bg Sofia

Alexander Chaprashikov House

- Evlogi and Hristo Georgievi Boulevard 125 -
The residential building was built around 1933 and was designed by the Bulgarian architects and . It was built for the Bulgarian military figure, merchant, and politician, Alexander Georgiev Chaprashikov, who was born on May 18, 1880, in . He is the grandson of a merchant from Gorna Dzhumaya, nowadays , who is the father of and and also the grandfather of his brothers and . In 1902, Alexander graduated from the Military School in Sofia and after three years of service, he left the army and graduated in law in . Later on, he got involved in the tobacco trade, together with his brother Krum.

He participated in the as a reserve captain and assistant chief of the intelligence section. After the war and the restoration of the city bureau of the Democratic Party in Dupnitsa in April 1919, he became its chairman, and afterwards, he became a deputy in the National Assembly. After the coup of in 1944, he was arrested and tried by the so-called People's Court. His property was confiscated, and his family was relocated to , where he died in 1950 at the age of 69. In 1954, his wife also passed away, which resulted in their two children, Anna and Georgi becoming orphans.
Dispatch in 1916 of the staff officer Alexander Chaprashikov on the occasion of his appointment to another position
The building, which is built in the Eclectic style with some Neo-Baroque elements, features a tower with a roof terrace on top of it, which is located on the east side of the building. The terrace is secured with a stone balustrade that contains . Other balusters are used in the balustrades that secure the roof terrace on the west side of the building, and the balcony that's placed on top of the on the east side of the building. The roof, which is covered with roof tiles, contains a total of three dormers, each decorated with a . Underneath the roof , which separates the attic from the rest of the building, you'll be able to see two different-sized strips of . Above the windows, which can be closed with shutters, you can either see a , or a segmental that contains a bust of a female that either looks straight, left, or right. The , different in size, give the corners a harmonious connection with the rest of the building. A statue of a child holding a lizard and a child holding a bird are both placed on top of a pier, which are parts of a balustrade that surrounds the yard terrace. The premise is enclosed by a wrought iron fence, as well as a gate, which is adorned with a beautifully decorative sun.
The building in the 1970s