Building of Merchant Stamenković

Building of Merchant Stamenković is located in Belgrade, in 41, Kralja Petra Street and it has the status of a cultural monument.[1] The building of Merchant Stamenković was built in 1907 according to the project by the architects Аndra Stevanović and Nikola Nestorović. The building is a combination of academic conception and Art Nouveau decoration, so that is belongs to a group of residential buildings built before the First World War in Belgrade.[2]

Building of Merchant Stamenković
Building of Merchant Stamenković Belgrade
General information
TypeCultural monument of exceptional importance
Town or cityBelgrade
CountrySerbia
Coordinates44°49′13″N 20°27′19″E
Completed1907

History

The position of the house on the corner of Kralja Petra Street and Uzun Mirko Street is not randomly chosen, given that Kralja Petra Street was the main trading street in Belgrade[3] and that it was paramount for all of Belgrade's merchants that they have their shop or business premises in this very city street. Thus, merchant Stamenković foresaw shops on the ground floor, and housing on the floors, which is a still ongoing division. Merchant S. Stamenković belonged to a family of skin merchants who came to Belgrade from Vranje in the mid-19th century. They were very successful in their work, and they even exported to many countries. Thanks to their acquired possessions, they were owners of many estates in Belgrade and they also established a bank that had branches abroad.

Architecture

The building of merchant Stamenković belongs to the group of residential buildings which were constructed in Belgrade before World War I, on which the combination of academic conception and Art Nouveau decoration was achieved.[4][5] At the time, the style of the Vienna and the Munich Art Nouveau was popular in Belgrade – the system of new decoration based mainly on the motif of floral origin. So the head and the cornices made of stucco and terracotta, the ornaments and geometrical ornaments found their place on the facades. This style was particularly close to the merchants, bankers and entrepreneurs, as well as architects who were tired of the academy, and this style won Belgrade facades to a lesser or greater extent and encouraged modernization of its architecture. At the same time, new building material, reinforced concrete, appeared in Serbia, which the architects Nikola Nestorović and Andra Stevanović used to experiment, even before the house with green tiles.[6]

References

  1. културе, Досије споменика. Зграда трговца Стаменковића. Завод за Заштиту споменика културе града Београда.
  2. Сецесија у Београду
  3. Богуновић, С.Г. (2005). Архитектонска енциклопедија Београда XIX и XX века (том Ι ed.). Улица Краља Петра(Зерек) Београд.
  4. Кадијевић, А. (2004). Два тока српског Ар нувоа: интернационални и национални (Наслеђе бр. V ed.). Београд.
  5. Ђурић Замоло, Д. (1981). Градитељи Београда 1815–1914. Београд.
  6. "Beograd koji ne primećujemo: Kuća sa zelenim pločicama" [Belgrade we do not notice: A house with green tiles]. Wannabe Magazine. 25 October 2011. Archived from the original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
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