bg Osijek

Villa Plazzeriano

- Ulica Stjepana Radića 34 -
The two-story building, which was built in 1901, was constructed for the residential needs of the owner of the town's brickworks, the Plazzeriano family. The construction was executed according to the design that came from the hand of the Austrian architect and builder . It changed owners in the 1920s, and it was repurposed into an inn that was named Gildo and it housed a shop. In 1927, Đura Tarnik moved his pharmacy into the building, and he adapted the interior of his new home, of which he became the owner. He transferred all the artistically designed inventory from his old pharmacy to the new space, but in the Allied bombing of Osijek in June 1944, the interior of the pharmacy was completely destroyed. Before the , it was bought by the Mišćević family. The building was nationalized in 1963, and from that time until 1991, it was used by the Serbian Orthodox Church, when it was returned to its former owners.
The building is shown in an old postcard from around 1912
The corner of the Eclectic building is determined by an that's covered by a hip roof on which a cross is placed as a . The gable on the eastern side of the building features a pointed and a segmental , of which the latter a decorative vase is placed. The bay window on the same side is topped with a roof terrace, which is secured with a stone balustrade that contains various . A is placed above many of the first and second floor windows, some of which are placed within a segmental pediment.
An old photo that shows the building