The building was constructed at the end of the 19th century by the Toshanovi family.
It served as a shop for colonial goods. The building is single-storey, with a square base, a bay window, and an integrated attic with a wooden mezzanine structure used for internal communication. The walls, approximately 80 cm thick, are solidly built from roughly cut green sandstone bonded with lime. The corners are made of finely worked stone blocks. The main entrance portal is an arched opening constructed from large blocks of green stone. To the left and right of the portal, there is one window each, framed with processed green stone. The attic contains small windows. The eaves are formed with a triple stone cornice made of green stone. The roof has three slopes.
The exterior appearance of the front (northern) façade has not changed, although the original massive wooden entrance door has been replaced with an aluminum one.
The interior has undergone changes made by the owner, with the original wooden mezzanine replaced by a concrete structure.
It is a unique preserved building of its kind in the city of Štip, as well as one of the rare examples in eastern Macedonia, representing an authentic example of a shop, well adapted to the needs of a specific social and economic structure from a particular historical period.

