Skip to the main content

Preliminary communication

https://doi.org/10.47960/2232-9080.2025.29.15.15

ZAGREB BREWERY: THE GENESIS OF CONSTRUCTION FROM ITS FOUNDING IN 1892 TO THE PRESENT DAY

Vedran Ivanković orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-3834-8697 ; University of Zagreb, Faculty of Architecture *

* Corresponding author.


Full text: croatian pdf 2.486 Kb

page 15-28

downloads: 61

cite

Full text: english pdf 2.431 Kb

page 15-29

downloads: 55

cite


Abstract

The Zagreb Brewery was founded in 1892 in Gornja Ilica (today Ilica No. 224) as the Zagreb Joint Stock Brewery and Malt Factory JSC. It is one of the rare industrial plants that has operated on the same location since its foundation. It was planned as a production complex of 11 buildings that were built and expanded until the First World War, namely: 1892–1897 according to the designs of Kuna Waidmann, then 1897–1912 according to the designs of Martin Pilar, and immediately before the First World War according to the designs of the construction company "Pollak, Albert and Bornstein" (after the First World War "Pollak and Bornstein"). As a representative production complex built in the historicist (neo-Renaissance) style, it marked the western part of Ilica, introducing the first public (entertainment) content to the former periphery. After privatization in 1994, the first and most valuable building layer was devastated beyond recognition by additions, and the devastation began to a lesser extent after the Second World War. Today, the Zagreb Brewery is a protected cultural property, but there are no plans yet for its restoration.

Keywords

Zagreb Brewery; Ilica; Kuno Waidmann; Janko Nikola Grahor; Franjo Klein; Martin Pilar; Pollak; Albert and Bornstein; Pollak and Bornstein

Hrčak ID:

332449

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/332449

Publication date:

20.6.2025.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 374 *