The street was opened in 1837 and named
Tsarskaya Street in the honour of Tsar
Nicholas I who visited the city during that period. In 1919, after the death of the first interior minister of the
First Republic of Armenia Aram Manukian, the street was officially renamed after him. After the sovietization of Armenia, the communists renamed the street after the
bolshevik activist
Suren Spandaryan in 1921. With the independence of Armenia in 1991, the name of Aram Manukian was restored and the street was officially renamed as
Aram Street (in Armenian:
Arami Poghots). Between 1917 and 1919, Aram Manukian lived in the building located at Aram Street 9. The building which belonged to Fadey Kalantaryan, dates back to 1910 and designed by architect Boris Mehrabyan. Aram Street was home to many old and traditional buildings of Yerevan. However, after the independence of Armenia, the majority of the historic buildings on the street were either entirely destroyed or transformed into modern residential buildings through the construction of additional floors. Only few structures were preserved, mainly in the portion that extends from the
Abovyan Street to the
Mashtots Avenue. =="Old Yerevan" project==