bg Novi Sad

Hotel Vojvodina

- Trg Slobode 2 -
The one-story building was built on the site of the famous Johann Heil brewery, which was demolished during the in 1949. The current building was constructed in 1854 for the owner Johann Eigler, who turned it into a hotel and a tavern with the name Hotel Elizabeth, named after Empress of Austria. The hotel, which was equipped with the most luxurious interior of that time, became known for its extremely high-quality cuisine and luxurious dishes, as well as top-quality wines. The hotel often organized parties for the elite, as well as balls attended by wealthier residents of Novi Sad. Between 1892 and 1895, the Dunđerski Theater was built in the courtyard of the hotel, as well as a generator that provided electricity for the lighting of a large part of the city center.
The building in the 1910s
In 1922, the hotel changed its name to Hotel Maria in honor of the Romanian princess , who got married to King . In 1927, the then owner executed a renovation in which it was equipped with new furniture and plumbing, and central heating. After the , the name of the hotel was changed again, this time to Hotel Vojvodina in honor of the region. The famous Hungarian writer died in this hotel on December 1, 1974, and in his honor, the passage connecting the street and the courtyard was named after him.
The building in the 1920s
Underneath the roof of the building, which was built in the styles of Biedermeier and Neo-Baroque, you can alternating and adorned with foliage. Underneath it, you can admire a band containing a pattern that's lavishly decorated with all sorts of geometric and floral ornamentation, as well as a motif. Some of the straight , which are placed above the second floor windows, are embellished with an ornament that consists of vines. The Corinthian that can be seen underneath these pediments contains two rosettes instead of the usual . The parts underneath some of the second floor windows, as well as the wrought iron railing and wrought iron of the balconies, are all adorned with even more rosettes.
An old postcard showing the building