bg Kyustendil

Stamenko Tonev House

- Ulitsa General Vladimir Zaimov 2 -
The residential building, which was later also used for administrative and commercial purposes, was constructed somewhere between 1905 and 1911. The private building was owned by the Bulgarian engineer and district governor Stamenko Tonev, who was present at the opening of the -Kyustendil railway line in 1909. During the , the building was inhabited by the Bulgarian officer Ivan Lukov, who was born on August 22, 1871, in .
Stamenko Tonev on the left during the opening of the Radomir-Kyustendil railway line
On May 31, 1889, he entered military service and served in several regiments and took his military studies at the Nikolaev General Staff Military Academy in , where he graduated n 1901. He participated in the , the , and the First World War, where in September 1915, he got appointed chief of the Operations Department at the Headquarters of the active army in Kyustendil. In 1918, he was part of the Bulgarian delegation to the signing of the in . Lieutenant General Ivan Lukov died on April 17, 1926, in .

Later on, the building became in use by the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions of Bulgaria, which was founded on February 18, 1990. The trade union is Bulgaria's largest, most influential, and well-established trade union, and is the successor of the Bulgarian Workers' Union. Later the building also became in use as a bar and restaurant.
Ivan Tsonev Lukov
The most eye-catching feature of the geometric Art Nouveau building is the on the southwestern corner, which is topped with an octagonal roof. The roof overhang is supported in many places by wooden . The turret is surrounded by two supported by four wooden pillars and secured with a wooden and wrought iron railing. The railing, as well as the gate to the premises, is lavishly decorated with . The decoration around the second floor windows consists of geometric shapes, a , , and an . The building contains some , which are adorned with diamond shapes, that are crowned with a Doric .
The building is depicted in an old photograph