bg Sliven

Georgi Ruschev House

- Nikola Karev Street 1 -
The construction of the residential building, which later turned into an educational building, lasted from 1910 until 1912. The building that used to stand in place of the current building was used during the reign of the Ottoman rulers to imprison freedom fighters. The groans and the clanking of chains frightened the people of Sliven, who gave it the nickname the goblin building. This was the reason for the Hadziangelov family, who commissioned the construction of the current building, to sell it to the Bulgarian manufacturer Georgi Ruschev, who at that time was a well-known manufacturer from Sliven.

On June 23, 1956, the building opened its door to the visitors of the Sliven Regional Library, which was established in 1955 and named after Georgi Kirkov. In the period from 1968 until 1972, reconstruction and modernization, as well as the first extension of the entire library building were executed. On July 22, 1992, by a decision of the Municipal Council of Sliven, the library receives the name of the famous Bulgaria writer, teacher, and revivalist, Sava Dobroplodni as its patron. In the period that lasted from 1991 until 1992, a complete renovation of the library was carried out. On May 18, 1995, a plaque in honor of Sava Dobroplodni was placed on the western side of the building, which was created by the sculptor Nikolay Sultanov.
Sava Dobroplodni
The southeastern corner of the Neo-Baroque building is crowned with a that's placed on top of a majestic bell-shaped dome, which contains multiple small dormers, as well as a certain amount of decorative vases. The roof of the rest of the building, which is covered with red roof tiles, also contains many dormer windows in all shapes and sizes. Underneath the , which separates the roof from the rest of the building, you can either see or , both of which are adorned with foliage. Between these corbels, you can admire a that in some cases, due to their size, ensures that the cornice has to take on a semi-circular shape.

Underneath the dome, which is supported by columns that are crowned with an Ionic , you can see a , which is secured with a wrought iron railing. The band, which repeats itself above the first floor windows, is interrupted by that are embellished with three . The band is lavishly decorated with a weaving pattern that contains . The columns that support the loggia, are part of a beautiful . A beautifully ornamented is placed above the second floor, while underneath these same windows, you can see an , which is adorned with guttae. The fragments that are placed underneath the first floor windows are either decorated with one or two . Some of these windows are flanked by , which are all crowned with a Doric capital.

The building features two balconies, which are both secured with railings that consist partly of stone and partly of wrought iron. One of the balconies is placed on top of a bay window, while the other one is supported by three corbels.
The building shown on an old postcard