In 1898, the Reformed Church bought two lots from the Timișoara City Hall, part of the new squares that appeared with the lifting of the construction ban in the non aedificandi area (esplanade).
[3][4] The Reformed Church is a landmark in the collective mind of the people of Timișoara, being the place where the anti-communist revolution of 1989 started.
[5] Two marble plaques placed near the entrance from Timotei Cipariu Street evoke in four languages (Romanian, Hungarian, German and Serbian) the December 1989 event: "This is where the Revolution that abolished the dictatorship started.
The next two registers (first and second floors) have the most decorative elements: apparent brickwork, marking of window frames, ogive-shaped arches, horizontal girdle and the rhythmic cornice of simple consoles.
[5] On the occasion of the 110th anniversary of the consecration of the Reformed Church, its representatives mounted on the facade a set of bells brought from Hungary.