ARCHITECTURE
Take a Tour of St. Petersburg’s Architectural Gems
An architectural tour of St. Petersburg
Posted September 16, 2015
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At the center of Palace Square stands the Alexander Column, constructed of a single piece of red granite and erected in 1834 in honor of Russia’s victory over Napoleon. In the background is the General Staff Building.
Architect Carlo Rossi was commissioned by Alexander I to design the General Staff Building, a bow-shaped structure built in the Empire style and completed in 1829. The double arch at its center is crowned with a Roman quadriga.
Much of St. Petersburg’s architecture is Baroque and neoclassical, but the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, begun in 1883 under Alexander III and completed under Nicholas II in 1907, celebrates medieval Russian architecture.
Kunstkamera, a natural-science museum seen in the center of this photograph, was established by Peter the Great. The Baroque-style building was designed by Georg Johann Mattarnovy and completed in 1727.
Typical neoclassical buildings seen from the Neva River. Yellow and white is a popular exterior palette in St. Petersburg; during the dark winter months, the yellow suggests golden sun and warmth.
The Old Saint Petersburg Stock Exchange sits on Vasilevsky Island, just across the Neva River from the Winter Palace. The Rostral Columns serve as twin beacons for ships navigating the river.
In the early 1700s, Peter the Great commissioned the Peter and Paul Fortress at the river delta to defend the city against attacks by the Swedes. The structure later became a prison, which held a long list of famous detainees, among them Dostoyevsky, Gorky, and Trotsky.
In 1909 an architectural competition was held to create a great Russian department store. Austrian architect Otto Wagner lead the jury and selected the design of German firm Wayss & Freytag. The result, DLT, is as grand as any department store in the world.
The Moskovsky District and Moskovskaya Square on the south side of the city were developed in the 1930s in Stalin’s preferred stripped-down neoclassical style. The House of Soviets, with its monumental architecture, was intended to be the new center of St. Petersburg, replacing the tzar-associated Palace Square.
An excellent example of Soviet-era art is the sculptural obelisk called The Monument to the Heroic Defenders of Leningrad, erected in the early 1960s to celebrate victory in World War II.
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