Centrul de Cultură Arhitecturală is the cultural hub of the Uniunea Arhitecților din România (UAR) in Bucharest. It functions as UAR’s headquarters, exhibition space, library, archive, and the home of the architecture journal ARHITECTURA, and it is also the main venue for the organization’s events.1
The organization’s activity is centered on architecture as a cultural and civic discipline. According to UAR’s own reporting, its work includes promoting the cultural quality of architecture, disseminating information on architecture, urbanism, restoration, and architectural heritage protection, and developing cultural, editorial, and social programs.2 The page also notes that the building was recently included on Romania’s list of historic monuments, which reinforces the organization’s direct connection to built-heritage preservation.1
In practical terms, the Centre acts as a public-facing platform for exhibitions, book launches, conferences, documentary screenings, and architecture-related debates.1 This makes it relevant to sustainable housing and affordable housing mainly through its support for architectural research, public discussion, urban policy, and heritage-aware approaches to the built environment rather than through direct housing delivery.12 A notable indication of wider territorial reach is UAR’s mention of a Centrul de Cultură Arhitecturală Transilvania in Alba Iulia, suggesting activity beyond Bucharest, although the main center remains in the capital.7
UAR is rooted in Romania’s architectural profession and cultural sector, with its primary headquarters and correspondence address in Bucharest.2 The materials provided do not identify a founding year for the Centre itself, and I did not find reliable social-media or LinkedIn company-page information in the supplied results.12
