[1] In the 1960s the site was used as a Yugoslav military hospital, and during the siege of Sarajevo the open-air lot was cultivated as a vegetable garden.
[2] Since 1999, the regulatory plan of Sarajevo envisaged the construction on the site of a museum of the city.
[5] In April 2019, the local council of Centar decided that the site would be redeveloped to host a building and underground parking, while remaining for 90% a green area.
On 25 September 2019, the municipal mayor of Centar, Nedžad Ajnadžić, and his SDA-SBB-GS-DF majority, voted to amend a regulatory plan for Marijin Dvor, to allow the construction of a multi-storey underground garage, art pavilion, local community premises and other facilities, instead of the surface parking lot accessible from Kranjčevićeva, neighbouring the Hastahana park.
[8] In February 2021, the new municipal mayor of Centar, Srđan Mandić (Our Party), acknowledged that the construction works would go ahead on the plot owned by the Central Bank.