bg Bucharest

Hotel Astoria

- Bulevardul Regina Elisabeta 40 -
The four-story residential and commercial building was built between 1884 and 1885 by the Romanian Society of Constructions and Public Works. The building was built according to the project of the French architect . The first floor of the building was intended for commercial purposes, wherein 1890, the Typography and Foundry of Letters of Thoma Basilescu was located, and then, in the 1920s, the Murgășeanu Confectionery. Between the and , Hotel Astoria operated here, with a famous confectionery on the first floor. The Astoria Garden was used in the years between 1918 and 1924 for theater performances and sometimes for films, and in the summer of 1917 and in the years between 1924 and 1925 for film screenings. In 1944, the Nissa Hotel operated in the building, and in 1945, the Riviera Hotel. In the years of socialism, the Cismigiu Confectionery was located on the first floor of the building.
An old colorized postcard that shows the building on the left
The corner of the building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Baroque, is determined by a covered with a dome. Underneath the that separates that mansard roof and the dome from the rest of the building, you can see two strips of within their midst an motif. The large located on the fourth floor alternate with in some cases. Between the Corinthian of the that stretch all the way up from the second until the third floor, you can admire various , all of which are adorned with four . Some of the wrought iron , which are lavishly adorned with , are supported by two . A pointed supported by two corbels is placed above most of the second floor windows. Above the circle-top windows, you can see a , as well as two containing a rosette placed within a laurel twig. Also located on the first floor, are several festoons, as well as some ornaments embellished with volutes and a pine cone, a symbol of human enlightenment, resurrection, eternal life, and regeneration.
The building is shown in an old postcard