It stands close to remarkable tenements in the same street: The house was completed built in 1898[1] by the architect Fritz Weidner, a German builder who came to Bydgoszcz at the end of the 19th century, and had a frantic building activity in the city between 1896 and 1914.
[4] Carl Bradtke also commissioned another local architect, Józef Święcicki, for the construction of a nearby tenement at 93.
The house presents forms of prussian Historicism, at a transition time from the Eclecticism to Secession movement.
The middle section play on symmetry, through the network of arcades and open loggias, while the upper part is purposefully designed asymmetrically.
This design is a choice undertaken by Fritz Weidner: to part from stuccoes for decorative arrangement as architectural elements.