bg Zilina

Royal Hungarian Post Office

- Sládkovičova 169 -
The former Royal Hungarian Post Office, which was built with two floors with an administrative function, was built in 1907 and ceremoniously opened in 1908. Above the main entrance, there was a large of Hungary, which was removed after the , when the building was handed over to the city administration. The city owned the building until 1936 when it was sold to the Czechoslovak Republic. Already during the first Czechoslovak Republic, the construction of a new post office took place on the plot of the old post office. The construction began in 1938 after the demolition of the old post office building and was finalized in 1941 according to the design of the Slovak architect , widely known as a master of functionalism.
The building is depicted in an old postcard
On top of the central part of the Art Nouveau building, in addition to the coat of arms, you could see a protruded part and a segmentally shaped multi-layered . The corners of this avant-corps part, as well as the avant-corps part in which a balcony was placed, were determined by . The balcony was supported by a total of three , and it was secured with a stone balustrade. A straight was placed above a large part of the windows, and underneath these pediments, an could be seen.
An old postcard from 1912 that shows the building on the right