bg Sarajevo

Sarajevo City Hall

- Brodac 1 -
The construction of the two-story building, which is also known as Vijećnica, started in 1891 and was completed in 1896. The building was built for governmental purposes and was designed by the Czech architect , but criticisms by the minister, Baron , caused him to stop working on the project. The Austro-Hungarian architect , who worked on the project in 1892 and 1893, fell ill and died in 1894 in , and the work was completed by the Croatian architect .
The project of Karel Pařík
The was formally opened 20 April 1896, and handed over to the City Authority, which occupied the property until 1949, when it was handed over to the National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Austro-Hungarian Archduke and heir to the throne visited Sarajevo City Hall on June 28, 1914, between the first assassination attempt aimed at him, which failed, and the second, fatal assassination attempt. After this event, the court declared war on Serbia, and this event is taken as the reason for the .
Franz Ferdinand arrives at the city hall after the first assassination attempt
On 25 August 1992, Serbian shelling during the caused the complete destruction of the building, which at the time housed the library. Among the losses were about 700 manuscripts and incunabula and a unique collection of Bosnian serial publications, some from the middle of the 19th-century Bosnian cultural revival. Under the direction of the architect Nedžad Mulaomerović, the reconstruction of the building started in 1996, and after years of restoration, the building was reopened on 9 May 2014.
The interior after the siege
The top of the building of the building, which is built in the style of Eclectic with Moorish and Byzantine influences, contains several and in addition to a dome. The hand-painted tiles were created by the Hungarian porcelain factory from called . The part of the building that's located on the southern side of the building, contains two , which are supported by several columns that are crowned with an Egyptian palm . A is placed on each of the three corner, which all containg a . There are many beautiful ornamentations around the windows, but also a number of flanked by columns and .
The building shown in an old postcard