Presidential Palace, Tirana

Coordinates: 41°18′41″N 19°50′0″E / 41.31139°N 19.83333°E / 41.31139; 19.83333

Presidential Palace
Pallati Presidencial

Façade of the Presidential Palace.
Alternative names Pallati i Brigadave
General information
Type Palace
Architectural style Monumental Rationalism
Location Tirana, Albania
Address Rruga e Elbasanit, Tirana 1044
Construction started 1939
Completed 1941
Client H.M. King Zog I of the Albanians.
H.M. Queen Géraldine of the Albanians.
Owner Government of Albania
Technical details
Floor count 3
Design and construction
Architect Gherardo Bosio

The Presidential Palace (Albanian: Pallati Presidencial), popularly known as the Palace of Brigades (Albanian: Pallati i Brigadave), is the official residence of the President of the Republic of Albania. The Palace, located in Tirana, was commissioned by HM King Zog I to serve as his main official residence. In 1945, it ceased to serve as a Royal Residence because the Monarchist regime was substituted by a Communist-ruled Government. Since 1946, it has been used by the Government of Albania for holding official Ceremonies and State Receptions. In 2013, the Presidential Palace became an official residence once again, when President Bujar Nishani and his family moved in to a reconstructed Villa inside the grounds of the Palace.[1]

History

The idea to build a Royal Palace on one of the hills of Sauk, near what was later to become the Grand Park of Tirana, was first conceived by HM King Zogu I in the 1930s. Because of the limited funds of the nascent Albanian state, the then Minister of Finance, Mufid Libohova, entered into negotiations with a group of Italian financiers represented by Mario Alberti. An agreement was made for the opening of a National Bank and for a loan of 50,000,000 gold francs (approximately 10,000,000 gold dollars). Part of this loan, also called "The SVEA Loan", was earmarked for the construction of his official residence, making it possible for the King to secure the funds to build the Royal Palace. The new palace was designed by three Italian architects, including Giulio Berte. Due to the outbreak of World War II, and the 1939 Italian Invasion of Albania, King Zog I fled Albania and never had a chance to see the Palace fully constructed. The Italians finished construction and used the Palace mainly for the Army Headquarters. The building was redesigned and completed in 1941, by the Florentine architect Gherardo Bosio.[2]

The building served as a functioning Royal Palace only once, for King Vittorio Emanuele III of Italy during his only visit to Albania in May 1941.[3] During the remainder of World War II it served as the official residence for Francesco Jacomoni, the first Luogotenente del Re (the title of the Italian Viceroy), and later for his successor, the Fascist General Alberto Pariani.[3] Both lived there along with their families. After Italy capitulated in September 1943, the Albanian officer who served the Palace hid the palace's official flag from the Germans and sent it to Italy, where it remained until 2003, when it was purchased by Artan Lame and returned to Albania.[3] After the German takeover of the country in September 1943, the Albanian parliament convened in the Palace and proclaimed the detachment of the Albanian Crown from the Italian Crown.[3]

In 1945 the Palace was renamed as the Palace of the Brigades, a name which remained in use throughout the Communist regime,[3] and is still used popularly and by the Albanian media.[4] During the Communist regime it served mainly as a government Reception facility.

The official name of the Palace was changed after the fall of the Communist regime in 1992 as the Presidential Palace. In January 2010, the Municipality of Tirana proposed that parts of the Palace be opened to the general public.[3]

Style

Architecturally, the Palace belongs to a style of modernist architecture, known as Monumental Rationalism. It is unique in its genre, not only in Albania but in the wider sphere of Fascist-era architecture, including in Italy itself.[3] The Palace's bas-reliefs were covered with drapes in the '70s during the Cultural Revolution, but not destroyed. Nevertheless, the Palace as a whole is in dire need of restoration.[3] A description of the then new (and unfinished) Royal Palace appeared in the issue of Life dated May 22, 1939.

Gardens

Because of its situation near the Grand Park of Tirana, the palace gardens are quite extensive. The Royal Palace is surrounded by trees for nearly 200 meters. The gardens are decorated in patterns and shapes of various designs. The palace also has a tennis court.

Challenge to Government Ownership

In February 2013, Leka Zogu, pretender to the throne of Albania and who styles themselves as the Crown Prince of Albania, began a legal challenge, pretending that he was the rightful owner of the Presidential Palace, claiming that the property had belonged to Ahmet Zogu in his personal capacity, and thus Prince Leka retained ownership as the former's heir.[5]

Leka Zogu claims to have won ownership of the building after a decision of August 2013 by the Supreme Court of Albania,[6] and has declared that the Palace would become the main official residence of the "Royal Court of Albania" (Albanian: Oborri Mbretëror Shqiptar).,[7] but as of 2016 the Palace keeps being in government possession and continues serving as the official residence of the President of the Republic of Albania and hosting State Receptions and Ceremonies, such as the annual end-of-year "Presidential Ball".[8]

See also

External links

References

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