
The owner of the mansion, which is estimated to have been built in the second half of the 19th century, before the exchange is known as “Treacherous Vasil”. The mansion, which was previously used as a house, was also used with the same function by Hürşit Başoğlu and his family, who immigrated here from Thessaloniki after the population exchange. Since the family has lived in the mansion for many years, the house is now known by the family’s surname. The house, which was later purchased by an investor to be used for commercial purposes, is empty and dysfunctional in its current state. The two-storey, gable-roofed building has a two-winged, arched main entrance door made of wood, located on the west facade, and an open courtyard is entered from here.
On the left side of the door, there is a relief with an eagle figure and an inscription with the date 1811. The walls of the mansion, which was built with the masonry technique, are made of stone; Wood and iron materials were used in door, ceiling and window elements. In the main room on the second floor of the mansion, there is a mural depicting two figures in a niche decorated with tulip motifs. In the picture, a woman on the left and a man on the right are depicted side by side, looking at each other. The phrase “EAP”, which means spring in Greek, is written on the upper part.
Soldier figures are depicted on both sides of the stairs leading to the upper floor of the mansion, but they are partially visible because they are covered with paint. A decoration on the entrance door of the main room of the house is accompanied by an inscription written in Greek, “If a person thinks that he is loved more by someone else from his family, then I have nothing to say (what can I say?)“, 1888.











