Near Piața Victoriei, at the crossing between Victoria Avenue and Sevastopol Street we can find the residence of Constantin Cesianu. Cesianu-Filipescu House (1892) is an example of the reconditioning of an older residence, from the period of 1846-1850 and is one of the few aristocratic residences of inter-bellum Bucharest which remains faithful to its original design. In this house have lived members of Romanian aristocracy, such as Iancu Filipescu and Maria Ghica Filipescu. Constantin Cesianu expanded the house with the help of architect Leonida Negrescu. On this occasion, the exterior decorations, imperial rooftop, and the house’s park also came to be. The period between 1893 and 1933 had been a time where Cesianu-Filipescu House was considered a fashionable locale. However, this changes in 1935 when the property was sold to the Romanian Radio Society (S.R.R) which eventually exchanged its base of operations with the Bucharest City Hall, the latter becoming Cesianu house’s new owner. In 1940-1941 it was decided that the Communal Museum (today the Bucharest Municipality Museum) would receive Cesianu House as a place to host its exhibitions. For a large period of time, after 1990, Cesianu-Filipescu House was used to stock the patrimony of the Bucharest Municipality Museum, and today the building is in the process of being consolidated and reconditioned, process which includes the restoring of the garden, to which a lapidarium will be added. This project, funded with European money, is to be finalized in the summer of 2015. Six months after its restoration, the Bucharest Municipality will organize a long-term exhibition related to the family’s history, childhood, and family life in Bucharest over the last 300 years.