Generally we define art relic to mean those buildings and edifices or groups of buildings and their furnishings and environment, to which a group, e.g. a country, will attribute significance and high priority due to their intangible values. Art relics, as public property of a community, will be passed down from one generation to the next.

The intangible value of art relics are generally analysed according to three categories: 1. historical value 2. aesthetic value 3. moral value

 
 
 

Up to the last century only buildings dating from antiquity and the Middle Ages were considered to be art relics. This category was extended to folk works at the beginning of the century then to technical works later in the century and then to valuable works from modern times. Nowadays there are protected buildings even among those in modern period. These buildings of art relic character are those new ones whose visual elements recall the atmosphere of art relics or town-houses.

 
  Technical content:
 
Wooden material: glued layers, hard borovi without lengthwise extension, larch, oak and meranti
 
Fittings: always with hidden SIEGENIA stock-lock and antique or doubly hidden strap-hinges, available in a safety version, too.
  Glass: float, hammered glass, glass-work increased thermal insulation
 
Surface treatment: cover painting or glazing colour in base or optionally chosen colour
 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

By this style we mean a room furnished with aristocratic furniture, upholstered period pieces and antiques. The furniture is generally golden or silver patterned. This style is categorised by reserved elegance and comfort. The furniture is usually made of the noblest wood and the auxiliary accessories are expensive and valuable.


We need space above all to create this style. Space in a monumental, symmetrical and antique home if possible, with high hall-like rooms which emit dignity. You should choose this style if you have a deep craving for nostalgia and ancient times or adore antique pieces. Only choose it if you are keen on the refined spaces radiating nobility which are regarded as anachronistic today but basically associate with refined manners and respectable etiquette.


It is characteristic of fixtures to be antique, long-lasting, hard and qualitative. In a home of classic style the fabrics are made of sophisticated materials, i. e. silk, velvet and lace. In addition to the furniture, the fabrics make up the true characteristics of a classical home. Some carry long-passed elegance such as patterned damask or an old drape, others such as brocade recall one particular historical time..


Our Kunság-Classic products were designed for this kind of environment. The art relic doors and windows or those of the art relic character are the representatives of this trend. They perfectly suit the exterior, interior spaces of old town-houses, or even the newly built but bourgeois homes. Owing to their excellent sound and thermal insulation and the wide range of choices in outer appearance they can satisfy almost all requirements arising in this area.