bg Oradea

Miklós Stern Palace

- Strada Republicii 10 -
The plot on which the three-story building was built, was bought in 1904 by the chemist and engineer Miklós Stern, who after the purchase commissioned its construction. He submitted the permit on June 30, 1904, and received the approval for the construction of the residential and commercial building on July 6, 1904. Two projects were created, one was made by the Jewish Hungarian architects and on June 29, 1904, while the other one was created by Hungarian architects and Vilmos Rendes. The building, which was built between 1905 and 1906, shows the reinterpretation of some parts of the first plan by the second plan.

Miklós Stern was deported in 1944, like many other Jews from Oradea to the Nazi extermination camps. Although he had a special status due to his merits in supporting the Hungarian war effort, and was exempt from deportation, he wanted to give some medicine to relatives who had been put on a train to a Nazi camp. At that moment when the wagon door opened he was pushed inside and later died in a camp, together with his family.
An old postcard that shows the building
The hip roofs of the Art Nouveau building are topped with , which also count for the bell-shaped dome that's part of the . On top of three of the , you can see another finial, while the top of the other oriel window is adorned with and . The oriel windows, as well as the roof overhang, which is interrupted by these same oriel windows, are all supported by . In addition, the building is exquisitely embellished with all kinds of floral and heart-shaped decorations.
The building is visible in an old postcard