Ostrów Wielkopolski Town Hall, Neoclassical town hall at Market Square in Ostrów Wielkopolski, Poland.
Ostrów Wielkopolski Town Hall is a three-story municipal building with a square plan, featuring a central turret topped by a cupola containing two lanterns and a 19th-century clock. The structure defines the appearance of the town square with its neoclassical form.
The town hall was built between 1824 and 1828 with funding from Duke Antoni Radziwiłł and has shaped the townscape since then. Following wartime damage, significant reconstruction took place in 1948.
The building houses the Regional Museum, which displays collections documenting the development and traditions of Ostrów Wielkopolski over several centuries.
The town hall functions as a Wedding Palace where local residents can conduct civil ceremonies and administrative procedures in an official setting. Access is from the main square and the building is easy to locate.
The building displays rusticated ground-floor elevations and an attic decorated with pinnacles, complemented by a balcony supported by stone balustrades. These architectural details give the town hall a distinguished appearance.
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