Sale, 4 bedroom apartment, Saksahans’koho St, Lviv, Halyts’kyi district

200.000 $
Reference Number
7462
Type of transaction
Sale
Bedrooms
4 bedroom apartment
Square meters
165 sq.m.
Floor
4 floor
Floors house
4 floor
Type building
Austria
Class housing
Elite

Apartments for sale in Lviv Saksahans’koho St Buy an apartment Halyts’kyi district - 165 sq.m.

Additional information
Description
4-room apartment for sale. apartments Lviv, st. Saksaganskyi (Tadeusz Obminskyi's stone house, 1912). 4/4th floor, area 165 sq.m. Austrian house in the historical part of Lviv with a wonderful view. Individual heating. The ceiling height is 3.60 m. The rooms are isolated. Two kitchens. Two exits from the apartment + an attic over the entire plane with its own exit with a height of up to 5 square meters. The roof is covered. Authentic Austria with preserved forging, mirrors, marble, carpentry, parquet. Front entrance. 2 bathrooms, 2 balconies, storerooms. Parking under the house. 2 entrances and 2 balconies. It can be divided into 2 apartments if necessary.The building was built in 1912-1913 according to the project of architect Tadeusz Obminskyi. In the tenement outside Poland, there was a store selling foundry products of Borman and a dairy of Lomaszewska, as well as the boarding house "Anyuta".Saksaganskyi Street is a street in the Halytsky District of Lviv, which connects Ivan Franko Street with Shevchenko Avenue and is essentially an imaginary continuation of Shevchenko Avenue. Yaroslava Stetska Street joins.The street was formed during the "global" reorganization of Lviv at the beginning of the "era" of local self-government. In 1871, it was named "Stezhkova". At that time, it was just a narrow footpath along the banks of the Soroka River, one of Poltva's tributaries, running along the modern street in the direction of Academic Street (now Shevchenko Avenue). After the river was "hidden" by pipes at the end of the 19th century, Stezhkova Street began to be built up and was fully formed before the start of the First World War. In 1905, it was named after Tadeusz Romanovich, a participant in the January Uprising of 1863.In December 1944, the street received its modern name - Panas Saksaganskyi, in honor of the prominent Ukrainian actor, director, playwright and teacher, one of the luminaries of the Ukrainian domestic theater.The architectural ensemble of Saksaganskyi Street is dominated by architectural styles — classicism, historicism, and constructivism. The vast majority of buildings on the street are included in the Register of Architectural Monuments of Local Importance in Lviv.
Location
Country
Ukraine
Region
Lviv region
City
Lviv
District
Halyts’kyi district
Street
Saksahans’koho St
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