bg Arandelovac

Knjaza Miloša Pavilion

- Vojvode Putnika 2 -
The construction of the one-story building, which was built for commercial purposes, was completed in 1907. The building was built according to the design that came from the hand of the Serbian architect . The building was built on a spring, which in 1836 was discovered by Doctor Emmerich Lindenmayer. He was the chief of the Serbian Army Medical Corps and discovered the healing power of the mineral water from the spring in Bukovik, a village that's now part of the city of Aranđelovac. The spring's catchment was made in 1839, during the arrival of Princess in Bukovik.
The building shown in an old postcard
The building, which was one of the first buildings that were built in Serbia from reinforced concrete, was split up into three parts. In the central part there was a spring, in the northern wing there was a bottling plant, and in the southern wing, there was a covered area intended for spa guests who used the mineral water for therapeutic purposes. In the period between the and , the covered open part got walls.
An old postcard that shows the building
The dome that covers the central part of the Art Nouveau building is topped with a containing an ornamental sun. Around the dome, placed on each of the four corners, you can admire a decorative vase. This part of the building is lavishly decorated with a adorned with a lovely female , as well as loads of floral decorations. In addition, this part, but also the northern wing, are embellished with an motif. The northern wing features a gable that's topped with a and two . The southern wing features some that are incorporated with simplified , as well as a .
The building is shown in an old photo