Banovina Palace (Novi Sad)

Banovina Palace
Зграда Бановине
Interactive map of the Banovina Palace area
General information
Architectural styleModernist
Art Deco
Stripped Classicism
LocationBulevar Mihajla Pupina 16
(Banovina)
Vladike Platona 1
(Banski dvor), Novi Sad, Serbia
Coordinates45°15′12″N 19°50′57″E / 45.2534°N 19.8492°E / 45.2534; 19.8492
Current tenantsGovernment of Vojvodina
(Banovina)
Assembly of Vojvodina
(Banski dvor)
Year built1936–1940
Construction started1936 (1936)
Completed1939 (1939)
(Banovina)
1940 (1940)
(Banski dvor)
Opened25 September 1939 (1939-09-25)
Renovated2019 (2019)
(Banovina)
2020 (2020)
(Banski dvor)
Cost58,000,000 Yugoslav dinars (1939)
Renovation cost30,175,000 Serbian dinars (2019; Banovina)
28,825,000 Serbian dinars (2020; Banski dvor)
OwnerGovernment of Vojvodina
Height
Height20 m (66 ft)
42 m (138 ft) (tower)
Dimensions
Diameter185 m × 42.5 m (607 ft × 139 ft) (Banovina)
100 m × 57.5 m (328 ft × 189 ft) (Banski dvor)
Technical details
MaterialBrač marble
Carrara marble
Floor count5 (Banovina)
Floor area5,700 m2 (61,000 sq ft) (Banovina)
2,200 m2 (24,000 sq ft) (Banski dvor)
Design and construction
ArchitectDragiša Brašovan
Other designersKároly Baranyi (relief sculptor)
Main contractorMilan Sekulić Construction Company
Other information
Number of rooms569 (Banovina)
147 (Banski dvor)
Parking167 parking spaces (underground garage)
Public transit accessJGSP Novi Sad lines: 1, 3, 3A, 3B, 8, 9, 9A, 11A, 11B
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The Banovina Palace in Novi Sad, Serbia, is a complex consisting of two buildings. The larger Banovina serves as the seat of the Government of Vojvodina, while the smaller Banski dvor serves as the seat of the Assembly of Vojvodina. The buildings, designed by Dragiša Brašovan, were constructed between 1936 and 1940 in modernist style (with art deco and stripped classicism elements) as the administrative seat of the Danube Banovina.