- The restoration of Megaro Kothri remains unresolved following new inspections.
- The former Minos hotel is frozen due to a dispute with the Archaeological Service.
- The Liopyrakis Mansion area is closed, but pedestrians ignore barriers.
- All three buildings sit on Heraklion’s historic 25th August Street.
- Tourists now walk past scaffolding instead of landmarks.
- The famous “Street of Illusion” lives up to its name again.
If you want to understand how restoration projects work in Greece, there is no better place than 25th August Street in Heraklion, once nicknamed the Street of Illusion because its elegant facades gave visitors the impression of a grand European city. This impression did not always survive once you walked past the front row.
More than a century later, the illusion is still alive, although now it comes from something else:
three historic buildings, three restoration plans, and three stories that seem unable to reach the finish line.
The Municipal Authority is currently facing a double — or rather triple — headache: the Megaro Kothri, the former Minos Hotel, and the closed section near Megaro Liopyrakis, all located within a few hundred meters of each other, all waiting for decisions, approvals, or simply the right alignment of Greek bureaucracy and fate.
Visitors arriving from the port pass the scaffolding, the fences, and the warning signs and receive a very authentic introduction to modern urban archaeology.
Megaro Kothri and the Endless Relay Between Services
The listed Megaro Kothri, on 25th August Avenue, has entered what officials politely describe as a “new phase of evaluation,” which in practice means another round of inspections, studies, and coordination between services.
A technical team from the Municipality recently conducted an on-site inspection to determine which works are actually needed, taking into account the Archaeological Service’s recommendations.
According to Deputy Mayor for Technical Works Dimitris Spyridakis, the Municipality expects to make a decision soon.
“the method, the timing, and the scope of the contract.”
This comes after the City Council approved yet another extension for the preliminary study, which was already submitted more than a year ago to the Service of Modern Monuments and then forwarded to the Ministry of Culture, where it continues its quiet journey through the administrative universe.
Meanwhile, parts of the building have already collapsed during recent bad weather; the street remains partially closed; and the monument stands wrapped in scaffolding, like a patient waiting for a diagnosis that never quite arrives.
The Minos Hotel Frozen Between Archaeology and Reality
Just a few steps away, the former Minos Hotel, once one of the most luxurious pre-war hotels in Heraklion, faces the sea and the Koules fortress — and does absolutely nothing else.
The building had begun stabilization works about ten months ago, raising hopes that the historic structure might finally return to life. Instead, the project stalled due to disagreements between the Archaeological Service and the study engineer.
“The study had been completed and submitted, but objections were raised, and the required corrections were not delivered,” the Deputy Mayor explained, confirming that the works remain frozen.
The result is a familiar Greek scenario:
- study completed
- objections raised
- corrections requested
- corrections not submitted
- works stopped
- future developments expected soon
The building, owned by the Municipality since 1987, after being transferred from the Venizeleion Foundation, was once planned to reopen as a hotel under a private lease. That contract collapsed years ago after the investor declared the archaeological restrictions unattainable.
Today, tourists walking from the cruise ships toward the city center pass a ruin that used to be a landmark, wondering whether it is undergoing restoration, under study, or permanently under discussion.
The answer is yes.
Megaro Liopyrakis and the Fence Nobody Obeys
Further along the same street stands Megaro Liopyrakis, one of the finest examples of romantic neoclassicism in Heraklion, designed by architect Dimitris Kyriakos in the early 20th century.
The mansion once formed part of the elegant architectural row that gave the street its European character, a row so impressive that locals jokingly called the avenue the Street of Illusion, because it made the rest of the city look richer than it really was.
Today, the illusion continues in a different way.
Part of the area near the building is officially closed for safety reasons, but the fence has been moved, pedestrians walk through, scooters pass, and daily life flows exactly as if nothing were restricted — which, in Heraklion, is often the most practical interpretation of the rules.
The building itself remains divided into separate properties, structurally complex, architecturally important, and permanently awaiting the kind of restoration that is always discussed but rarely completed.
A Perfect Introduction for Cruise Visitors
The timing could not be better.
With cruise ships expected to arrive in increasing numbers, thousands of visitors will soon walk along 25th August Street, the main axis connecting the port with the city center.
What they will see:
- A scaffolded mansion,
- a frozen hotel restoration,
- a closed section nobody respects,
- and one of the most beautiful streets in Crete is still waiting for its next chapter.
In a way, the name Street of Illusion has never been more accurate, as it once promised elegance, history, and restoration, but now delivers paperwork, disagreements, and scaffolding.