Since 1983 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been based in a purpose-built edifice in the district of
Slatina east of the Sofia city center, situated at 2 Alexander Zhendov Str. It lies just northeast of the city's largest boulevard
Tsarigradsko shose and its oldest park
Borisova gradina. The competition for the building design was held in 1970 and was awarded to the Sofproekt architect bureau under the architects Bogdan Tomalevski and Lozan Lozanov. The planning and design phase took until 1974–1975. Construction began in 1975 and continued until 1983. Several distinct techniques give the characteristic image and impact of the building — the successive
bay window elevation of the structure, the finer division in height, the rhythm of the structural elements and the prominent decorative columns around the window openings. Its architecture was inspired by the
Boston City Hall, which is considered a prominent example of
Brutalist architecture. Yet, the building does not fully belong to the flowing open public spaces and egalitarian architecture of post-war Brutalism. Rather, it is an
eclectic structure that bears the marks of all the decades in which it was designed, built and completed — the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. In the formal spaces in the interior, the dark marble and brass details bear similarities with the decoration style of the representative
Sofia Largo of the 1950s. Formally, the architectural image repeats characteristic patterns of the post-war modernism of the 1960s but the finishing works and stone cladding bear the high level of demonstrative luxury accepted as the norm in the buildings of the power of the
People's Republic of Bulgaria at the time, such as the
Boyana Рesidence. The synthesis of architecture with other arts are characteristic of the cultural policies of the second half of the 1970s and throughout the 1980s, as many of the architects, designers and decorators also worked in a number of the most representative contemporary architectural sites of Bulgaria, including the remarkable
Buzludzha monument in the
Balkan Mountains. Elements of its architecture inspired other public buildings throughout the nation, including in the cities of
Vidin,
Ruse,
Burgas,
Pazardzhik and
Troyan. ==See also==