The house was built according to the project of architect Milan Kapetanović in the spirit of French Neo-Baroque and Neo-Renaissance.
Facade decoration is the work of the Italian master of decorative painting Domenika D`Andrea, which implies the technique of graffiti, which is a very rare, almost unique example in the architecture of Belgrade.
During the KSIKS and KSKS centuries, in the spacious salons of this building, there were organized city balls on which the social elite of Serbia, as well as diplomatic meetings, were organized on which the political and intellectual champions of that time decided on the future of the young Serbian state. Here, the secret treaty of Serbia and Bulgaria was signed for the liberation of the South Slavs in 1912, which was later founded by the Balkan Alliance. In visiting Grujić, Queen Mary Karađorđević came unannounced and without protocol, and Jovan Dučić, Milan Rakić, were regular guests and family projectors. Half a century later, in the basement, the first discotheque was opened in Belgrade in 1967, which was marked by a sociological boom in the contemporary history of the city.
The house of Jevrem Grujic is a monument of culture of high importance, the first building protected by the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments of the City of Belgrade in 1961 and the only member of the European Association of Historical Houses.
Today's descendants of the line of Jevrem Grujić, Lazar Šećerović and Aleksandar Konić came to the idea of establishing the Museum of Jevrem Grujić, in order to give up the rich Serbian history and family tradition and present our audience.