bg Sofia

Vasil Razsolkov House

- Solunska Street 25 -
The residential and commercial building was designed by the Bulgarian architect and was built in 1914. It was built for the Bulgarian philosopher, teacher, and Member of Parliament, Vasil Zahariev Razsolkov. He was born in and according to the family memory as a child, he was patronized by , who sought out and supported children. Vaskidovich sent him to study in Germany, and in 1872 he graduated in philosophy from the University of . Immediately after his return, at the age of 29, he became a teacher at the Main IV Class School in Sofia. At the age of 37, he is already a Member of Parliament in the Ordinary National Assembly, and two years earlier he was appointed a government member of the Sofia Provincial Court. He was married to Ekaterina Bagdatliyska, the daughter of a prominent master tailor, and together they had five children. He divided the two houses between his four sons and daughter. He obliged them to take each other into account when they wanted to make changes on the exterior, even when they painted the frames of their windows.
Vasil Zahariev Razsolkov
The building is built in the Art Nouveau style with a certain Neo-Baroque influence. The building features two beautifully decorated semi-hexagonal , which are located on the northern and eastern sides of the building. They are both decorated with geometric and floral ornamentation, like and garlands. The at the bottom are decorated with a lovely wavy pattern, which can be seen around the entire building. Although at some points it's interrupted by a cornice, which contains vertical relief lines. The balconies on top of the oriel windows are secured with a wrought iron railing.

Some beautiful floral ornamentation is used in the fragments, which can be seen on the third floor. In the top gable, you can see some pretty big , while the strip underneath it, contains smaller dentils and continues further on. In some places, the strip of dentils is interrupted by , which are placed within the frieze. The straight underneath the protruding strips on the third floor are adorned with an motif. The only difference between the northern and the eastern side is that on the eastern side you can see two additional balconies. Both of the balconies are secured by a wrought iron railing and are supported by two lavishly decorated corbels.
The building before the necessary renovation