bg Karlovy Vary

Quirinal Palace

- Mariánskolázeňská 23 -
The four-story building later also became known as Dukla and Kyjev, and even later as Sanatorium Florence, together with some of the surrounding buildings. It was built somewhere at the end of the 19th century for residential and commercial purposes according to the project of the German-Bohemian architect and master builder . The building was built for Julius Pupp, who was born on March 11, 1844, in Karlsbad, nowadays Karlovy Vary, as the son of Heinrich Josef Wilhelm Pupp and Theresia Pupp. He was a member of the hotelier family that owned Granhotel Pupp and loads of other buildings in the city. He got married to Katharina Barbara Pupp, born on October 25, 1845, in , with whom he had seven children, two sons and five daughters, who eventually inherited the building. 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.
Julius Pupp
The central part of the Eclectic and Neo-Renaissance building is determined by an , which is supported by a large that's adorned with floral decorations. The attic is determined by top gables and dormers, which are embellished with , , , as well as all sorts of , including swan neck pediments. The underneath the attic, of which some of the pediments are part of, you can either admire corbels adorned with a or . The , which feature a wrought iron railing that's abundantly decorated with volutes, are supported by all sorts of corbels, some of which are adorned with a depicting the Greek god . The building is richly decorated with all kinds of ornaments, to a greater extent with , foliage, and green men to which are attached.
An old postcard from 1910 in which the building is visible