Clark Ádám tér

Castle District


Clark Ádám tér, the square named after the 19th-century Scottish engineer Adam Clark (1811–66) who supervised the building of the Szécheny Chain Bridge (Széchenyi lánchíd), leading east from the square. He also designed the all-important tunnel (alagút) under Castle Hill, which opened to traffic three years after it was started in 1853.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Castle District attractions

1. 0km Stone

0.03 MILES

What looks like an elongated concrete doughnut hidden in the bushes off Clark Ádám tér is the 0km stone. All Hungarian roads to and from the capital are…

2. Museum of Applied Hungarian Folk Art

0.08 MILES

This small museum focuses on folk art from around Hungary. There are impressive collections of fine textiles and embroidery, wood and bone carvings,…

3. Turul Statue

0.1 MILES

To the east of the Habsburg Steps entrance to the palace is a bronze statue from 1905 of the Turul, a hawklike totemic bird that supposedly impregnated…

4. Sándor Palace

0.12 MILES

This imposing neoclassical palace dates back to 1806 and now serves as the official residence of Hungary's president (János Áder who was re-elected to a…

5. Hungarian National Gallery

0.13 MILES

The Hungarian National Gallery is an overwhelming collection spread across four floors and four wings of the palace that traces Hungarian art from the…

6. Eugene of Savoy Statue

0.13 MILES

To the southeast of the Habsburg Steps entrance, just in front of the Royal Palace, stands a statue of Eugene of Savoy, the Habsburg prince who wiped out…

7. Royal Palace

0.16 MILES

The former Royal Palace has been razed and rebuilt at least half a dozen times over the past seven centuries. Béla IV established a royal residence here…

8. Matthias Fountain

0.17 MILES

Facing the Royal Palace’s large courtyard to the northwest is the Romantic-style Matthias Fountain, portraying the young king Matthias Corvinus in hunting…