The BTI Building, formerly known as the “Peasant House” or “Selyansky House,” was designed by architect Boris Kornienko in 1912 in the Ukrainian Art Nouveau style as an apartment building for Adam Piotrovsky.

According to research by V. Prilutsky, the building was in fact a reconstruction—an extension built atop two two-story houses from the mid-19th century.

The ground floor housed a restaurant, and the second floor housed the Imperial Hotel.

In the early 1920s, the building became the “Central Peasants’ House” (Selbud), where NEP peasants from all over Ukraine could stay during their trips to Kharkiv, which was then the capital.

This was also the location of the newspaper *Selyanskaya Pravda*, which became the hub of the city’s literary life in the early 1920s.

At the same time, a bust of Taras Shevchenko was installed in a niche on the pediment.

In 1922, Sergei Pilipenko, the newspaper’s editor, founded the Union of Revolutionary Peasant Writers “Plough” (in 1998, a memorial plaque honoring Pilipenko was installed on the building).

During the renovation, which took place from 2016 to 2020, previously lost elements of the facade were restored, including the balconies and decorative majolica tiles.

The interior of the building was redesigned and significantly expanded, and an attic floor was added.

The architect behind the facade restoration project is Vladimir Novgorodov.

Monument to Taras Shevchenko:





The building was damaged by a Russian missile strike on August 27, 2022; its windows were shattered, and shrapnel damaged parts of the facade and monument to Taras Shevchenko.
