Renowned after 1910 as Cuza Voda Street, but formerly known as Uliţa Golia, a name that had been given to it after the old monastery on this street today, there was a street tramway and a place where the trade was at home. Along the entire street, all the houses were inhabited only upstairs because there were various shops on the ground floor. All the marafets were found on Cuza Voda Street: shops for the little ones, bridal shops, craft shops, drink dugheads, ornaments shops, various shoes, carpets, or any other goblins. In the middle of the street there was once the log-house Alecu Ghica also called “The Palace of Hope” because it accommodated treatments and other cure, the activity of midwives and young progressives.
Today the building houses the Obstetrics and Gynecology Hospital. Along the way, Cuza Voda is a house with elegant architecture dating back to 1925. It is the former Palace of the Chamber of Commerce where all the directives of the commerce activities of the commune were drawn. On the ground floor of the building there was an American bar where Charleston or Foxtrot were dancing. Also on this street were the headquarters of Viatra Romaneasca, printing houses and libraries in which the shadow of the steps of Sadoveanu, Toparceanu, Mihai Codreanu or Teodoreanu was floating.