Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Yerevan "Deprived Of " Historic Building

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Yerevan "Deprived Of " Historic Building

    YEREVAN "DEPRIVED OF" HISTORIC BUILDING

    A1+
    [02:56 pm] 23 May, 2008

    The black building at the intersection of Tigran Mets-Hanrapetutiun
    streets once housed the government of the first Republic. Today it
    is getting more and more unrecognizable.

    We tried to learn our citizens' opinion of the construction although
    specialists assure that the new storeys added to the building will
    not spoil its appearance.

    "I think badly of the construction. They have completely spoilt the
    beauty of the building.

    Unfortunately, it is not upon me to decide," said an indignant citizen.

    "I wish the opinion of ordinary citizens were taken into
    consideration," a woman expressed her concern.

    "How will the authorities act if a well-off oligarch decides to add new
    floors to the present government building? No matter what building it
    is, a tiny or a huge one, it is an ounce of our history," said a woman.

    Nevertheless, architects do not share public opinion.

    "I do not endorse all those blacks buildings erected during the period
    of Russian tsarism. They have nothing to do with our culture. They
    are common to Russian towns of a medium size. The building reminds
    of rags. It is not a Mozart to regret for its loss," said an elderly
    architect from "Yerevan Project" Company.

    "Today money plays a decisive role in Yerevan. It is the root of all
    evil," he adds.

    As the establishment of the first Republic is directly connected
    with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation we tried to find out the
    party's opinion of the construction.

    Kiro Manoyan, one of the leaders of ARF Dashnaktsutiun and the head
    of Armenian Cause Office thinks the building had better become a
    museum. "As far as I know it was privatized during Ter-Petrossian's
    office, therefore we could do nothing to preserve the building."

    "The building was purchased by a Diaspora benefactor Hrair Hovnanian
    in 1998, and the construction launched in 2007," deputy chairman of the
    "Protection of Armenian Historic Monuments" Mikael Harutiunian says.

    The building hosted the Committee of Cultural Ties with the Armenian
    Diaspora in 1960-1998. Then I suggested preserving the building,
    changing the interior and opening a museum of the first Republic.

    But our suggestion was rejected. Thanks God, the facade hasn't been
    changed. All buildings of the street are three-storeyed. New storeys
    distort the proportion and beauty of the sight," Mikael Harutiunian
    adds.
Working...
X