Zoltan Harmat | |
Birth Date: | August 20, 1900 |
Birth Place: | Máramarossziget, Hungary (today Sighet, Romania) |
Death Place: | Israel |
Nationality: | Hungarian, Romanian, Israeli |
Alma Mater: | University of Budapest |
Significant Projects: | Holyland residential complex, Villa Hanna Salameh (The Salameh House) |
Relatives: | Dumitru Cernicica brother in law |
Zoltan "Shimshon" Harmat, born Stern (August 20, 1900 in Máramarossziget, Hungary - June 1, 1985 in Israel)[1] was an Israeli architect.
Zoltan Harmat was born in the town of Máramarossziget, Hungary (today Sighet in Romania). Harmat's parents provided him with a rich education and cultural experience. His father served as a teacher and director of a local Jewish school.
At the end of high school, Harmat decided to study architecture at the Budapest Faculty of Architecture and completed his degree in 1924.[1]
After graduation Harmat worked for one year in his profession, before immigrating to Mandate Palestine.[1] In the following years he went back several times to visit his relatives, the last time just days before the outbreak of the Second World War, Harmat making it back to Palestine on the last ship to cross in peacetime.[1] After the war there was no one left of his family in Sighet, all having been killed in the Auschwitz extermination camp.[1]
In Palestine Harmat joined a firm led by the renowned British architect Albert Clifford Holliday and worked there for the next five years.[1] During this period, he participated in the planning of many projects in Jerusalem, including St Andrew's Church (the "Scottish Church"; 1927), the Town Hall on Jaffa Street 22 (1930), the Bible Society House on 7 Yohanan MeGush Halav (John of Giscala) Street (1926–28), and two new wings for the outpatient Saint John Eye Hospital, separated by the Hebron Road - one wing is currently the Mt Zion Hotel, and the other the .[1] [2] [3]
After the departure of Holliday, Harmat contributed in one way or another to other important projects, such as the Central Post Office, the National Bank and the Generali Building.[1] Around the 1930s and 1940s, he designed, independently, homes for elite families in Jerusalem.
One of his most famous designs is the Holyland Hotel near the Malha neighbourhood. The hotel was planned in 1952, built between 1955-1958,[4] and demolished to make place for new hotels and private homes in the 2000s.[5] Harmat designed the hotel implementing a modern International Style type of architecture and utilising Jerusalem's traditional white limestone.
Zoltan Harmat designed over 150 architectural projects. All projects are built in Jerusalem unless stated otherwise.