusing on Brno, Pécs, Timişoara, and Rijeka, this article examines the circulation of industrial architectural models across the Monarchy and challenges linear center-periphery interpretations of modernization. It argues that architectural transfer operated through multidirectional exchanges facilitated by educational institutions, professional networks, public competitions, municipal administrations, state monopolies, and private enterprises. While standardized solutions were widely employed, their implementation was mediated by local economic conditions, administrative frameworks, and municipal initiatives. The article highlights how regional cities functioned as active sites of adaptation and experimentation rather than passive recipients of metropolitan models. The study contributes to a more nuanced understanding of industrial architecture as a key agent of imperial integration, while also addressing the tensions, negotiations, and local specificities that shaped modernization processes.
Keywords: Habsburg Empire, architectural exchange, industrial heritage, infrastructure development, regional adaptation