bg Karlovy Vary

Rudolfshof Spa House

- Mariánskolázeňská 25 -
The four-story residential and commercial building, which later also became known as Sanatorium Florence together with some of the surrounding buildings, was built in 1888 for Rudolf Knoll, brother of the well-known Karlovy Vary mayor, , who perished during the of 1890. The project was developed by the architect and builder Karl Fischer-Birnbaum, who was also responsible for the extension made in 1892. Since the beginning of its existence, it has been providing services to travelers and later to spa guests, among these visitors was the Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, , who stayed here in 1915. In 1918, another famous person who stayed here was the Turkish soldier, politician, writer, and the founder of the Republic of Turkey, . He received treatment here for a serious kidney disease, which first appeared during the . During the , he received treatment first in Vienna and then in Karlsbad between June 1 and July 28, 1918, to recover from his health. After the , the building was confiscated by the Czechoslovak state, and later in December 2005, it became part of the Carlsbad Plaza Hotel, like several of the surrounding buildings.
An old postcard in which the building is depicted
The building, built in the Neo-Renaissance and Eclectic styles, features a semi-octagonal covered with a bell-shaped dome, which is topped with a lantern tower and a . The turret, as well as the dormers and the top gable, are all decorated with a pointed . In addition, the top gable features some , circle-top windows topped with a , , and a supported by . The on the top gable, as well as elsewhere on the building, and also the columns, are either crowned with an Ionic, a Doric, or a Corinthian . Underneath the eave, you can admire a decorative band adorned with a and even more dentils, which in this case, are adorned with foliage. The large , which is topped with a , is supported by corbels, which also counts for the that are either secured with a wrought iron railing or a stone balustrade with incorporated . Underneath four of the corbels, you can admire a , in which a is incorporated. A is placed above some of the third floor windows, and another keystone is placed above the first floor windows, which features another cartouche.
The building around 1940