bg Stara Zagora

Bulgarian Agricultural Bank

- Tsar Simeon Veliki Boulevard 126 -
The construction of the one-story building took place somewhere at the beginning of the 20th and was built with both a commercial and an administrative function. The building was built as the Stara Zagora branch of the Bulgarian Agricultural Bank, which had branches all around the country, in many different cities, and its headquarters in the capital . The bank was founded in 1904 by a special law and played a key role in the economic life of the country providing funds to mainly agricultural producers and cooperatives. Often with a state guarantee, the Bulgarian Agricultural Bank made numerous loans to municipalities and unprofitable enterprises that, after the onset of the of 1929, proved uncollectible, and the state was unable to meet its obligations under the guarantees. After the coup of , 1934, the bank was merged with the Bulgarian Central Cooperative Bank into the Bulgarian Agricultural and Cooperative Bank. It's unknown when the building was demolished, but it was most likely demolished somewhere after the , as many of the iconic buildings in Stara Zagora were demolished in that period.
The building is shown in an old postcard from 1909
Around the same height as the scaly sheet metal mansard roof of the building, which was built in the styles of Neo-Classical and Neo-Renaissance, you could see, in addition to various dormers, several open pointed . The pediments that were part of the roof were, like the last mentioned cornice, embellished with . Within the open part of the pediments, a could be admired. The windows were flanked by , which were either crowned by a Doric or an Ionic , above which the latter three in different sizes could have been seen.
The building in the 1930s