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Alexander Papachev House

- Khan Asparuh Street 4 -
The residential and commercial building was built in 1912 for the leather merchant Alexander Papachev. It was initially intended for residential purposes but was later converted into a hotel, which bore the name Hotel . After that, it became an architect's club, and later on, an administrative building for the pension department of the National Social Security Institute.
The building in 1980
The Art Nouveau building is richly decorated with lion head . They can be seen above multiple windows on the first and second floor, as well as in the frieze, located underneath the roof . The cornice underneath the frieze is decorated with a Greek key motif. Underneath the segmental cornice on top of the building, you'll see a that's adorned with a . In the center of the building, there's a semi-hexagonal with a small balcony on top of it. Above one of the windows, you can see a sculpture of a lion which, is holding a . The fragments underneath each of the windows are adorned with some beautiful whiplash lines, which is a common feature of the Art Nouveau style.
An old photo from the beginning of the 20th century showing the building on the right