Millet HamamI
Tac-i Ahmet Mahallesi is on Hamam Range Street. The building, which was built on a sloping land from south to north, has a men's part in the northern part and a women's part in the southern part. The women's part dressing on the east facade of the building is attached to the south wing of the facade. The kulhan on this facade is adjacent to the northern wall of the dressing. There are three window openings in the northern part of the facade. The men's section undressing at the northern end of the east front is reached by an eight-step staircase. The dressing room is a square space on both sides of the entrance; It consists of a large distribution space in the middle and a rectangular space extending in the north-south direction. The warm room with a rectangular plan extending in the north-south direction is covered with a mirrored vault. On the east wall of the space, there are two entrance arches with a round arch. The temperature consists of a square space covered with a dome and a private room covered with a mirrored vault located on the eastern and northern edges of this space. The women's part dressing room forms a rectangular protrusion on the southern part of the east facade of the building. At the eastern end of the northern facade of this rectangular space, there is a crown door framed by simple moldings. The fountain pool in the middle of the women's dressing room is in the garden of the Afyon Archeology Museum. It is a rectangular space that extends in the east-west direction, covered with a mirrored vault. There are two entrance openings in the eastern part of the north wall. These doors open to a rectangular space in east-west direction, covered with a mirrored vault. The warmth consists of a domed middle space, as in the men's section, and two halvet cells covered with a mirrored vault opening to this space. It is understood that the water tank is a rectangular shaped space extending in the north-south direction. Although the date of construction is unknown, XVII.-XVIII. It is similar to the Ottoman buildings. As a result of the fire, the women's dressing was reconstructed by the Armenians living in the neighborhood in 1911. In 1955, a men's dressing was performed.