bg Sofia

Central Post Office

- General Gurko Street 6 -
In 1893, excavation works for the foundations of the three-story building began and it took more than ten years to complete the building, which was built with a residential and commercial function. The majestic building, which was constructed according to the project of the Bulgarian architect , was officially opened in 1904. It was built to house the Central Telegraph Post Office, which started operating in Sofia in May 1879 by order of Prince , a month before the government was formed. On January 18, 1892, the first long-distance telephone call was made in Bulgaria. The conversation was between Sofia and Plovdiv and all the important political figures and Prince himself were present for it. Letters were delivered by horse-drawn carts, and it wasn't until 1905 that the automobile began to enter as a means of transportation. The walls in the offices of the newly built building are lined with silk wallpaper, and in the lobby, there are metal elements, the glasses are specially created and brought from .
The interior in early 20th century
The first director of the Central Telegraph Post Office was , who was also the first football player in the country. In 1931, the trams began to be used as mailboxes, as citizens put their letters there and from Sofia station, they were distributed. Over the years, many changes were made to the building as expansion became necessary, the first of which took place in 1935 and was completed in 1939. The building was slightly damaged by the on Sofia that took place during the , which were repaired soon after the war. The building was reconstructed in 1980 and again in 1999, and today nothing remains of its splendor, and lost all of its beautiful ornamentation.
The building is shown in an old postcard
The most eye-catching part of the building, which was built in the styles of Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Baroque, was the open dome that was crowned with a decorative vase as a . Another decorative vase was placed on top of the pointed that featured a and was part of a , which like the cornice that was placed between the second and third floor, was embellished with . The scaly sheet metal mansard roof that could be seen around that same height as the pediment contained loads of dormers that were adorned with and a .
The telegraph operators in the salon of the Central Telegraph Post Office in 1924
A clock was placed on the corner, under which an was placed that was decorated with various . One of the segmental pediments that were placed above some of the second floor windows was adorned with a that depicted the Greek god , the messenger of the gods. Another mascaron was placed in the keystones that were placed above the circle-top windows, which were located on the same floor. This floor also featured many columns and , which were either crowned with a Doric or an Ionic . Underneath some of the windows, there was a containing , one of which, the one located on the corner, was supported by five . Three of the keystones that were located on the first floor were embellished with another cartouche.
The building somewhere at the beginning of the 20th century