bg Plovdiv

Lucien Chevallas House

- Veliko Tarnovo Street 39 -
The two-story building was built way back in 1885 according to a design that was created by the Italian architect . It was built for the Swiss-Bulgarian landscape architect and municipal gardener of Plovdiv, Lucien Chevallas, and his wife, the French noblewoman Sophia Brossard. Lucien, also known as the Minister of Flowers, was born on August 26, 1840, in , as the ninth of eleven children. He graduated from the Forestry Institute in and specialized in decorative gardening and park construction. For five years he was one of the leading court gardeners of the French emperor , after which he settled in Brazil, where he brought European traditions to park planning.
Lucien Chevallas
Around 1875, he arrived in , where he worked as a court gardener for the sultan . In 1879, at the invitation of Prince , Governor-General of , he arrived in Plovdiv as a princely gardener. Here he created the Princely Garden, 's Garden, Peninierata, and reforested the hills of Bunardjika and Sahat Tepe. According to his projects, with his personal participation, the first nurseries were built in , , , and . In 1893, he created the first garden in near today's Toplitsa bath. He died on October 22, 1921, and was buried with honors in the Catholic cemetery in Plovdiv.
Sophia Brossard
The building, which is built in the Eclectic style, features many geometric forms, including a . The windows, of which the second floor windows are topped with a , are flanked by that are crowned with a Doric . The that can be seen above the main entrance door is secured with a curved wrought iron railing, which is embellished with . The woodwork underneath the loggia consists of two pointed supported by two , which are adorned with foliage, as well as and .
An old postcard that shows the Tsar-Simeon's Garden