bg Skopje

Mihajlo Shkaperda House

- 8 Udarna Brigada Street 22 -
The two-story building, which was built between 1930 and 1932 for residential purposes, later changed into governmental purposes. The building was constructed according to a design that came from the hand of the Romanian architect . The building was built for Mihajlo Shkaperda and his wife Aglaica Sapundzi, and the project of Gheorghe was a wedding gift for the young married couple, as they had been friends since their student days. When Mihajlo and Aglaica were on their wedding trip to , Simota promised them that he would design a beautiful house for them as a wedding present. The beautiful furniture was specially made by the then most famous company Abonos from . Mihajlo is a member of the old Vlach family, who originates from . His parents Nikola and Domnika, as a young married couple, moved to Skopje somewhere at the beginning of the last century with their six children.
The building during its construction
For their sons Mihajlo and Janko, education was provided in famous and expensive schools from an early age. Mihajlo, after finishing the Romanian High School in , went to study at the Export Academy, then the Faculty of Economics, in Bucharest. After completing his studies, he returned to Skopje, but instead of working in his father's building materials store, he got a job as a bank clerk. Only after two or three years, Nikola started instructing his sons in the construction materials trade, and after his death in 1924, Mihajlo and Janko started trading independently. Their warehouse worked like that until 1941, when the Shkaperda warehouse was confiscated with all their materials, for military purposes. The took its toll and Mihajlo left for Krushevo with his wife and daughter, where he stayed until liberation. After returning to Skopje, the family settled in their house again, until the moment when the house was confiscated, and they got a small apartment in the same street. The building has changed many owners since then, and at one time it was the house for representation, when all the important guests of Skopje stayed in it, including . After that, it became the editorial office of Mlad Borec, then the headquarters of the Commission for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries, and later the Embassy of Italy.
The Shkaperda family
The corner building was built in the Romanian Revival style and was characterized by a tower that was demolished after the Skopje that took place in 1963. Underneath the roof overhang, which in some places is adorned with ornaments, you can see squares decorated with . There is a band that runs around the entire building, which is beautifully embellished with floral ornamentation that's also reflected in the arches. A fragment is placed on both the northern and eastern sides of the building, which is adorned with a chess motif and a richly decorated . A straight is placed above the second floor windows, which are adorned with different-shaped . The building contains several columns and , which are all crowned with a Corinthian . The building also contains a secured by stone balustrades containing either lovely floral decorations or that differ from the ones used in the banister.
An old photo showing a part of the interior