bg Burgas

Vladimir Vasilev House

- Ulitsa Bulair 7 -
The residential building was built somewhere between 1890 and 1895 for the merchant, land and property owner, and municipal councilor, Dimitros Haralambus, who was of Greek origin. The building was inhabited by the Bulgaria literary and theater critic Vladimir Vassilev Mateev, was born on November 4, 1883, in Burgas. He was born in the family of the Chitalist activist and justice of the peace from , Vasil Mateev and Maria Hadji Nikolova. He graduated from the classical department of the first male high school in in 1900 and in 1904 he graduated in law at the University of Sofia. In the period from 1906 until 1907, he worked in the University Library and after that, he worked as a judge in , , and Sofia. During the , he was a reserve captain, and after the war, from 1924 to 1938, he was the director of the National Theater in Sofia.
Vladimir Vassilev Mateev
His literary activity began with reviews in the magazine, and during this time he became close to the Bulgarian symbolist poet . On August 31, 1919, he got married to Tsveta Lenkova, who came from a wealthy family. From 1920 until 1943, he was the editor of the magazine called Zlatorog, which was one of the most authoritative periodicals for Bulgarian literature. After the coup of September 9, 1944, Vladimir Vassilev was arrested and expelled from the Union of Writers. In the following years, he worked for a time as a proofreader but was very rarely allowed to write critical material again. He died in Sofia on December 27, 1963, and an obituary and the delivery of eulogies at his funeral were prohibited by the Bulgarian Communist Party.

Later, the building became a medical college, and in 2003 the building was restored into a hotel. In 2015, the interior and exterior were completely renovated by the hotel.
Vladimir Vassilev and his wife Tsveta Lenkova in 1923
The most distinctive features of the Neo-Renaissance building are the two , both with a balcony on top of them. They're are either supported by two , which are adorned with , or with two pillars that are crowned with an Ionic . The segmental parts, which are placed on top of the building, are embellished with a that contains a . Each of the three floors, which are separated with a , feature many . The , as well as the semi-circular fragments, which are placed above the windows are decorated with a rosette. The banisters of the stairs that lead to the main entrance contains .
The building in the 1970s