bg Lovech

Petar Zlatev House

- Targovska Street 29 -
The residential and commercial building, which was built around 1905, was commissioned by the rich hunting merchant Petar Zlatev. He was born in Lovech in 1854 and graduated from the first Bulgarian school, and later from the Turkish school, where he learned the Turkish language well. He started trading at a very young age and mainly with Constantinople, nowadays , where he sent processed hides and cattle. From there he supplied luxurious woolen and silk fabrics, which attracted the attention of wealthy Turks and Bulgarians. His trade was successful and he opened a large and modern store where he sold his own wool and cotton fabrics. The increased income gave him the opportunity to build a new house, like the ones he sees abroad. Petar Zlatev passed away in 1912.

In the early morning of May 1, 1974, there was a thunderstorm and it was raining heavily, and at some point, a bolt of lightning hit a substation, which caused the electricity to stop working in almost the entire city. Around an half hour later, the howling sound of firetrucks was heard, as a fire broke out in the building. The fire was caused by a person entering the cellar with a candle where a canister of gasoline caught fire. After the fire, the city's people's council decided to demolish the building and build a new one. This happened in 1986, according to the project of architects Ognyan Simeonov and Elisaveta Cholakova.
An old postcard showing the building before the fire
The stately building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Baroque and Art Nouveau, features a tower-like structure on the northeastern corner. The hexagonal roof, which contains a dormer with a on top of it, is crowned with . The frieze of the tower-like structure is beautifully decorated with male . One of the balustrades of the , which can be seen on the corner of the building, is accompanied by wrought iron parts, while the other one contains curved . The entrances that lead to these loggias are flanked by some lovely floral ornamentation. The loggias are supported by a pair of columns, above one of which you can admire two .

Above the second floor windows, you can admire a lavishly decorated , as well as a male mascaron that is placed within a broken segmental . The wavy pattern that's placed between these pediments, is embellished with foliage. Underneath the second floor windows, you'll be able to see two circles, as well as a cartouche. Underneath the that separates the first and second floor, you can admire a row of squares that are adorned with a . One of the that are placed on top of the first floor windows, contains another male mascaron.

The balconies that are placed on the northern, as well as the eastern side of the building, are both supported by three . They are secured with a wrought iron railing that is brightened up with plenty of . The balcony doors that lead to the balconies are flanked by fragments that are adorned with a garland and a shield-shaped cartouche.
An old photo shows the building during the fire