bg Timisoara

Austro-Hungarian Bank

- Bulevardul Ion Constantin Brătianu 1 -
The building permit for the construction of the two-story building, which was built for administrative and commercial purposes, was obtained on November 5, 1903. The construction, which was commissioned by the Austro-Hungarian Bank, lasted from 1930 until 1904. It was built according to a design that was created by the Hungarian architect and the contractor Alois Schlosser participated in the works. The Austro-Hungarian Bank was a bank that was founded in 1878 after the Austrian National Bank changed its name as a delayed consequence of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. It was the first Timișoara bank whose headquarters were not located inside the Citadel but in its immediate vicinity. The bank operated in the building until the end of the , after which it became in use by the National Bank of Romania, which was founded in April 1880.
A beautiful etching of the building
The protruded parts on two of the corners of the building, which is built in the styles of Art Nouveau and Neo-Baroque, are lavishly decorated with globes, , , a , and a . The underneath it, which got interrupted by the mascaron, is embellished with two strips of , of which the larger one is adorned with foliage. The cartouches that are placed on the are beautifully adorned with a crown and a . The parts between the pilasters are decorated with , even more volutes, and acanthus foliage, as well as two lion head and garlands.
The building visible in an old postcard
The six impressive columns that are located on the western side of the building, are all crowned with an Ionic . Above some of the second and first floor windows, you can see a keystone, some of which originates from the mouth of a lion head protome. The , which are placed underneath the first floor windows, are all incorporated with a total of five . The wrought iron that can be seen above the main entrance door contains the . The wrought iron fences that separate the plot from the street, as well as the wrought iron-barred windows, are lavishly decorated with volutes.
An old postcard that shows the building on the right