Antiguo Palacio de los Müller, Renaissance Revival public building in Granada, Spain
The Antiguo Palacio de los Müller is a government public building in Granada featuring an L-shaped footprint with Renaissance Revival detailing. A semicircular portico with double columns marks the side entrance and serves as a defining architectural element.
Construction of the building spanned from 1916 to 1940 and was initially conceived for the Rodríguez-Acosta heirs. The property later passed to the Müller family, from whom it derives its current name.
The palace interior displays decorative thermal flooring and a stained glass window bearing the Müller family coat of arms. These elements reflect early 20th century Spanish design sensibilities.
The building sits on Gran Vía de Colón and currently functions as a government administrative office headquarters. As an active administrative building, public access is generally restricted to official business hours.
Local lore refers to the palace as the enchanted palace following a tragic event on its inauguration day when Antonio Müller took his own life. This dark historical moment remains part of the building's identity in Granada's collective memory.
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