The
Largo (
Bulgarian:
Ларго, definite form Ларгото, Largoto) is an architectural ensemble of three
Socialist Classicism edifices in central
Sofia, the capital of
Bulgaria, designed and built in the 1950s with the intention to become the city's new representative centre. Today it is regarded as one of the prime examples of Socialist Classicism architecture in
Southeastern Europe,
[1] as well as one of the main landmarks of Sofia.

A Council of Ministers of Bulgaria
decree was published in 1951 regarding the construction of the Largo.
[2] The lot in the centre of the city, damaged by the
bombing of Sofia in World War II, was cleared in the autumn of 1952, so that the construction of the new buildings could begin in the following years.
[2] The Party House building, once crowned by a
red star on a pole, was designed by a team under architect Petso Zlatev and completed in 1955.
[2] The Ministry of Electrification office, later occupied by the State Council and today by the President's Office, the work of Petso Zlatev, Petar Zagorski and other architects, was finished the following year, while the TZUM part of the edifice, designed by a team under Kosta Nikolov, followed in 1957.
[2] The fountain between the President's Office and the older
National Archaeological Museum, was shaped in 1958.
[2] The Largo also once featured a statue of
Vladimir Lenin, which was later removed and replaced by the one of
St. Sophia in 2000.
Following the democratic changes after 1989, the symbols of
communism in the decoration of the Largo were removed, with the most symbolic act being the removing of the red star on a pole atop the former Party House using a
helicopter and its substitution by the
flag of Bulgaria. In the 1990s there have been suggestions to reshape the former Party House, sometimes regarded as an imposing remnant of a past ideology,
[3] by introducing more modern architectural elements.
[4] According to the new architectural plan of Sofia, Nezavisimost Square is as of 2006 being reorganized. The lawn and the flags in the centre are to be substituted by a glass lid on the floor, so that the ruins of the ancient
Thracian and
Roman city of Serdica can be exposed in an impressive way, thus becoming a tourist attraction.
[5] The two
underpasses, the one in front of the former Party House and the one with the medieval
Church of St Petka, are also planned to be connected.
[5]
TZUM (left), the former Party House (middle), and the President's Office (right)
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Guardsmen in front of the main entrance to the President's Office
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