It is located in the greater center of Niška Banja (or spa). The data regarding the investor and the designer are not known, but it is supposed to have been built in the interval between 1930 and 1940.
The villa is architectonically formed in the modified Serbian–Byzantine style. It possesses a small but very representatively formed façade in artificial stone. The entrance is monumental, it has a very unusual elongated arcade porch in three sections, with a considerably larger medium arch and extremely high gable wall crowned with a prominent cornice. The pairs of arched windows were constructed as the mullioned windows found in medieval church architecture. What is particularly impressive is the lavishly decorated – undulated roof cornice which additionally accentuates the mullioned windows. The façade has minimal decorations, with a prominent well-crafted rosette, and the effectively executed name in artificial stone. The impact of the Moderne style in its architecture is also visible in the openings of the staircase railing, which are square in form, as well as in the wrought iron metalwork.
The function of the villa did not change, as it used to be and still is a strictly residential building.