Mahmut Gjinolli House | |
Native Name: | Shtëpia e Mahmut pashë Gjinollit |
Built: | 19th century |
Designation1 Type: | Architectural |
Designation1 Criteria: | Under protection |
Designation1 Number: | 3296 |
The Mahmut Gjinolli House is a cultural heritage monument in Vushtrri Municipality, Kosovo.[1]
The house of Mahmut Pasha Gjinolli, a member of prominent feudal lord Jashar Pasha Gjinolli’s family lies in western Vushtrri near the Terstena River. Historical records and oral tradition agree on its 19th-century origin. Later in the century, it became an Ottoman municipal office (Turkish: belediye). After World War II, it was put back into use for a similar purpose, going on to serve as an ambulance garage in the 1960s and a shelter for families displaced by floods in 1978. Including a basement and two above-ground floors, the building was built from natural stone reinforced by brick lines with some oak wood panels on the domed roof highlighted by a clock. The front façade is decorated in a Western-influenced style. The house's exterior is unchanged, and most interior changes amount to re-furnishing.
Facing eastward unlike most feudal buildings of the era, the house overlooks the city from what was at the time of construction its center to better observe the goings-on. Baroque and Ottoman elements coexist in this hybrid building. The domed clock testifies to a business-oriented mentality in the city at the time of construction.[2] [3]