bg Sofia

Ivan Naumov House

- Shipka Street 3 -
The residential building was built in 1911 and was designed by the architect . The building was built for Ivan Naumov and was built by Lazar Kiselinchev, whose family also lived in the building. Both were revolutionaries and part of the Internal Macedonian-Edirne Revolutionary Organization (). Lazar Kiselinchev was born in 1874 in the large Kostur village of Kosinets in the family of the famous builder Tarpo Kiselinchev. He is the brother of the sculptor , the architect and the revolutionary Hristaki Kiselinchev, who died in the battle of Lokvata and Vinyari. Lazar Kiselinchev laid the foundations of the Bulgarian Macedonian Committee in . From there, he organized the import of weapons from Albania and Greece to southwestern Macedonia.
Lazar Kiselinchev in 1904
At the outbreak of the in 1912 he was a volunteer in the Macedonian-Edirne militia. In 1926 he was elected to be a member of the National Committee of the Macedonian Brotherhoods and in 1928 he joined the board of the Macedonian National Bank. Kiselinchev together with Vasil Stumbov is a delegate of the General Kostur Civil Committee in Sofia. Lazar Kiselinchev was married to Krastana Burdasheva, with whom he had five children. Lazar Kiselinchev died on December 18, 1946, in Sofia at the age of 72.
An old photo from the 1970s showing the building
The building is built in the style of Art Nouveau and is richly decorated with beautiful ornaments. The third and fourth floors were not part of the original design. In the 1960s it was constructed on top of the original building.

The first notable feature is the balcony on the second floor, which is located on the corner of the building. There are two on either side of the balcony door. On the balcony, there are also two supporting columns with richly decorated Doric . The railing of the balcony is decorated with a total of seven .

The upper part of the main entrance door, located on San Stefano Street, is decorated with , a , a garland, and other floral decorations. The , above the circle top window, is flanked by beautiful ornamental festoons. The , visible from all sides and located mainly above the windows, are decorated with grapes and grape leaves.

On the south side of the building, you can see a beautiful wood-carved , with underneath it a fragment that is decorated with floral ornaments. The balcony in the southeast corner is set at a 45 degree angle and is shaped like an arrow at the top. The structure above the balcony is supported by one column, and its railing has a total of twelve balusters. The balcony itself is supported by two . On the east side of the building, you'll be able to see a steel structure that contains another entrance, as well as a balcony, that's decorated with wrought iron ornaments. The last renovation of the building took place in 2013.
The richly decorated mascaron above the main entrance door