Results Monuments to visit Bucharest

PARLIAMENTARY BUILDING

Monuments & Buildings
4.2/5
77 review

Go there and contact

Carte de l'emplacement de l'établissement
Strada Izvor, 2-4, Bucharest, Romania Show on map
Improve this page
2025
Recommended
2025

The Parliament Palace (Palatul Parlamentului), an emblematic building in Bucharest, is the symbol of the megalomania of Ceaușescu. Its colossal silhouette stands in the heart of the capital, like a stinging reminder of this painful page of history. It is seen from above, from the Marriott for example, that it is the most imposing. Its location on the hill, added to the height of its walls, gives the impression that it crushes the city.

Built between 1984 and 1989, the building was then called the House of the People (Casa Poporului). It was supposed to house the main institutions, but its construction was interrupted by the revolution. The building as it stands today therefore remains unfinished. Its dimensions are impressive and it is difficult to mention it without a long list of numbers: it is the largest administrative building in Europe, the second largest in the world (after the Pentagon). With a surface area of 365,000 m², it is 270 metres long, 240 metres wide and 84 metres high, on 12 levels (plus 8 underground). The palace has more than a thousand rooms, of which the largest, the ballroom, is 2,200 m². Its gigantic carpet weighs 4 tons. The style is the one that prevails in most of the many villas that Ceaușescu have been built across the country: marble is omnipresent, as are gilding and chandeliers (there are 2,800 of them!).
Some 20,000 workers and 12,000 soldiers worked on its construction. Thousands of tons of materials were transported from all over the country: marble, crystal, cement, steel, wood... The House of the People was part of a larger project of systematization of the city: the Civic Centre (Centrul Civic), organized around the gigantic boulevard of the Victory of Socialism (today Unirii Boulevard), also included ministries and residential buildings for the communist elite.
To make room for this titanic construction site, a fifth of the city was razed to the ground, including valuable historical monuments such as the monastery Văcărești. Some 10,000 houses were demolished, particularly in the Uranus district, which was then full of charm with its cobbled streets and beautiful houses. The project consumed huge sums of money and contributed to the impoverishment of the population.
After the fall of the communist regime, the question was raised as to what function the building should be used for. There was talk of a hotel, a conference centre or simply destruction. Finally, the Chamber of Deputies was established there in 1994, followed by the Constitutional Court and the Senate, while the west wing houses the National Museum of Contemporary Art. The site also serves as an international conference centre. Rooms can even be rented for private events (including weddings, such as Nadia's Comăneci in 1996). However, a large part of the building is still unused and the maintenance of such a building is very expensive (more than 300 people work there daily).
Of course, the guided tour only takes you to a small part of the palace's rooms (about 5%), the most imposing ones. It lasts about 2 hours and is usually in English or Romanian, sometimes in French. For a small extra charge, you can add to the basic package a visit to the underground passages. Another, more expensive formula gives you access to the terrace on the eighth floor. Don't forget to bring an identity card.

Did you know? This review was written by our professional authors.


Members' reviews on PARLIAMENTARY BUILDING

4.2/5
77 reviews
Send a reply
Value for money
Service
Originality

The ratings and reviews below reflect the subjective opinions of members and not the opinion of The Little Witty.

You have already submitted a review for this establishment, it has been validated by the Petit Futé team. You have already submitted a review for this establishment, awaiting validation, you will receive an email as soon as it is validated.
Visited in july 2025
Très, très belle bâtisse !!!
Une vraie pépite pour ce coin d'Europe...
Visited in july 2025
certains ne sont pas éduqués, certains sont grossiers, ils ne savent pas distinguer la gauche de la droite. La Roumanie telle qu'elle est ! à éviter. le mieux, c'est de ne pas venir du tout dans ce pays ! Vous ne perdrez rien.
Visited in july 2025
Ce bâtiment, construit à l'époque communiste, est un exemple du peu de connaissances que Nicolae Ceausescu avait dans ses rêves de dictateur, il voulait le plus grand. Pour ce faire, il a détruit un village entier et utilisé beaucoup de ressources alors que le peuple en avait besoin. Le pouvoir qu'il détenait n'était d'aucune utilité pour les faibles à qui il refusait du pain. Lorsque vous le visiterez en tant que touriste, pensez à la quantité de sang et de douleur qui se trouve dans chaque morceau de marbre.
Visited in july 2025
On ne peut même pas faire de tourisme ! Je suis venue de 300 kilomètres, pour une visite, pour découvrir que... je dois rentrer chez moi, on n'a pas le droit, vous voyez, j'aurais dû appeler quelques jours avant pour prendre rendez-vous. Ce n'est pas non plus comme ça à Moscou. J'ai vu des touristes étrangers traités de la sorte. Dans n'importe quelle capitale européenne, on ne fait pas ça. Dégoûté.
Visited in july 2025
Un concert extraordinaire ! O experienta de neuitat ! ❤️
Send a reply