Sofia before World War II: urban design as a cultural implication
In the period until 1897, there is an ambiguity concerning the authors of the
next cadastral and regulation plans for Sofia. This can be attributed to the
pure archive documentations and the imprecise interpretations in the sources.
The Department of Cadastre and Regulation at the Municipality appoints in
1888 Johann Bartel as chief topographer to elaborate a new cadastral map. He
equips the team with a number of Austrian technicians.^33 It isn’t clear if a result
is reported in 1891, but a year later, in 1892, a new regulation plan is prepared,
not coming into effect. The remark in some sources, that the author of the plan
is unknown is questionable, because in this period the head of the department
is Nikola Nachev and the department is occupied by the above mentioned
Austrians. A lot of the ideas in the regulation plan are suggesting that it is a
work of experts, who are familiar with the Central European urban design. The
regulation plan from 1892 is an unfinished work that shows a richness of ideas,
which surprise even today. The basic decisions of the first regulation plan are
developed continuously with great capability. The ring road is designed as an
ensemble of characteristic public places and gardens, representative buildings,
monuments and bridges located along.
In the Bulgarian sources there are once again some absurdities concerning the
contribution of the Austrian experts to a regulation plan from 1897. The same
year’s cadastre map in the scale 1:5.000 is attributed definitely to Wilhelm Bartel.
Fig. 6
The cadastral map of Bartel,
- (Museum of Sofia)