bg Sarajevo

Ješua Salom Palace

- Obala Kulina Bana 20 -
The two-story building, which houses a residential function on both floors, was constructed in 1910. The construction, which was executed according to a design that came from the hand of the Austro-Hungarian architect , was commissioned by the prominent Bosnian Jewish merchant Ješua D. Salom. In 1922, the building was sold to Simo Krstić, and in 1931 the mansion was taken over by the National Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which in the same year sold the building to Jacques Salom, director of Dolac, the first Bosnian match factory. In 1962, the building was nationalized as social property, housing the headquarters of the Society of Engineers and Technicians of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Since 1991, it became the home of the Sarajevo Cantonal Board of the Party of Democratic Action.
An old postcard that shows the building on the left
The most distinctive feature of the Art Nouveau building is the majestic bell-shaped dome that's crowned with a . On top of the piers, which are embellished with and , you'll be able to see a globe. The that's placed between two of these piers is adorned with an motif, which also counts for the frame of the mushroom-shaped window. The , which is supported by three impressive , is topped with a balcony that's secured with a wrought iron railing adorned with and geometric forms. Around the windows, you can see even more floral ornamentation and egg-and-dart motifs, as well as embellished with . At the bottom of the oriel window, you can admire a surrounded by even more floral ornamentation, including a .
The building is visible in an old postcard