bg Sofia

Dimitar Mollov House

- Narodno Sabranie Square 10 -
Dimitar Mollov's house is located on the same square as the statue of . The house was built in 1909 and was designed by the Bulgarian architect .

The building was built for Dimitar Petrov Mollov, who was a Bulgarian physician, surgeon, and politician in the Progressive Liberal Party, later called the People's Party. He was born on January 7, 1846, in the town of , but studied in his father's native village in . In 1867 he attended high school and graduated from the seminary in . In 1876, with a scholarship from the Slavic Charitable Society, he graduated in medicine at the University in 1873.
Dimitar Petrov Mollov
Dimitar Mollov participated as a volunteer in the , organizing a sanitary detachment and a field hospital. During the , he was a provincial doctor in and head of a Red Cross ambulance train. After the , he was one of the founders of the Bulgarian healthcare system. For a brief period, which lasted from 1895 until 1896, he was the mayor of Sofia. His son who was Minister of Finance also lived in the same house. Dimitar Mollov died on January 21, 1914, in Sofia.
The building before the bombardment
The building is built in the Art Nouveau style, which can be seen in the use of the many round shapes and the beautiful natural plastered ornaments. The most eye-catching part is the huge with the wrought iron canopy and balcony on top of it. The oriel window is decorated with floral ornaments and has two impressive round-shaped side windows. Above the canopy, you can see a with the inscription "M" (Mollov). The along the top give the building more depth. The heavy , the windows, and the front door were personally designed by the architect Nikola Lazarov and commissioned in . The cartouche below the central window is richly decorated with plant motifs and four . The windows below the oriel window have the same rounded shape as the canopy on top. Above the main entrance door, you can see a of a goat with a mens face.

The house was badly damaged by the during the , and during the restoration in 1945 the exquisitely shaped attic floor and the dome were not restored.
An old photo in which the building is visible