bg Chisinau

Princess Dadiani's Girls' Gymnasium

- Strada 31 August 1989 115 -
The construction of the two-story building, which was originally built with an educational function, took place between 1900 and 1901. The construction was executed according to the design that was created by the Russian architect . It was built on the site on which old buildings stood, which State Councilor Mitrofan Purishkevich sold to the Council of the Women's Gymnasium on behalf of . She ordered the construction of the building to house the Girls' Gymnasium named after her and headed the institution until her death in 1903.
The building is shown in an old postcard
The building served as the Girls' Gymnasium until the , during which the upper part was damaged. Until 1964, it was part of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, after which it became the Palace of Pioneers and Schoolchildren. In 1976, the Museum of the History of the Communist Party of Moldova was established inside the building. Later on, it became the home of the National Museum of Fine Arts, which was founded on November 26, 1939.
An old postcard that shows the building
The pyramid hip roof of the Eclectic building with Neo-Gothic features has a lantern tower placed on top of it. The top of the building features loads of , , , and several . There are several fragments, which are embellished with all sorts of geometric forms. The beautiful Gothic windows are decorated with rose windows, as well as columns crowned with different types of . The balcony, of which the stone balustrade also features rosettes, is supported by two adorned with , foliage, and decorative shells.
Another old postcard that shows the building