Hananel Naar Building
Hananel Naar building is of eclectic architecture designed by Eli Modiano.
Modern and Contemporary era (1912 - )
1925 Built.
Ottoman era (1453- 1912)
Byzantine era (331 AC- 1453)
Roman era (30 BC- 330 AC)
Hellenistic era (322- 31 BC)
Classical era (478-323 BC)
Archaic era (800-479 BC)
Geometric era (-1100- 800 BC)
Prehistory (-1100 BC)
What I can see
It is an eclectic building with a ground floor and two floors. The ground floor has large rectangular openings and its false pillars extend to the floors, thus forming the tripartite arrangement of the facade. The openings of the second floor are arched with embossed keys on top, while there are embossed wreaths and garlands in between the openings of the first floor on the one side and the openings of the second floor on the other.
What I can't see
It was owned by Daniel Alvo and designed by Eli Modiano. Often in the bibliography, there is confusion with the building right next door, which was designed by Jacques Moshe and the architecture of the Hananel Naar building is wrongly attributed to him. This confusion is not unjustified, as the street numbering of the buildings is problematic. Even though today the address of this building is 6 Agiou Mina Street, in bibliographic and electronic sources the address is 4 Agiou Mina Street.
Info
- Address: 6 Agiou Mina St.
Bibliography
Fragkoudi Ch., (2015), Οικοδομή Χανανέλ Ναάρ, [Hananel Naar Building] in Thessarchitecture
https://thessarchitecture.wordpress.com/2015/04/22/%CE%BF%CE%B9%CE%BA%CE%BF%CE%B4%CE%BF%CE%BC%CE%B7-%CF%87%CE%B1%CE%BD%CE%B1%CE%BD%CE%B5%CE%BB-%CE%BD%CE%B1%CE%B1%CF%81/
Last visit 25/1/2025