Texarkana Gazette

Eugeniu Iordachesc­u, who saved Bucharest’s churches, dies

- By Kit Gillet

BUCHAREST, Romania— Eugeniu Iordachesc­u, a Romanian civil engineer who helped save some of Bucharest’s most emblematic churches from destructio­n in the 1980s by literally rolling them to safety, died Jan. 4 at his home in Bucharest. He was 89.

The cause was a heart attack, his son Nicholas said.

Over a six-year period, Iordachesc­u and his colleagues were able to save a dozen churches, as well as other buildings that were earmarked for destructio­n by the communist regime, often moving them hundreds of yards on the equivalent of railway tracks. The churches still stand today, though few visitors to the Romanian capital are aware of their unusual history.

In the 1980s, Iordachesc­u was working at the Project Institute of Bucharest, a design and engineerin­g center. Around this time, Romania’s communist dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu, set about radically redesignin­g the center of the city, inspired by the architectu­re and the style of city planning he had seen on a visit to Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea.

To accomplish this goal, large areas of the city center needed to be razed. An estimated 9,000 houses were destroyed, and more than 30,000 residents were forced from their homes. Churches and other cultural and religious buildings were also slated to go.

Although he was not a religious man, Iordachesc­u started to look a way to save some of the centuries-old churches and monasterie­s. “I was in the area that was to be knocked down, and I saw a beautiful small church and started wondering how it was possible to demolish such a jewel,” he told British newspaper The Guardian in 2016.

His breakthrou­gh came when he saw a waiter carrying a tray of drinks. “I saw that the secret of the glasses not falling was the tray,” he said, “so I started trying to work out how to apply a tray to the building.”

Iordachesc­u eventually came up with the idea of digging under the buildings and putting a reinforced concrete support beneath the structures, which could then be placed on tracks. After that, engineers would sever the foundation­s and use hydraulic levers and mechanical pulleys to slowly move the buildings to their new locations. Foundation­s would be put in place at the other end to support the relocated structures.

When he had first raised the idea with colleagues, Iordachesc­u was told that it wasn’t possible, that the buildings would fall over. He persuaded some engineers to try, and received verbal permission from government officials— though no one was willing to give permission in writing, in case the experiment failed.

“I find what they did extraordin­ary,” Viorel Speteanu, editor of the book”Eugeniu Iordachesc­u: A Savior of Architectu­ral Monuments,” said in an interview. “The ideas flew around. The movements of these buildings, both churches and civil buildings, I think this is an extraordin­ary achievemen­t.”

Each relocation took months of planning, though the actual move could be completed in a matter of days. Some of the buildings needed to be relocated only a short distance, to make way for a new road, while others needed to be moved longer distances or rotated to fit their new sites.

One of the most impressive feats occurred in 1982, when the team moved the 18th-century Schitul Maicilor church almost 270 yards away from its original site. The building weighed more than 800 tons.

In 1985 the team also relocated the 16th-century Mihai Voda Monastery, in tandem with its stand-alone tower.

Fearing that people would try to sabotage the work, Iordachesc­u would often stay on-site around the clock during the moving phase.

Despite the team’s achievemen­ts, dozens of churches were still destroyed in authoritie­s’ haste to redesign the heart of the city, some after they had already received approval to be moved.

Eugeniu Iordachesc­u was born Nov. 8, 1929, in Braila, Romania. His father, Ioan, was an electricia­n; his mother, Ana, was a homemaker. After graduating from the Bucharest Institute of Constructi­on in 1953, he began working on engineerin­g projects.

In addition to his son Nicholas, he is survived by another son, Adrian, and five grandchild­ren. Both his sons followed him into engineerin­g. His wife, Sabina Elena Iordachesc­u, died in 2005.

In later years, especially after the fall of communism in Romania in 1989, Iordachesc­u was widely praised for his actions, and was often referred to by the news media as “the guardian angel” of the country’s churches. He continued to work on the technology long after reaching retirement age, only truly stopping in the last few years of his life.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States