The problem of the permanent housing of the Service and the Archive at suitable premises was partially solved in late 1996, when, following various ups and downs, the after various adventures the DMNAM was relocated from its offices at Karytsi Square to the building at 11, Agion Asomaton Street. The new offices and large spaces enabled the development of new programmes and activities.
The property, along with others in the same and adjacent building blocks, had initially been expropriated in the 1970s to expand the excavation of the ancient Kerameikos area.
However, the times and priorities changed, and many of the buildings destined for demolition, including the one on Asomaton Street, were considered listed buildings and were preserved.
In 1993, in the inspection report of the Directorate of Cultural Buildings and Restoration of Contemporary Monuments, the building was described as a four-storey with a basement on the elevation and a recessed 5th storey, possessing a characteristic polygonal floor with irregular spaces and a very interesting frontage with neoclassical morphological elements, without symmetrical window frames.
Emphasis was also placed on its mixed construction, i.e. load-bearing masonry made of stones and reinforced concrete in the stairwell and flooring. Subsequently, following a unanimous opinion issued by the Central Council of Contemporary Monuments, a Ministerial Decision was issued, classifying the building at 11, Agion Asomaton Street as a work of art, as it is one of the first multi-storey buildings in Greece, with noteworthy neoclassical elements in its elevation (Government Gazette, Series II, Issue 254/8-4-1994).
The building was originally retrofitted for museum use, but the plan to establish a “Mothers’ Museum” did not go ahead and the building was thus granted to the DMPA. In addition to offices, part of the Archive of the Archaeological Service was also transferred to the building.
Since its establishment in 1834, the Archaeological Service, which initially functioned as the Office of Antiquities at the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Public Education, created a rich archive of documents, drawings and photographs, which are valuable artifacts not only for archaeological but also for historical research.
Research into and scientific utilisation of this rich material remained a desideratum of archaeologists in Greece for decades since it remains inaccessible to scholars for many years due to the successive changes and relocations of the Archaeological Service. To discuss just the “relocations” in modern times, in 1958 the Archaeological Service, made subordinate to the Ministry of the Presidency of the Government, was transferred to the annexes of the Byzantine Museum (where the War Museum is currently housed).
In 1971, following the establishment of the Ministry of Culture, it was transferred to 12, Aristeidou Street, while its old archive was transferred to the basement of the National Archaeological Museum.
In a memorandum dated 1978, Evangelia Deilaki refers to its poor storage conditions in the basement of the National Archaeological Museum, in an inadequate room sharing an entrance with the vessel warehouse, making work on and processing of the archive impossible. In 1981, the inactive archive of the Directorate General of Antiquities and Restoration of the Ministry of the Presidency was handed over for safekeeping to the Archaeological Society and the National Archaeological Museum.
According to the delivery and acceptance report, 273 or 277 cartons and envelopes were ceded “for storage on consignment”.
In 1988, the DMPA carried out the first inspection of the inactive archive of the Archaeological Service, which was kept in the basements and corridors of the National Archaeological Museum.
Of the 273/277 original boxes, 160 were found and matched inside three wooden closets. The autopsy report notes that the boxes were preserved in poor condition and, in certain cases, were completely destroyed, their indications erased and their materials scattered.
Although the building at 11, Asomaton Street was not suitable for the housing and storage of sensitive archives, the year 1997 can be considered as the starting point of fulfilling the long-standing request for the settlement of the inactive archive of the Archaeological Service. It was then that the first phase of classification of the inactive archive of the Ministry of Culture and its supervised entities (after 1971), which had been placed in boxes by the Directorate during the transfer of the headquarters of the Ministry from Aristeidou Street to Bouboulinas Street, was completed, and the archive was kept in the basement of 11, Asomaton Street.
In 1999, at least six gradual transfers of the boxes forming part of the archive from the basement of the National Archaeological Museum to the Asomaton Street building took place. The historical archive of the years 1834-1945 consists of heaps of loose documents whose order and sequence had been disrupted. It was received and recorded in this condition, rendering the reconstitution of its original order and the archival sequences impossible. The part of the archive of the Archaeological Service not handed over (lists of provincial museums, excavation logs, etc.) remains at the National Archaeological Museum to this day.