- 1 Ilica Street
-
1 Ilica Street Neboder u Ilici General information Type Office building Location 1 Ilica Street, Zagreb, Croatia Coordinates 45°48′46″N 15°58′34″E / 45.81278°N 15.97611°ECoordinates: 45°48′46″N 15°58′34″E / 45.81278°N 15.97611°E Construction started 1957 Completed 1958 Opening 22 August 1959 Technical details Floor count 16 Floor area 5,600 m2 (60,000 sq ft) Design and construction Owner Frankopan Nekretnine Architect Slobodan Jovičić
Josip Hitil
Ivan Žuljević1 Ilica Street (Croatian: Neboder u Ilici, Ilički neboder) is a skyscraper located in Ilica Street overlooking Ban Jelačić Square in the Lower Town area of Zagreb, Croatia. In Croatian, the building was known under the generic title Neboder (lit. Skyscraper) as it was the first business skyscraper in the country, but this use is today obsolete.
The building, designed by the trio of Slobodan Jovičić, Josip Hitil and Ivan Žuljević, was built between 1957 and 1958 and was officially inaugurated on 22 August 1959, when Većeslav Holjevac was mayor of Zagreb.[1] It was the tallest building in Yugoslavia at the time of its completion,[2] and it was the first building in the country which featured an aluminium façade (aluminium sheets for the building were manufactured at the Utva aircraft factory in Pančevo).[1][3] Other notable high-rises built earlier in Zagreb include the nine-story modernist Löwy Building built in 1933 and the so-called Wooden Skyscraper designed by Drago Ibler - but since they were both residential buildings which resembled skyscrapers in design but not in function or size, the sixteen-story 1 Ilica Street is regarded as the first "bonafide skyscraper" built in Zagreb and Yugoslavia.[1]
The principal investors were KONČAR Group and Ferimport, two large state-owned companies. The building later housed Ferimport offices, but it also featured an observation deck and a restaurant on its top floor (later converted into a short-lived disco club in the early 1990s) and a small shopping arcade which was built around the base of the building, connecting Ilica, Gajeva, Bogovićeva and Petrićeva streets. The observation deck was open to the public for decades, but it was fenced by security railings in 1967 after a man committed suicide by jumping off it and landing on a woman passing by, who was also killed.[3]
On 29 November 1970 (Yugoslav Republic Day), political activists Zvonko and Julienne Bušić used the observation deck to throw leaflets advocating Croatian independence, for which they were arrested.[4] (They later went on to hijack a TWA airliner in 1976 with the intention of convincing the international media into publishing a similar leaflet.)[5]
Ferimport later experienced a dramatic downturn in the 1990s after it was privatized in the years following Croatia's independence and the fall of communism, and the building visibly deteriorated in this period.
In 2001, three years after Ferimport had entered administration, it was sold for 6 million euros to Peter Doimi de Frankopan, a British real estate investor who claimed lineage to the House of Frankopan, a Croatian aristocratic family thought to be extinct in the 17th century.[1][3] Frankopan had plans for a large scale reconstruction of the building, but the initial concept (which entailed a complete redesign of the façade and the addition of panoramic elevators, spiral staircases and a few extra floors), was rejected by the city's institute for the protection of cultural heritage.[6] The project was then delayed for four years until a revised renovation plan was finally approved by city authorities in December 2005.[6]
Following the approval, renovation was finally launched in 2006[7] and was finished in early 2008.[3] The project was designed by the Aukett Fitzroy Robinson interior design practice in collaboration with the Zagreb-based architecture studio Proarh, and the actual work was done by the Strabag construction company.[6] The most significant change in the exterior was the replacement of the originally clear windows with dark gray glass.[8] The building currently has 5,600 m2 of office space, and the observation deck on the top floor is closed to the public.[3]
References
- ^ a b c d Ponoš, Tihomir (24 August 2009). "Kako je Zagreb dotaknuo nebo" (in Croatian). Novi list. http://www.novilist.hr/2009/09/03/kako-je-zagreb-dotaknuo-nebo.aspx. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
- ^ Milčec, Zvonimir (24 June 2009). "Ilički neboder" (in Croatian). ZAGrebus by Imejlčec. City of Zagreb. http://www.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=16462. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
- ^ a b c d e Vujaklija, Anamarija (5 December 2007). "Posljednji pogled s vrha iličkog nebodera" (in Croatian). Jutarnji list. http://www.jutarnji.hr/posljednji-pogled-s-vrha-ilickog-nebodera/234678/. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
- ^ Sablić Tomić, Helena. "Razotkrivanja" (in Croatian). Kolo magazine. Matica hrvatska. http://www.matica.hr/Kolo/kolo0201.nsf/AllWebDocs/Razotkrivanja. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
- ^ "Julienne & Zvonko Busic - Chronology". ZvonkoBusic.com. http://www.zvonkobusic.com/enga1.asp. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
- ^ a b c "Započela obnova Iličkog nebodera" (in Croatian). Croatian Real Estate Newsletter. Filipović Business Advisory Ltd.. February 2006. pp. 4. http://www.filipovic-advisory.com/datastore/newsletter/news_hr_1140193595.pdf. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
- ^ "Obnova nebodera isplatit će se tek za osam godina [Article about the renovation]" (in Croatian). Poslovni dnevnik. 2006-06-07. http://www.poslovni.hr/14818.aspx. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
- ^ Blašković, Boba (11 March 2007). "Neboder u Ilici uskoro u potpunosti ostakljen" (in Croatian). Jutarnji list. http://www.jutarnji.hr/neboder-u-ilici-uskoro-u-potpunosti-ostakljen/216437/. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
External links
- History of the building at the City of Zagreb official website (Croatian)
Zagreb History History of Zagreb · Gradec · Kaptol · Krvavi most · 1880 earthquake · 1995 rocket attacks · Zagreb crisis · MayorsDistricts Brezovica · Črnomerec · Donja Dubrava · Donji grad · Gornja Dubrava · Gornji grad-Medveščak · Maksimir · Novi Zagreb-istok · Novi Zagreb-zapad · Peščenica-Žitnjak · Podsljeme · Podsused-Vrapče · Sesvete · Stenjevec · Trešnjevka-jug · Trešnjevka-sjever · TrnjeBuildings and
landmarks1 Ilica Street · Ban Jelačić Square · Banski dvori · British Square · Cibona Tower · Dolac Market · Grič Cannon · Ilica Street · Jarun · Kallina House · Lotrščak Tower · Maksimir Park · Marshal Tito Square · Medvedgrad · Meštrović Pavilion · Mirogoj Cemetery · Nikola Šubić Zrinski Square · Nine Views · Old City Hall · St. Mark's Square · Tkalčićeva Street · ZagrepčankaChurches Culture Galleries and
museumsArt Pavilion · Croatian Museum of Naïve Art · Glyptotheque · Klovićevi dvori · Mimara Museum · Modern Gallery · Museum of Broken Relationships · Museum of Contemporary Art · Strossmayer Gallery · Technical Museum · Zagreb City MuseumEducation Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts · University of Zagreb (Academies: Dramatic Art · Fine Arts · Music · Faculties: Economics and Business · Electrical Engineering and Computing · Geodesy · Humanities and Social Sciences · Medicine · Teacher Education)Sports venues Transport Festivals Categories:- Buildings and structures completed in 1958
- Skyscrapers between 50 and 99 meters
- Skyscrapers in Croatia
- Buildings and structures in Zagreb
- Donji grad
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.