bg Karlovy Vary

Three Moors House

- Tržiště 25 -
The original building was built in 1715, already known by the name Three Moors by then, and was owned by the Heilingötter family for several generations. The devastating of 1759 completely destroyed the building, and in that same year until 1760, Josef Heilingötter had a new building built in the Rococo style. Since 1803, the owners of the house were tinsmith Bernard Heilingötter and his wife Lucie. During their tenure, the German poet was accommodated here nine times between 1806 and 1820.
The building that was built in 1760 shown in an old postcard from 1909
The new owners of the building were Franz Stüdl from Vienna and his wife Wilhemine. In 1899, they decided to tear down the building and build a new, more spacious one in its place. There was a lot of resistance from the citizens of Karlovy Vary against their intention, and it took ten years for the Stüdls to enforce their intention. In 1909, the building was demolished, and in that same year, the construction of the current building started. The construction, which was executed by a project of the architect and builder Karl Heller in collaboration with the Austrian architect , was completed in 1910. After the in 1945, the house was renamed as part of the expropriation of private property. After more than two centuries, he was given another name, Dagmar.
An old photo in which the previous building is visible
The most striking part of the Art Nouveau building are the stucco floral decorations on the second floor were transferred from the original building. On the first floor, you can see several windows, two of the chamfered windows contain three moors. Two relief figures, which are part of the entrance portal, depict figures of two more moors, and even more moors are placed on top of the drainpipes. The building features several balconies, secured with wrought iron railings, in different shapes and sizes.
An old postcard in which the building is depicted