bg Thessaloniki

Jedid Hani

- Agíou Miná 11 -
The commercial building, which later also gained an educational function, was constructed in 1904, and was one of the many commercial arcades built in the city. It is one of the few buildings in the center of Thessaloniki that survived the of 1917 and the reconstruction processes that followed. From 1909 until 1925, it housed the Bank of Athens, and from 1909 until 1941, the offices of the Jewish newspaper L'Independent. Later on, it housed the Melka store, and in 2001, after extensive work, the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki opened its doors in the building.
The building shortly after the great fire of 1917
On the corner of the building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Renaissance and Eclectic, you'll be able to see an , which is supported by three impressive , of which one is larger and cone-shaped. Above the oriel window, you're able to admire a hip-roofed dome, which is adorned with a sun emblem and crowned with a . The that's placed on top of the second floor is lavishly decorated with a , an , and an pattern, as well as . A straight is placed above the second floor windows, which are supported by two corbels, within their midst a fragment that's adorned with and a , as well as a . The frames of the windows, as well as the that flank these same windows, are embellished with . The wrought iron of the second floor windows are adorned with even more volutes. On the first floor, you'll be able to see even more corbels and keystones, but also , which are placed within the pilasters and above the entrance on the southern side of the building.
The building visible in an old postcard