Community House of Kádártai

Institution presentation

Agóra Veszprém, Kádárta - külső
8411 Veszprém-Kádárta, Vasút u. 2.
Phone: +36 88 458 475
Fax: +36 88 458 475
E-mail: kadarta@agoraveszprem.hu

The professional manager of the Community House is Gina Tósoki

 

Presentation of the institution, its activities

The biggest change in public education in Kádárta was in 2017. After 70 years, the village has a new, modern Community Centre. It houses local clubs, NGOs, the offices of the Parish Council and the meetings of the Parish Council. Members of the Joyful Nose Retirement Club, who celebrated their 25th anniversary in 2018, meet weekly, and the Nostalgia Club meets monthly in the Community Centre.

The Kádárta Community House is the first base of cultural activities for about 2,000 inhabitants of Veszprém-Kádárta. As a result, our programmes are mixed, trying to meet the needs of the residents. Our events include exhibitions, games and crafts, educational lectures, commemorations, literary and musical programmes. Hungarian holidays and special days play a special role in the life of the Community Centre, and most of the programmes are organised in cooperation with the Ficánka Day Nursery.

With the support of the Kadárta Municipality and the Community for Kadárta Association, the largest NGO in the municipality, we organise a number of high quality cultural events every year.In autumn 2018, after several decades, we organised the Harvest Festival again, a joint event of the Association and the Community House, as well as the Village Christmas and the Kadárta Children's Day.

The Community House's big summer event has become a tradition, attracting many people from the surrounding smaller settlements and from Veszprém to the Kádártai Vigasságok

Community House of Kádártai - Rooms, rental conditions

Products:

  • Club room (about 20 m2)

Capacity: max 15 people.

Suitable for small craft activities, small gatherings, courses.

  • Large room (approx. 150 m2)

Maximum capacity: 110 people.

It is suitable for weddings, family and company events, dance rehearsals (equipped with a mirror), courses for larger groups, meetings, lectures.

Rental conditions:

  1. The tenant will take over the premises in the condition as viewed. The occupation lasts from the moment the keys are handed over to the tenant. During the above period, the lessee is responsible for the safekeeping of the fixtures and fittings of the rented premises. In the event of damage, the tenant must pay the costs of repair or replacement.
  2. If the Lessee carries out any activity during the use of the premises which gives rise to a royalty payment, the Lessee shall be responsible for the notification and settlement of such payment and for the payment of the royalty. The Lessor shall not be under any obligation in this respect. The Lessee acknowledges that if the premises are used for any activity or event which gives rise to any obligation to pay public taxes, to issue invoices, to provide receipts or to use a cash register, the Lessee shall be solely responsible for the resulting obligation.
  3. The Tenant has the necessary permits for the activity it is carrying out and is not carrying out any illegal activity.
  4. The hirer shall be fully liable for any damage caused by his/her involvement or by any person connected with him/her in connection with the activity.
  5. If the tenant is using the room for a music or dance event, the tenant must comply with the city's ambient noise limits with the music provider.
  6. Tenant shall comply with the local regulations of the MJHA, in particular with regard to advertising.
  7. The Community House is available free of charge to: civic organizations, clubs, foundations of Kádárta - by appointment. Other than those described above, the rooms can be hired by prior arrangement, for a fee.
Agóra Veszprém, Kádárta - terem
Agóra Veszprém, Kádárta - kiállítás
Agóra Veszprém, Kádárta - nagyterem

About the settlement

Kádárta has been a part of Veszprém since 1973, in 2001 it had 1590 inhabitants. There are fishing ponds on the outskirts of the village, which dates back to the Middle Ages. Until 1973 it was an independent, small, family-oriented village about 5 km from the centre of Veszprém, inhabited mainly by Reformed Christians. This magically beautiful area at the foot of the Bakony was already inhabited in Roman times. The storms of time did not wipe it out, and although it was reduced to a desert during the Turkish occupation, by 1727 it had a church and a water mill. In the early 1800s, more than 600 people lived here. By the post-World War II period, the population had risen to just over 700. Until 1950 it was part of Gyulafirátót, then it functioned as an independent council village until 1969, when it was annexed to Gyulafirátót again. From 1 January 1973 it became part of the town of Veszprém. Thanks to its proximity to the town, it is now inhabited by more than 2000 people. Its rural character has not been lost until today. 

The district is becoming increasingly dynamic. There is no school in the municipality, but in the early 2000s a beautiful two-group kindergarten was built on the area bordered by Kenderföld, Malomkert and Egres streets. The Ficánka Foundation was created by the community, with the help of the parents of the children attending the kindergarten. The Foundation has been in operation ever since, and every February the Charity Kindergarten Ball is held, the proceeds of which are used to develop the institution.

A memorial park and a playground were built on the banks of the Séd in Kádártai, and for several years the village festival was held here, which is now located in the Gelemér Street Fountain Park, and since 2013 it has been called the Kádártai Vigasságok. Since 2010, the Dévai Bíró Mátyás Prize, founded on the initiative of the Kádárta Municipality, is awarded on this day to those who have contributed to the cultural life of the Kádárta municipality, to the formation and maintenance of the Kádárta communities and to the strengthening of the Kádárta identity.

There is also a post office on the banks of the Séd, and the old Kádártai Village Hall, which was in service until 2017, and will house a new medical clinic after renovations.

The village has two churches. One is the Catholic Church of the Holy Spirit in Kádárta, built in 1981. It is very small in size, practically consisting of one room. The church of the Reformed Parish of Kádárta was built around 1790 in late Baroque style, using Gothic walls. The Reformed Church is under monumental protection.

In 2004, the Ministry of Defence invested in the construction of a state-of-the-art residential complex directly adjacent to Route 82. More than 100 flats and four new streets (Apród, Bedevölgy, Kapitány and Lődomb streets) were created, and the new County Prison Institute was opened next to them.

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