bg Zilina

Arpád Braun House

- Námestie Andreja Hlinku 815 -
The construction of the three-story residential and commercial building was supposed to begin in 1911, however, the firm of Jozef Junek started building the house only on May 18, 1914, when the building permit was issued. The building, which was constructed on a plot where two smaller buildings used to stand, was built according to the design created in 1909 by the architect Izidor Szerdahelyi. From 1914 until 1920 wooden scaffolding was standing around the building. A new building permit was issued and the building company of Jozef Nosko completed the building in 1921. It was built for the Žilina lawyer Doctor Arpád Braun and his wife Ida Braunová, maiden name Wiesnerová. Arpád Braun was an important representative of the Jewish Orthodox religious community, who was born in Žilina in 1877.
The building is depicted in an old postcard
The commercial premises on the first floor were mainly used by banks, from 1922 Moravian Bank, from 1930 Moravian-Slovak Bank, and from 1939, the Slovak People's Bank. The owners, Arpád Braun and his wife Ida Braunová, were taken to a concentration camp in 1942, where they died. The building was nationalized in 1942 and until 1947 part of it was rented by the Žilina Garrison Military Command. The house passed to Ida Braunová's niece Signa Ševecová in 1949, but in 1962 it was nationalized again. In 1959 the ground floor was reconstructed, interior partition walls were demolished and only the shoe shop remained in the whole premises. Later it was transferred into the first self-service shoe shop in the town.
An old postcard that showsn the building on the left
The Art Nouveau building features two , one of which is covered by a dome, which is crowned with a . The building also features two topped with a , which are the only places that contain , which by the way are crowned by an Ionic . Above the second floor windows, you can admire an motif, various , and a surrounded by floral decorations. Below these same windows, an embellished with geometric shapes can be seen.
Another old postcard that showsn the building on the left