Gyula Rochlitz (1825â1886) was a Hungarian architect.
Born in NagyrĆce, Austro-Hungarian Empire (now RevĂșca, Slovakia) in 1825, Rochlitz completed his studies at Vienna University of Technology before commencing work at the Hungarian Railways where he became chief architect of the Budapest Railway Directorate in the late 19th century. It was in this role that he planned and designed (along with JĂĄnos FeketehĂĄzy) the arrivals hall of Budapest's 1884 Keleti pĂĄlyaudvar (Eastern Railway Station)[1] and the 477m-long Southern Railway Bridge (ĂsszekötĆ vasĂști hĂd) over the river Danube.[2] He died in Budapest in 1886.