It was designed by architect Andrei Fyodorovich Nidermeyer in the Art Nouveau style, and belonged to the sisters Olga and Elena Sariyev.
[1] The Sariyev House was built in the late Art Nouveau style, and completed in 1902 with features distinctive to the form that had developed in the city.
[3] The building once housed a library named after Maxim Gorky, before renovations that converted the upper floors into residential apartments.
[4] A plan to privatize the municipal property was set out at the 42nd meeting of the City Duma, which envisaged the creation of five non-residential premises with a total area of 1399.8 sq.
[7] The Sariyev House was auctioned for the fourth time in September 2021, and was sold for 10 thousand rubles to Taganrog resident Shushanik Mkrtchyan.