- Bey Hamam restoration funded for 2022–2024 under the Cultural Investment Program.
- The total budget reached €1.5 million.
- The monument dates to 1444 and is the oldest Ottoman bath in Thessaloniki.
- Full restoration reveals frescoes, domes, marble basins, and hidden rooms.
- The women’s section opens for the first time in decades.
- The project effectively finished two years late — perfectly on schedule by Greek standards.
The restoration of the historic Bey Hamam in Thessaloniki — also known as Loutra Paradeisos — has finally reached completion, bringing back to life one of the oldest Ottoman monuments in the city. The project, financed under a national program for cultural routes and economic transformation, had a clean, tidy schedule on paper: start in January 2022, finish in December 2024, celebrate progress, issue press releases, move on.
Reality, as always, had other plans.
Now, after a €1.5 million restoration, the 15th-century bathhouse is fully accessible to visitors for the first time in decades. The delay was never officially characterized as such, of course. In Greece, projects do not run late — they mature slowly, like good wine, olives, or public paperwork.
The monument itself has certainly earned the patience.
Built in 1444 by Sultan Murad II shortly after the Ottoman conquest of Thessaloniki in 1430, the Bey Hamam is a classic double bath, with separate male and female wings running parallel but independently, according to archaeologist and Byzantinologist Konstantinos Th. Raptis, who presented the monument’s history at the 38th Conference for Archaeological Work in Macedonia and Thrace, said the bath follows the traditional Ottoman layout.
Visitors moved from the cold hall (cameğan) with changing rooms on the upper floor, to the warm space (soğukluk), and finally to the hot chamber (sıcaklık), where a large marble slab stood in the center for massage. Around it were smaller, hotter rooms known as halvet, while the eastern side of the complex housed the water reservoir and the heating system with hypocaust floors. In other words, a perfectly engineered 15th-century spa — which, naturally, required a 21st-century committee to fix.
Studies, Reports, Studies About Reports, then Actual Work
According to the official project description, the restoration included everything one expects from a serious cultural intervention — and a few things one expects only from a Greek one.
The works covered:
- Architectural restoration studies;
- structural reinforcement studies;
- electrical and mechanical installation studies;
- material analysis studies;
- conservation of frescoes, marble, wood, and metal elements;
- drainage and water network restoration;
- roof repairs and moisture control;
- signage, information panels, and printed material.
The women’s section — closed since 1968 — required the most extensive restoration, after decades of alterations dating back to the 1950s. Once those were removed, the original organization of the rooms became visible again, including older flooring, perimeter seating, and the central basin.
Even the decorative elements turned out to be richer than expected. The painted decoration, mostly floral motifs executed in the dry fresco technique, reappeared after the 1978 earthquake, when later reinforcements were removed. Marble floors, basins, the central heating slab, and architectural details regained their original shine after conservation.
For the first time, visitors will also be able to enter the space between the two bath sections, which was previously reserved for attendants. The room probably served as a laundry for clothes and bathing cloths, and it still contains a wooden spiral staircase leading to the roof between the domes, where fabrics may have been dried in the sun, which proves that Ottoman engineers thought about logistics — something modern project schedules occasionally forget.
After Thessaloniki became part of the Greek state, the bath continued operating under the name Loutra Paradeisos until 1968, when modern plumbing made public baths obsolete. The 1978 earthquake caused serious structural problems, especially in the large domes, leading to stabilization works in the 1980s that allowed only part of the monument to remain open for events and exhibitions.
A Cultural Route With Scenic Detours
Officially, the restoration belongs to a broader program titled Modernization and Resilience of Key Economic Sectors Through Cultural Routes.
It sounds impressive, and it probably is, although nobody is entirely sure how many routes must be studied before one bathhouse gets fixed.
The project fell under:
- Pillar 4 – Private investment and economic transformation
- Axis 4.6 – Modernization of key economic sectors
- Action 16485 – Creation of cultural routes
The latest restoration finally addressed the remaining damage, reinforced the domes, repaired the roof covering, and restored the exterior decoration, including the stalactite-style entrance ornament.
Architectural lighting will now highlight the monument on Aristotelous Square, where it stands as one of the most recognizable remnants of the Ottoman period in the city.
“The monument highlights the history, architecture, and bathing tradition of the Ottoman era in Thessaloniki,” Raptis noted, adding that the baths remain “an important landmark connecting the past with the contemporary cultural life of the city.”
Which is a polite academic way of saying the building waited patiently for decades until the paperwork caught up.
The restoration was carried out by a multidisciplinary team of archaeologists, architects, and conservators from the Ephorate of Antiquities of Thessaloniki — proof that when enough experts, reports, and funding programs finally align, even a project scheduled for 2024 can proudly open in 2026. And in Greece, that still counts as progress.