The three-story building is located in the central city street, Obrenovićeva Street. The building was constructed in 1930 according to the designs of the owner – architect Milan Joksimović – and the Zagreb engineers Skopalo, Juričić and Batušić, with whom he had a joint enterprise.
The architect Milan Joksimović was one of the first educated architects in Niš, who started working in 1906. As a partner in the Zagreb-based company, he provided the assignments in Niš, among other things, due to the fact that he was the son-in-law of Dragiša Cvetković, the president of the Municipality of Niš and later the president of the Yugoslav government.
The building has a characteristic flat façade, with a cascade finish of the roof cornice, and façade elements of various styles – balconies with wrought iron railings, plastics on the façade with medallions featuring women in a seated position, and at the top, in the central part of the symmetrical volume of the façade, a large figure of a girl with a scepter in her hand, which is the symbol of refinement and power.
Nowadays the building has a residential-office building function, fitted in between two buildings erected after WWII.