Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Architect Rumen Dzhagarov leaves Sofia to restore his ancestral home in Novo Selo village

“In villages you can have all conveniences you are accustomed to in an urban environment”

Photo: courtesy of Rumen Dzhagarov

5,257 is the number of towns and villages in Bulgaria, National Statistical Institute data from 2021 show. Almost 5,000 of them are small settlements, but statistical data show that one village in the country “dies” every year after its last inhabitant has left. At the moment there are almost 600 villages at risk of “going extinct” with between one and five people still living in them.

Young architect from Sofia Rumen Dzhagarov has decided to set an example of how this can be changed. In the midst of the pandemic and wanting to restore the dilapidated house that once belonged to his grandfather, he returned to his ancestral home in Novo Selo village in Northwestern Bulgaria. Until 2021, Novo Selo was, for Rumen Dzhagarov, a place to go for walks – or to take a trip down memory lane. Yet now it is the place he associates with advancing his career and making his boldest dreams come true.  

Rumen Dzhagarov, who graduated History and Theory of Architecture at the University of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy in Sofia, is now working on the first “post-graduate project” of his life – authentically restoring a house which is more than 100 old.
Architect Rumen Dzhagarov
“My house is still in the process of being restored, but the idea is to use as many building crafts and techniques as possible, as well as natural materials so it can be preserved as it stood originally,” the young architect explains in an interview for the BNR’s culture channel Hritso Botev. “To reach the required standard that would make this house livable in the 21st century, I am counting most of all on organization and planning and less on the use of modern materials – and only in more specific rooms like the bathroom for example. Because back in the day there was no bathroom, no wet rooms, but now you can’t do without them and you have to have showers, WCs and washing machines inside the house. I may have had big problems in the process of construction, and through the long winters when the people left in the village are few and far between, but it has never even crossed my mind to drop everything, pack my stuff and go back to the city.”

Returning to the village is a dream come true for the young architect from Sofia, a demonstration that living a rustic life in our day is possible, and that it can bring a sense of self-fulfillment and completeness.

“We should be protesting against the demographic crisis and the depopulation, especially of the border villages in Bulgaria. Novo Selo is a very big village, and if you are standing in the village centre, you would think it was a small town. Everything is well organized here, we have streets that are paved, a clock tower, a village hall, a post office, administrative buildings. But when I feel I need to take a break it is very easy to reach the fields.”

The future is, for Rumen Dzhagarov, a future that is more serene and closer to nature. But in a village, you can still have all the conveniences an urban environment has to offer, architect Rumen Dzhagarov says.

Interview by Svetla Todorova, Hristo Botev channel, BNR

Compiled by Gergana Mancheva

Photos courtesy of Rumen Dzhagarov, BNR-Vidin



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Bulgarian pupils in Rome revive the memory of the first Bulgarian school in Chiprovtsi dating to 1624

An unusual opening of the new school year was made by the students and teachers of the Bulgarian school "Asen and Ilia Peikov" in Rome and Florence.  The event was attended by the Ambassador of Bulgaria to Italy H.E. Kostadin Kodzhabashev, as well as..

published on 9/18/24 3:15 PM

More than 80 craftsmen to demonstrate their skills at Veliko Tarnovo handicrafts festival

A six-day handicrafts festival in Veliko Tarnovo kicks off the celebrations of Bulgaria's 116th anniversary of independence , reports BNR correspondent Zdravka Maslyankova.  More than 80 craftsmen from all over the country will take part in the..

published on 9/18/24 7:50 AM
An aerial view of the St Sophia Basilica. The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral can be seen in the background.

Sofia - more modern than ancient in the eyes of foreign tourists

St. Sophia - the church that gave the Bulgarian capital its present-day name - is dwarfed by St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral , which towers in the centre of the square of the same name. With its white façade, gleaming gold and green domes and beautiful..

published on 9/17/24 8:20 AM