As Benedek Gyorgyevics, the CEO of Városliget Zrt. the company responsible for implementing the Liget Budapest Project, emphasised, "The projects completed as part of the first phase of the park's redevelopment already show the singular – even by European standards – level of quality and thoughtfulness that will characterise the entire rehabilitation of the landscaping." He also said that 2019 marked the start of the second phase of the park's development, in which one of the biggest and most modern playgrounds in the country will be constructed in the Liget and ready to welcome children in the autumn of the same year. The construction work is already in an advanced state, with the play equipment – each piece surrounded by safe, fall-mitigating surfaces – also now installed in the area dedicated to the smallest visitors. In the next phase of the work, play equipment for older age groups will also be installed. The
Main Playground offers each age group a separate network of slides, along with nest, circle and hanging swings, rope courses, rotating play equipment, equipment for individual and doubles kicking games, trampolines, various sandboxes and water games in a total area of more than 13,000 square metres. As part of the family-friendly developments, the Városliget will host a total of seven new or renovated playgrounds. Also to be developed in the second phase of the park's redevelopment will be additional athletic grounds and a new two-kilometre illuminated running track.
Gyorgyevics emphasised that the Városliget and its nearly one hundred hectares of parkland are being renewed in several phases, with an important factor being that most of the Liget should always be open to visitors throughout the entire process. "With the implementation of the Liget Budapest Project, we are returning to the century-old traditions of the park in such a way as to ensure that they be maintained over the long term as well. The park is being renewed in terms of both quantity and quality: the new Liget will be both greener and more modern than the current one. As in its golden age, the renewed institutions, harmonically integrated into the park around them, will provide everyone with something new to love," the CEO said.
The state of developments currently in progress,
Gyorgyevics said that of the parts of the project that are currently in progress, the construction of the iconic
Museum of Ethnography building has been underway since the end of 2017, and last year was recognised as "Europe's best public service building" at the International Property Awards, where it won the special prize in the "World's Best Architecture" category, one of the most prestigious recognitions in the property profession around the world. Currently being completed is the underground work on the building, with the foundation ready and work on the underground structure and insulation in progress. Above-ground work will commence in due course. The museum will be structurally complete by the end of next year.
With the underground construction phase finished on the
House of Hungarian Music, the foundation and internal insulation is now ready, and work on the columns and supporting walls is now underway. Within one year, the remarkable building designed by world-renowned Japanese star architect Sou Fujimoto to occupy the former site of the Hungexpo office building will be structurally complete.
Work on the Dózsa György Street underground garage is in an advanced stage: on this project that started last summer, the foundation is being poured, and the reinforced concrete structure is being put into place The garage providing capacity for nearly 800 cars on three levels will be available for use by visitors to the Liget, and at discounted rates by local residents, by next summer. In order to achieve the goal of a car-free Városliget, additional underground parking is also being constructed in facilities on Állatkerti Boulevard and Hermina Road, with capacity for 700 and 275 cars respectively. The Kós Károly Promenade, for its part, is being set up as a traffic-free walkway, thus ridding the Liget of the 10,000-15,000 cars that pass through every day.
The Városliget Zrt. head feels that the reversal of the decades-long trend of growing paved surfaces eating up its green space is an important measure in the Városliget's renovation. As a first step in this direction, the unnecessarily wide – at 14 metres across – paved surface of the Olof Palme Promenade is being narrowed to a width of six metres, thus returning nearly 1600 square metres of green space to the park. While the construction is underway, pedestrian and bicycle traffic remains unimpeded on the 6-metre-wide paved surface that will remain. The renovation of the entire park will entail re-greening several thousand square metres of land, at the expense of its paved surfaces.
"The Liget Budapest Project is the kind of world-class development project that is extremely significant in terms of developing tourism and increasing the city's property values. Investors have already shown interest, and the values of local homes have also increased. Plans for hotels are also emerging. The area around the renewed Városliget will be one the most dynamically developing parts of Budapest," concluded Gyorgyevics.