bg Sofia

Hotel Macedonia

- Knyaginya Maria Luiza Boulevard 2 -
The building, which was built as a hotel at the end of the 19th century, was originally built as a two-story residential and commercial building. Later on, the building was upgraded with another floor and most of the facade was adapted and the were replaced for balconies. The first cinema projection in Sofia took place in the salon of Hotel Macedonia on December 8, 1896, which was announced by Professor Melinson, who announced it as a showing of a curious and new invention of .
The original two-story building just left of the mosque
The cafe named Cafe Macedonia on the first floor of the building was maintained by the Bulgarian entrepreneur and public figure, Spiro Haliolchev, who was born in the city of , then in the Ottoman Empire. Cafe Macedonia, with its wide terrace and numerous tables on the sidewalk, where many Sofianians sat, was also the center of all Macedonian actors. It was also a center of prominent Macedonian figures from the Internal Macedonian-Edrina Revolutionary Organization (). By 1905, Spiro was the main shareholder and director of the Pivovarna Sofia Factory, and his son Petar Haliolchev was a master brewer in it. Spiro Holiolchev was an active member of the Ohrid Charitable Brotherhood and as such was a delegate to the unification congress of the Macedonian Federative Organization and the Union of Macedonian Emigrant Organizations from January 1923. Spiro Haliolchev died in July 1925 in Sofia. The building of Hotel Macedonia and Cafe Macedonia was completely destroyed during the Anglo-American during the .
An old photo that shows the building
The roof of the building, which was built in the Neo-Renaissance style, contained a pointed and was supported by a lot of . A was placed above all of the windows, while another pointed pediment was only placed above the second floor windows. The that stretched all the way up from the second until the third floor, were all crowned with a Corinthian The building featured a lot of balconies in different sizes, most of them were supported by corbels, but all of them were secured with a wrought iron railing.
The building is shown on the right side after the bombardment