Let wrap up this route with a hidden gem — a finely-designed utilitarian structure. Its main feature is the smoothing: all corners of the volumes and windows have smoothed angles.
And then, there is a very Cypriot detail: the pylon closest to the tower cuts through the concrete eaves of the roof — as a promise of continued construction — the eternal, endless progress that you could believe back in the 1980s.
The petrol station was built by Haris Fereos, who had studied at the University of Athens and had worked closely with the Larnaca-based oil giant, Petrolina, since the late 1960s. He designed the company’s Larnaca head office for Petrolina and a magnificent mansion for a member of the company’s family, inspired by the American master Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater house (see more on the Lefkaritis family in my “Vanishing Homes” route).
Around the petrol station, you can also see other modernist buildings most likely from the 1980s–1990s: a monumental toilet and an administration office building.
That’s it for this time, I’d like to get your impressions of the route! Please tag your photos from the walks @favole_di_cemento #nikitinrimsky.
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