bg Portschach

Villa Hoyos

- Haupts 120 -
The residential three-story villa, which is also known as Villa Eichenhügel, was built between 1894 and 1895 according to the plans of an unknown French architect. The construction of the building was commissioned by Count Ladislaus Hoyos, who was born in 1834 and got married to Countess Franziska of Herberstein, who was born in 1850. Together they had seven children, who were named Friedrich, Heinrich, Ladislaus, Josef, Therese Felicie Marie, Maria Theresia, and Felicie. Count Ladislaus Hoyos comes from a Spanish noble family, who settled in Austria and in the 16th century. Between 1883 and 1894, Ladislaus was the Austro-Hungarian Ambassador in . The large family of Ladislaus and his brothers came and went, they only stayed there in the summer. The villa was very difficult to heat, they noticed this when they were here in the winter and always complained that it was terribly cold. Count Ladislaus died in 1901, and his wife Franziska in 1920, but the villa remained in the family's possession.
Count Ladislaus Hoyos
The beautiful building, built in the Heimatstil architectural style, features a tower on the northwestern side, of which the roof, covered with orange roof tiles, is crowned with . Other parts of the roof, including the dormers, are crowned with . Underneath the roof of the tower, you can see a protruding part of the facade supported by loads of wooden . Below that, and on the southern and eastern sides of the building, you can see an that's supported by wooden corbels, which also counts for the eaves of the roof that are placed on top of the oriel window. The building also features several wooden , a wooden , as well as a wooden porch that covers the main entrance door.
An old postcard in which the building is shown