Tbilisi City Assembly Building | |
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თბილისის საკრებულოს შენობა | |
General information | |
Architectural style | Exotic style with Neo-Moorish design |
Location | Tbilisi |
Country | Georgia |
Current tenants | Tbilisi City Assembly |
Construction started | 1830s |
Completed | 1878 |
Owner | Georgian government |
Website | |
tbilisi.gov.ge | |
Official name | Tbilisi City Assembly Building (City Hall) |
Designated | October 1, 2007 |
Reference no. | 4392 |
Item Number in Cultural Heritage Portal | 3878 |
Date of entry in the registry | October 11, 2007 |
Accounting Card / Passport # | 010508007 |
Tbilisi City Assembly Building (Georgian: თბილისის საკრებულოს შენობა) is a clock-towered edifice situated in the southern side of Freedom Square (in Georgian - tavisuplebis moedani), Tbilisi, capital of Georgia. It houses the City Assembly (sakrebulo).
History
The original building was built under the Imperial Russian rule in the 1830s but was reconstructed several times, taking a different look over the past two centuries. It served, until 1879, as a Chancellery of Chief Policemaster and police department. A competition announced in 1878 for the remodeling the building to the City Hall (Gorodskoy Dom) was won by the architect Paul Stern's project. It exterior architecture reflects the then-popular Exotic style with Neo-Moorish design. A tower was added in 1910 and the building was further enlarged in 1912.
References
- (in Georgian) "საქართველოს ძველი ქალაქები: თბილისი" (2006), ISBN 99940-0-923-0.