Architecture practice Robert Gutowski Architects designed a Lookout Tower in an area of exceptional beauty and rich wildlife, located in the surroundings of Lake Naplás, in the alluvial plain of the Szilas stream and the Cinkota Forest Park, also known as the Budapest Nature Reserve. in Hungary.

The area has always been a popular and interesting destination for hikers, becoming one of the most visited hiking spots and natural areas around Budapest. The tower is a structure that crowns the area and invites hikers to climb up, to rise above the landscape and above themselves, to enjoy the 360 degree panoramic views.

Robert Gutowski Architects designed the structure of the tower with fir wood, using a model reminiscent of a "column" that is both simple and sophisticated. The tower is fixed to a concrete base in the form of a "column" built on an equilateral triangular plane. The upper part, 27 meters high, is a triangle that corresponds to the floor of the lower level but rotated 60 degrees.

The figure resulting from the constant rotation of the triangle is a hexagon, with which the architects have wanted to refer to the symbolic link between architecture and mathematics. A characteristic geometry that has caused it to be proudly known by the locals as "Silas' Leaning Tower", and one of the most visited hiking spots in Budapest.

The perimeter wooden beams begin and end at the vertices of the horizontal triangles. You can enjoy the landscape from different angles thanks to the gaps between the beams. As we rise above the ground, we get a better view of the world outside, but also inside.


Lookout Tower by Robert Gutowski Architects. Photograph by Tamás Bujnovszky.


Lookout Tower by Robert Gutowski Architects. Photograph by Zsolt Hlinka.

Description of project by Robert Gutowski Architects

The nature reserve of Budapest is the Naplás lake and its surroundings, the floodplain of the Szilas stream and the Cinkota Park Forest. This area of outstanding beauty and rich wildlife has long been a popular destination for hikers. The hill rising above Naplás Lake is now crowned with a lookout tower, that as an architectural sign emphasizes the excursion place on the map of Budapest.

The structure of the tower made of timber is simple, yet playfully sophisticated. The mass gently twisting towards the sky, open-worked yet sculptural, highlights the site with its presence. The regular, yet unusual form brings variety and a joyful balance while creating connection. As you approach the lookout and then climb higher and higher up it, you are on a journey, spiritually. As we rise from the ground, we get a better view of the outside world, but also of the inside. The lookout is a link between the earth and the sky, connecting man with nature, giving us the opportunity to contemplate and relax.


Lookout Tower by Robert Gutowski Architects. Photograph by Tamás Bujnovszky.

The spruce timber structure fixed to the concrete base is interesting for its mass: a "column" built on an equilateral triangular plan, which is both unusual and regular. The 27-metre-high top is a triangle corresponding to the ground plan of the lower level but rotated by 60 degrees. The two horizontal planes are connected by triangular front walls sloping gently inwards and outwards, and the wooden beams at the edges start and end at the apexes of the horizontal triangles. The hexagon, which is the result of the rotation of the triangles, refers to the symbolic link between architecture and mathematics.

As you climb up the tower, you can see the landscape from different angles between the gaps in the wooden slats, all the way to the top lookout, where you can enjoy a 360-degree panorama. The lookout tower, with its unique geometry, is proudly known by the locals as "Silas's leaning tower", and almost immediately became one of Budapest's most visited hiking spots.

More information

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Architects
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Robert Gutowski Architects. Lead architect.- Robert Gutowski.
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Project team
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Béla Ákos Szokolay, Hunor László Kovács, Gergely Lőrincz
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Collaborators
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Architect’s associate.- Gáspár Bollók, Barnabás Dely-Steindl.
Structure design.- Dezső Hegyi.
Lightning protection.- Ádám Turi.
Contractor.- Fitotron System Ltd.
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Client
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Pilisi Park Forest Ltd. and Budapest Capital XVI. District Self-Government.
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Area
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120 m².
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Dates
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Completion year.- 2021.
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Location
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Budapest 1164, Hungary.
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Budget
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€287,185.14 (£250,000.00).
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Photography
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Robert Gutowski was born in Budapest, Hungary. He studied architecture at the Budapest University of Technology. He founded his studio in 2004 and has been practicing in a creative community.

The competence and expertise of Robert Gutowski Architects are reflected in the successful implementation of design tasks for particularly complex projects: they have references in projects built in complex and sensitive urban conditions or in a monumental, UNESCO World Heritage environment, as well as in smaller-scale interior design assignments.

He has participated architectural design competitions from the start of his career. In addition to their built projects, recognition of Robert Gutowski Architects was mainly due to their achievements in international design competitions. His office has won awards in Yekaterinburg, at the international design competition for the new concert hall of the Sverdlovsk State Philharmonic, in Helsinki, at the competition for the expansion of the Finnish National Museum, and in Mariazell, with the Korda Pilgrim House. His scheme submitted at the international competition for the design of the Shenzhen Opera House was shortlisted, where he was competing for the first prize with renowned architects such as Jean Nouvel, Steven Holl, Herzog & de Meuron or Kengo Kuma. 

The design and construction of the church in Páty, also awarded at an architectural design competition in 2004, provide the framework for his works of the past one and a half decades. The consecration of the Pope John Paul II Church in the spring of 2019 is also a celebration of his professional and community commitment.
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Published on: May 9, 2023
Cite: "Sculptural presence in nature. Lookout Tower by Robert Gutowski Architects" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/sculptural-presence-nature-lookout-tower-robert-gutowski-architects> ISSN 1139-6415
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