bg Arad

National Bank Palace

- Bulevardul Revoluției 72 -
The construction of the three-story building, which was built for administrative and commercial purposes, started in 1909 and was completed in 1910. The design for the construction was created by the Hungarian architect , while the demolition and construction works were executed by the Romanian-Hungarian architect . At first, the building was owned by the Arad–Cenad Railway Company which operated in it, as well as several residential apartments, and shops and warehouses on the first floor, one of them being the shop of the merchant from . Later on, the building housed a branch of the National Bank of Romania, which is an independent public institution, with headquarters in the city of . Until 1948, the institution was private, controlled with an iron fist by its shareholders who, more than once, defied the government of their own party, the National Liberal Party.
An etch as part of a newspaper advertisement that shows the building
The mansard roof of the building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Classical and Neo-Renaissance, contains a protruded part that's adorned with floral ornamentation and crowned with a . The , which is topped with a beehive, features a richly decorated , as well as . Dentils are also used to adorn the roof , which is topped with a balustrade that contains the same as the ones used in the . The tympanum is supported by four impressive columns, which are unlike the , crowned with an Ionic . Some of the cartouches and all of the that are placed between the third and second floor windows are embellished with a . The first floor is also adorned with cartouches and keystones, as well as a floral motif, and wrought iron-barred windows that are placed within the wooden entrance doors, one of which is topped with a lovely window.
An old postcard that shows the building on the right