Old version
Font size:
Color scheme:
Images:
Catholic Cathedral
Catholic Cathedral

The Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Sacred Heart of Jesus began construction in 1912 on the high bank of the Salar. The architect of the building was the Pole Ludwig Panchakevich. Among the builders were Austrian and Hungarian prisoners held in a camp near Tashkent. Among them were highly skilled engineers, masons, and sculptors. 

During the Soviet years, construction was halted. The unfinished building was used for various purposes: it housed a dormitory and later a hospital. Many sculptures and decorative elements were lost. In the late 1970s, city authorities began restoration, but it dragged on, and the building was transferred to the Ministry of Culture. 

In 1992, the building was handed over to the capital’s Catholic community, and a year later, a new reconstruction began under the leadership of engineer Alexander Ponomaryov and architect Sergey Adamov. 

In October 2000, the church was consecrated by Archbishop Marian Oles. 

The interior spaces are richly decorated with marble and granite. 

The beautiful, tall cathedral building is visible from afar—it has organically blended into the cityscape.

Also interesting places
Sharafbay Mosque
Sharafbay Mosque

In the mid-19th century, a wealthy Tatar entrepreneur named Sharafbay (Sharafiddin Bay) built a mos...

Residential Building on Mustaqillik Street
Residential Building on Mustaqillik Street

The residential building on the former Pushkin Street was built in 1931 according to the design of ...

Café “Ugolok” – one of the most famous in Tashkent
Café “Ugolok” – one of the most famous in Tashkent

One of the oldest cafés in the city has preserved the unique taste of its signature “tapaka” chicke...

Building of the Irrigation Institute
Building of the Irrigation Institute

In 1934, the Tashkent Institute of Irrigation and Agricultural Mechanization Engineers was establis...

We have launched a new version of the website. If you wish to return to the old version, please click here.

Old version