bg Sofia

Dimo Nichev House

- Evlogi and Hristo Georgievi Boulevard 133 -
The residential building was built in 1914 and was constructed for and designed by the Bulgarian architect Dimo Todorov Nichev. Together with , , and , he designed a large number of public schools, and residential buildings in Sofia. He was born on August 4, 1876, in the town of in the wealthy family of Maria and Todor Nichev, as the second son of six children. After the , the whole family moved to Northern Dobruja, where Todor Nichev bought a property and became mayor of the city of .
Dimo Todorov Nichev
In 1901, Dimo Nichev studied architecture at the Technical University of , Germany. He left Munich to return to his homeland by boat on the Danube river where he reached and settled. He does not return to Constanța, because the city is already on the territory of Romania, and he wants to live and work in Bulgaria. In Vidin, he became a district architect, married Hristina Karakashova, and remained there until 1908. In 1908 he moved with his family to Sofia. In 1914, architect Dimo ​​Nichev built his own three-story house on Evlogi and Hristo Georgievi Boulevard opposite the Military Academy, which later was declared a cultural monument. Dimo Nichev died in Sofia on April 2, 1952.
Drawing of the front facade
The building is built in the Eclectic style and features some Art Nouveau elements. The mushroom-shaped window on the main facade is a great example of the style of Art Nouveau, as is the metal balcony railing over the semi-hexagonal . Above each window on the third floor a floral decorated is placed, with around a lovely waved and dotted relief. The , which is placed under each rectangular window on the third floor, contains several rectangles of different colors, as well as straight-lined . Another oriel window can be seen on the western side of the building, which in this case is rectangular but features the same beautiful railing. The aprons underneath these windows are decorated with . A , which is supported by two corbels, is placed above each of the two windows on the southwestern corner. The on the northwest side of the building is crowned with a bell-shaped roof and a pointed . Just underneath the roof, some garlands adorn the upper part of the oval windows. If you look closely, you'll see a nice cartouche above one of the windows. The striped walls on the first floor are colored in two different colors, a beige and a light salmon color, which are also used in many other places.
The building in the 1970s