Vojislav G. Kostić was an engineer and architect who achieved success in the sphere of Belgrade's private practice during the Interwar period. Following the Second World War, he devoted himself to scientific and pedagogical work. His work has not to date - with the exception of a limited number of publications presenting a few objects preserved in situ, which also stand as the most representative examples of his work - been fully valorized and recorded in Serbian architectural historiography. He developed more than forty projects, among which creative and original solutions for interpolated residential buildings and multi-story buildings stand out. The topic raises numerous questions, and leaves room for further research into the activities of engineers and architects whose work has not yet been adequately represented and valorized, with the aim of determining their role in Serbian and Yugoslav architecture. In addition, it represents a deepening of the study of Belgrade's Interwar architecture through the phenomenon of interpolated objects, which constitute a key component of construction in the aforementioned period within the architectural vision of the capital.
Aleksa Novaković (Wed,) studied this question.