[1][3][6] The present complex of the Steam Bath of Brothers Krsmanović began to develop in 1901 around the former hamam and it was finished by the 1920s.
[2] Original owner of the bath was artisan Petar J. Petrović (1854-1921), who worked as the "king's and court's artistic fitter".
His father was Josef Schauengel, who migrated to Serbia, became military medic with the rank of major and changed his name to Jovan Petrović.
[6] In 2004 the facility was closed due to the safety concerns as the standards for the safe public use, both for the building and the instalastions, were not reached.
[7] After closing, the venue was occasionally loaned by the city government, for the music videos productions, private parties, exhibitions and as the movie sets, but by 2017 the facility deteriorated a lot.
The idea was revived by Gunnar B. Kvaran, director of the Oslo's Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, who visited the bath in July 2017.
[3] In October 2017, during the visit of the high state delegation from Ankara, Serbian and Turkish governments signed a memorandum on restoration of the object, but the details were not disclosed.
In the central part of the symmetrical façade lies a portal that ends with a semicircular shape, surmounted by a triangular pediment.