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Sergey Kiselev. Interview by Yuliya Tarabarina

Archi.ru is the official information partner of the Russian pavilion on XI Venetian biennial. This material begins a series of interview to architects-participants of an exposition of the Russian pavilion which will be published in "the Venetian" catalogue. So it has turned out that the exhibition of the architectural company "Sergey Kiselyov and partners" which have been named by "architects of year" last summer becomes a part of "Arh-Moskvy" starting in the nearest Monday.

23 May 2008
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You founded one of the first private architectural studios during perestroika, and it subsequently grew into a large architectural firm. How did you begin?

An important factor was a trip to America made by the first delegation of Soviet architects to visit the USA since 1935. The party included: Yury Platonov, who had recently been elected Chairman of the Union of Architects ‘from the floor’; Aleksandr Kudryavtsev, Rector of the Moscow Institute of Architecture; Academician Dzhim Torosyan; and myself (representing the country’s young architects). We were literally given the red-carpet treatment from New York to San Francisco and received with great honour. This trip literally revolutionized my outlook on life. It was then that I met the architect Sydney Gilbert, who was Vice-chairman of Architects, Designers, and Planners for Social Responsibility, our host organization. This acquaintance had a great impact on me.

American architecture of that time really influenced you?

No, not architecture, but how the process was organized. Sydney was no ‘star’, and at the time the big names in architecture paid us Russians no attention. But he was a brilliant organizer. Everything in his office was beautifully arranged, and we subsequently used this experience in our own work. And the second important thing was that he brought us commissions. We organized a kind of exchange of delegations between our offices. Subsequently, we signed an agreement by which we undertook to work only with Gilbert’s firm in America and were in turn his only partner in Russia. He began supplying us with commissions to design Russian offices for foreign companies (it was at that time that they began setting up operations here). Mainly, this was interior design. It was a good start and it allowed us to gain experience. Then we stopped being interested in interior design, and in 1996 we passed all these contacts to Boris Levyant, who retains an interior-design department to this day.

So you started specializing?

Yes, in the end we specialized. Like many, though, we started with interiors, and did a great number of them. For the joint-stock enterprise Burda Moden alone – which at the end of the 1980s was curated by Raisa Gorbachev in person – we designed offices in Moscow and another 16 cities. Then in 1992 we did the urban-planning concept for the development of Mosfilmovsky district. The concept went before a session of the Government of Moscow. Subsequently, we had the heads of other municipal districts queuing at our doors, so to speak. This was followed by reconstruction and even restoration projects, including the restoration project for the Senate in the Kremlin. Then came contextual construction projects and restoration of historical buildings, including of the building which contains our office. At the time, in the mid 1990s, we invested our labour by doing several projects free of charge in exchange for the chance to have our own office in the city centre. Our logo still contains the words ‘architecture, design, planning’, implying that we are a large universal company. However, it’s now extremely rare for us to take on interior-design jobs, and only in buildings which we have designed ourselves. And ‘two-dimensional’ planning, i.e. urban planning, is something we’ve likewise not done for a long time, although Vyacheslav Bogachkin, one of my colleagues from the 90s, and I graduated from the Department of Urban Planning at MARCHI. We gradually realized that urban planning is another type of activity: it is management, zoning laws, and regulation. So, even though we design street blocks of 10-15 hectares, I don’t regard this as urban planning, but as building design on a large scale. Ours is ‘box’ architecture. We design only for the city. Single-family houses and out-of-town settlements are not our thing. In the final analysis, we specialize in large architectural objects that are financially independent from the authorities.

Why?

At the beginning of the 1990s we made an attempt to work for public money. The civil servant who was responsible for allocating the commission suggested that we return to him part of the money for this commission. We thought him a thief, turned the job down, and decided, as far as possible, to have nothing more to do with such officials. We decided we should work with people who have their own money or borrow it, rather than for public money.

Have you had any desire to change or expand your established area of specialization?


I have said repeatedly that we’re a little tired of commercial commissions. Of course, we want to do non-commercial architecture – or, at the very least, architecture that prioritizes image. Currently, what we mainly do is satisfy the client’s objectives, and clients usually want the maximum – to spend as little as possible on construction and sell for as high a price as possible. We would like to design a building with a cultural function – one where profit is not the main criterion of success. But no one has approached us with such a proposal. Probably, we’re too dry, too far from art. Perhaps it’s in vain that we have created this image for ourselves, refraining from emphasizing the aesthetic aspects of our work for fear of being told that we won’t be able to cope. Perhaps this is from fright. Unjustified fright.

Nonetheless, in 2007 you were named ‘Architect of the Year’ at Arch Moscow and, what’s more, picked up all possible awards for best buildings for the same year.

I was surprised when we were honoured as best architects. When we were awarded the prize for best project from the point of view of developers for Avant-garde a year earlier, that was more comprehensible.

You often talk in this vein – emphasizing the pragmatic side of things while leaving aesthetics to art critics. At the same time your work clearly shows rules and principles – with regard to both style and behaviour – to which you adhere quite strictly. Could you say a few words about these principles?


There are two of them and they both begin with ‘u’ in Russian – appropriateness and ability. Appropriateness means ‘don’t harm’ the site or the city. It’s the social responsibility that the architect should feel with respect to the city in which he works. And ability is that which makes it possible for architects to satisfy their clients’ requirements.

But these are opposites: everything for the city and everything for the client!

Yes, and there’s a third principle: compromise, the ability to find a balance between the above two principles. My ‘sworn friends’ are often ironic on this subject. Kiselev, they say, can find his way between the raindrops; he’s an affectionate calf sucking two mothers. But I’m absolutely sure that an urban architect should have a talent for finding a compromise between the greed of the client and the constraints imposed by the city. The better the balance he can find, the better the buildings that he designs for the city. The ability to reach agreement, to explain why certain things cannot be done, to satisfy the client materially and spiritually, and at the same time not to behave offensively in the city: these have been the main principles that have governed us when building in the historical city centre. Currently, we’re trying to do exactly the same in our large projects, but they are on a different level of technical complexity. Here a different philosophy and different aesthetic apply: you have to create an absolutely rational building. This in itself entails an aesthetic component.

What do you mean by rationalism?


Nothing should happen without good reason. As a student, I read a textbook on formal logic for teaching colleges. I really liked it. It made clear that everything flows from and follows something else. This makes it difficult for me to accept from my colleagues arguments such as ‘That’s the way I see it’. There have even been conflicts, and gradually we’ve been left only with architects who can explain their decisions and formulate why they have drawn something this way and no other – why there’s a projection here, why green is the colour used here and red the colour here. This can be difficult; solutions occur intuitively, but at the same time I think it very important to think through the result, to make it well-considered – rather than an automatic movement of the hand. Architecture, as I see it, is a more complex species of activity than simply art. It involves organizing life, functions, flows, and movements of people and vehicles. Note that in Vitruvius’s triad of ‘benefit, strength, beauty’, beauty comes last. A great many of my colleagues and many art critics read this triad in reverse order, emphasizing the aesthetic component. There’s reason for this: art is higher and it’s art that moves culture forwards. The two other components are self-evident. But I think it’s very important in the city to see the other components as well as the aesthetic. A city is something more complex than simply the sum of its buildings. It’s an organism that has to be managed. Its processes need to be organized by means of laws and rules, written and unwritten. For me, for example, the environment as a whole is very important – the potholes on the roads, advertising banners strung across houses, and dirty rubbish bins. Not to mention the crumbling facades.

You have created a large architectural firm with a large number of projects and several leading architects. At the same time, your scrupulousness is well-known: some time ago, you even refrained from having your surname necessarily put first in the list of members of the creative team – so as to show the degree to which you had taken part in a project. Why?

There are traditions and rules of decency. At a certain moment there gets to be so much work and so many helpers are involved that it becomes more their project than yours. In general, having a project in production is awful. It ought to be your project, but you’ve lost control of it, and it becomes more someone else’s than yours. So I refrained from putting my own surname first on buildings which seemed to me to have been conceived by other people. This concerned Skuratov and Bogachkin, above all. They were self-sufficient. These guys have set up their own offices and now have every right to put their names at the top. At the same time, my ‘complexes’ in this regard have been largely eliminated by a whole series of buildings which have likewise won acclaim and in which the main melody and idea have been mine. They are: the oval block in the Central Telegraph project, Subaru Centre, Avantgarde, Ermitazh Plaza, and other structures where it was I who determined the main principles. In the case of Avantgarde I proposed making the building multihued, of three types of panels, proposed correcting the tension in the lines of its rounded outline, and proposed putting it on legs like a cupboard… On the other hand, in large foreign companies it’s accepted procedure for the owner always to write his name first. It’s like the artistic director of a theatre – who may not direct every production, but nevertheless determines the main themes. We espouse certain aesthetic principles. It’s unlikely, for instance, that something decorated with capitals will ever come out of this office.

You don’t do Classicism. To design the Neoclassical house in Levshinsky pereulok, you called on Il’ya Utkin. What else defines your aesthetics?


As Okuzhava said, ‘everyone writes as he breathes.’ I’m of the firm opinion that all architecture is a portrait not just of its author, but also of the age and the country in which it is created. A civilization should be reflected in architecture that matches its degree of progress. If the idea of appropriateness is extended to include position in time, then I sincerely think that Classical architecture is absolutely inappropriate when we have other technical capabilities, another language, and another mentality. There are, of course, specific tasks that make it necessary to use traditional techniques, but this is mainly for restoration work.

So for you Classicism is conservatism?

Yes. It goes without saying that the different types of architecture may be talented or the reverse, but still I think it strange to create Classical architecture in this day and age. It’s something I just cannot understand.

To return to principles, what was your motivation in leaving design institute in the 1980s to set up your own architectural office?

First, there is such a thing as honesty. It is impossible to sit for eight hours a day earning 150 rubles and then earn 800 during the evenings. It just doesn’t make sense. Clearly, your main working day will be less intense and you’ll begin using these less busy eight hours to do what you should be doing in the evening after work. This is one such principle. There was another interesting point, though. I had always been apolitical and even took pride in the fact that till the age of 27 I hadn’t even read the Komsomol charter. Then I was invited to join the Communist Party. I categorically refused until Yury Platonov, who had become a member of the Party’s Central Committee, talked me into it by arguing that as Communists we should reconstruct the country. I joined, but then, as soon as I realized I’d made a mistake, I quickly left of my own accord. You could say these were acts of the same order – to leave the Party and to resign from design institute. This was in the spring of 1988. At the time this was a serious matter: I was taken aside and asked how I’d dare return my Party membership card.

All for the sake of being honest?


Strictly speaking, yes. There are colleagues of mine of whom it’s said at planning-approval sessions, for instance, that their figures need to be checked. Whereas my figures never have to be checked. Reputation is the most valuable capital there is; this is our slogan to this day.

Is this a help or a hindrance?


A help. I think this was wise – to stake our money on reputation from the very beginning. This is our principle, you could say. Why was I awarded ‘Architect of the Year’? I really don’t know! I suppose that over the years we have earned ourselves a reputation which has led both the architectural authorities and clients to think highly of us. Judging by the number of commissions we have, our reputation is well-deserved. Now it works in our favour, and all we have to do is maintain it.


23 May 2008

Headlines now
A Roadside Picnic of Urban Planning Theorists
Marina Egorova, head of Empate Architectural Bureau, brought together urban planning theorists – the successors of Alexey Gutnov and Vyacheslav Glazychev – to revive the substance and depth of professional discourse. At the first meeting, much ground was covered: the participants revisited the theoretical foundations, aligned their values, examined a cutting-edge case of the Kazan agglomeration, and concluded with the unfathomable intricacies of Russian land demarcation. Below, we present key takeaways from all the presentations.
Perspective View
CNTR Architects has designed a business center for a new district in Yekaterinburg, aiming to reduce the need for commuting and make the residential environment more diverse. The architectural solutions are equally focused on creating spatial flexibility, comfortable working conditions, and a memorable image that could allow the building to become a spatial landmark of the district.
Malevich and Bathhouses, Nature and High-Tech
The Malevich Bathhouse complex is scheduled to open in the fall of 2025 on the Rublyovo-Uspenskoye Highway. The project, designed by DBA-GROUP under the leadership of Vladislav Andreev, is an example of an unconventional approach to the image of a spa in general and of a bathhouse in particular. Deliberately avoiding any kind of allusion, the architects opted for streamlined forms with characteristic rounded corners, a combination of wood with bent glass, and restrained contemporary shapes – both inside and out. Let’s take a closer look at the project.
Rather, a Tablecloth and a Glass!
After many years, the long-abandoned Horse Guards Department building in St. Petersburg has finally received the attention it deserves: according to a design by Studio 44, the first restoration and adaptation works are scheduled to begin this year. Both the intended function and the general scope of works imply minimal alteration to the complex, which has preserved traces of its three-century history. All solutions are reversible and aimed, above all, at opening the monument to the city and immersing it in a lively social scene – hence the choice of a cultural center scenario with a strong gastronomic component.
​Materialization of Airflows
The Nikolai Kamov International Airport in Tomsk opened at the end of August last year. We have already written about the project – now we are taking a look at the completed building. Its functionality is reinforced by symbolic undertones: the architects at ASADOV sought to reflect local identity in the architecture as fully as possible.
The City as a Narrative
Sergey Skuratov’s approach to large urban plots could best be described as a “total design code”. The architect pays equal attention to the overall composition and the smallest of details, striving to ensure that every aspect is thoroughly thought out and subordinated to the original vision. It’s a Renaissance-like approach, really – a titanic effort demanding remarkable willpower and perseverance. The results are likewise grand – architecture that makes a statement. This article looks at the revived concept for the central section of the Seventh Heaven residential district in Kazan, a composition so thoroughly considered that even the “gradient of visual emphasis” (sic!) across the facades has been carefully worked out. It also touches on the narrative idea behind the project – and even the architect’s own doubts about it.
A Garden of Hope for Freedom
In October, at the Spaso-Evfimiev Monastery in Suzdal, the Prison Yard Garden opened on the site that had served as a prison from the 18th century until the Khrushchev Thaw. The architectural concept was developed by NOῨD Short Film, and the landscape design by the MOX landscape bureau. In fact, there are two gardens here – very different ones. We try to understand whether they evoke the right emotions in visitors, while also showing the beauty of June’s ruderal plants in bloom.
A Laconic Image of Time
The Time Square residential complex, built on the northern edge of St. Petersburg, appears more concise and efficient than its neighbor and predecessor, the New Time complex. Nevertheless, the architect’s hand is clearly felt: themes of “black and white”, “inside and outside”, and most notably, the “lamellar” quality of the facades that seems to visibly “eat away” at the buildings’ mass – everything is played out like a well-written score. One is reminded of both classical modernism and the so-called “post-constructivism”.
The Flower of the Lake
The prototype for the building of the Kamal Theater in Kazan is an ice flower: a rare and fragile natural phenomenon of Lake Kaban “froze” in the large, soaring outlines of the glass screens enclosing the main volume, shaping its silhouette and shielding the stained-glass windows from the sun. The project, led by the Wowhaus consortium and including global architecture “star” Kengo Kuma, won the 2021/2022 competition and was realized close to the original concept in a short – very short – period of time. The theater opened in early 2025. It was Kengo Kuma who proposed the image of an ice flower and the contraposition of cold on the outside and warmth on the inside. Between 2022 and 2024, Wowhaus did everything possible to bring this vision to life, practically living on-site. Now we are taking a closer look at this landmark building and its captivating story.
Peaceful Integration on Mira Avenue
The MIRA residential complex (the word mir means “peace” in Russian), perched above the steep banks of the Yauza River and Mira Avenue, lives up to its name not only technically, but also visually and conceptually. Sleek, high-rise, and glass-clad, it responds both to Zholtovsky’s classicism and to the modernism of the nearby “House on Stilts”. Drawing on features from its neighbors, it reconciles them within a shared architectural language rooted in contemporary façade design. Let’s take a closer look at how this is done.
An Interior for a New Format of Education
The design of the new building for Tyumen State University (TyumSU) was initially developed before the pandemic but later revised to meet new educational requirements. The university has adopted a “2+2+2” system, which eliminates traditional divisions into groups and academic streams in favor of individualized study programs. These changes were implemented swiftly – right at the start of construction. Now that the building is complete, we are taking a closer look.
Penthouses and Kokoshniks
A new residential complex designed by ASADOV Architects for the Krasnaya Roza business district responds to its proximity to 17th-century landmarks – the chambers of the Hamovny Dvor and St. Nicholas Church – as well as to the need to preserve valuable façades of a historic rental house built in the Russian Revival style. The architects proposed a set of buildings of varying heights, whose façades reference ecclesiastical architecture. But we were also able to detect other associations.
Centipede Town
The new school campus designed by ATRIUM Architects, located on the shores of a protected lake in the Imeretian Lowland Ornithological Reserve, represents an important and ambitious undertaking for the team: this is not just a school, but a Presidential Lyceum for the comprehensive development of gifted children – 2,500 students from age 3 through high school. At the same time, it is also envisioned as a new civic hub for the entire Sirius territory. In this article, we unpack the structure and architecture of this “lyceum town”.
Warm Black and White
The second phase of “Quarter 31”, designed by KPLN and built in the Moscow suburb town of Pushkino, reveals a multifaceted character. At first glance, the complex appears to be defined by geometry and a monochrome palette. But a closer look reveals a number of “irregular” details: a gradient of glazing and flared window frames, a hierarchy of façades, volumetric brickwork, and even architectural references to natural phenomena. We explore all the rules – and exceptions – that we were able to discover here.
​Skylights and Staircase
Photos from March show the nearly completed headquarters of FSK Group on Shenogina Street. The building’s exterior is calm and minimalist; the interior is engaging and multi-layered. The conical skylights of the executive office, cast in raw concrete, and the sweeping spiral staircase leading to it, are particularly striking. In fact, there’s more than one spiral staircase here, and the first two floors effectively form a small shopping center. More below.
The Whale of Future Identity
Or is it a veil? Or a snow-covered plain? Vera Butko, Anton Nadtochy, and the architects of ATRIUM faced a complex and momentous task: to propose a design for the “Russia” National Center. It had to be contemporary, yet firmly rooted in cultural codes. Unique, and yet subtly reminiscent of many things at once. It must be said – the task found the right authors. Let’s explore in detail the image they envisioned.
Greater Altai: A Systemic Development Plan
The master plan for tourism development in Greater Altai encompasses three regions: Kuzbass, the Altai Republic, and Altai Krai. It is one of twelve projects developed as part of the large-scale state program bearing the simple name of “Tourism Development”. The project’s slogan reads: “Greater Altai – a place of strength, health, and spirit in the very heart of Siberia”. What are the proposed growth points, and how will the plan help increase the flow of both domestic and international tourists? Read on to find out.
The Colorful City
While working on a large-scale project in Moscow’s Kuntsevo district – one that has yet to be given a name – Kleinewelt Architekten proposed not only a diverse array of tower silhouettes in “Empire-style” hues and a thoughtful mix of building heights, creating a six-story “neo-urbanist” city with a block-based layout at ground level, but also rooted their design in historical and contextual reasoning. The project includes the reconstruction of several Stalin-era residential buildings that remain from the postwar town of Kuntsevo, as well as the reconstruction of a 1953 railway station that was demolished in 2017.
In Orbit of Moscow City
The Orbital business center is both simple and complex. Simple in its minimalist form and optimal office layout solution: a central core, a light-filled façade, plenty of glass; and from the unusual side – a technical floor cleverly placed at the building’s side ends. Complex – well, if only because it resembles a celestial body hovering on metallic legs near Magistralnaya Street. Why this specific shape, what it consists of, and what makes this “boutique” office building (purchased immediately after its completion) so unique – all of this and more is covered in our story.
The Altai Ornament
The architectural company Empate has developed the concept for an eco-settlement located on a remote site in Altai. The master plan, which resembles a traditional ornament or even a utopian city, forms a clear system of public and private spaces. The architects also designed six types of houses for the settlement, drawing inspiration from the region’s culture, folklore, and vernacular building practices.
Pro Forma
Photos have emerged of the newly completed whisky distillery in Chernyakhovsk, designed by TOTEMENT / PAPER – a continuation of their earlier work on the nearby Cognac Museum. From what is, in essence, a merely technical and utilitarian volume and space, the architects have created a fully-fledged theatre of impressions. Let’s take a closer look. We highly recommend a visit to what may look like a factory, but is in fact an experiment in theatricalizing the process of strong spirit production – and not only that, but also of “pure art”, capable of evolving anywhere.
The Arch and the Triangle
The new Stone Mnevniki business center by Kleinewelt Architekten – designed for the same client as their projects in Khodynka – bears certain similarities to those earlier developments, but not entirely. In Mnevniki, there are more angular elements, and the architects themselves describe the project as being built on contrast. Indeed, while the first phase contains subtle references to classical architecture – light touches like arches, both upright and inverted, evoking the spirit of the 1980s – the second phase draws more distantly on the modernism of the 1970s. What unites them is a boldly expressive public space design, a kaleidoscope of rays and triangles.
Health Factory
While working on a wellness and tourist complex on the banks of the Yenisei River, the architects at Vissarionov Studio set out to create healing spaces that would amplify the benefits of nature and medical treatments for both body and soul. The spatial solutions are designed to encourage interaction between the guests and the landscape, as well as each other.
The Blooming Mechanics of a Glass Forest
The Savvinskaya 27 apartment complex built by Level Group, currently nearing completion on an elongated riverfront site next to the Novodevichy Convent, boasts a form that’s daring even by modern Moscow standards. Visually, it resembles the collaborative creation of a glassblower and a sculptor: a kind of glass-and-concrete jungle, rhythmically structured yet growing energetically and vividly. Bringing such an idea to life was by no means an easy task. In this article, we discuss the concept by ODA and the methods used by APEX architects to implement it, along with a look at the building’s main units and detailing.
Grace and Unity
Villa “Grace”, designed by Roman Leonidov’s studio and built in the Moscow suburbs, strikes a balance between elegant minimalism and the expansive gestures of the Russian soul. The main house is conceived as a sequence of four self-contained volumes – each could exist independently, yet it chooses to be part of a whole. Unity is achieved through color and a system of shared spaces, while the rich plasticity of the forms – refined throughout the construction process – compensates for the near-total absence of decorative elements.
Daring Brilliance
In this article, we are exploring “New Vision”, the first school built in the past 25 years in Moscow’s Khamovniki. The building has three main features: it is designed in accordance with the universal principles of modern education, fostering learning through interaction and more; second, the façades combine structural molded glass and metallic glazed ceramics – expensive and technologically advanced materials. Third, this is the school of Garden Quarters, the latest addition to Moscow’s iconic Khamovniki district. Both a costly and, in its way, audacious acquisition, it carries a youthful boldness in its statement. Let’s explore how the school is designed and where the contrasts lie.
A Twist of the Core
A clever and concise sculptural solution – rotating each floor by N degrees – has created an ensemble of “dancing” towers: similar yet different, simple yet complex. The designers meticulously refined a single structural node and spent considerable effort on the column construction – after that, “everything else was easy”. The architects also rotated the core walls on each floor to maximize the efficiency of the office spaces.
The Sculpting of Spring Forest Matter
We’ve been observing this building for a couple of years now: seemingly simple, perhaps even unassuming, it fits in remarkably well with the micro-district context shaped by the Moscow MCD road junctions. This building sticks in the memory of everyone who drives along the highway, even occasionally. In our opinion, Sergey Nikeshkin, by blending popular architectural techniques and approaches of the 2010s, managed to turn a seemingly simple structure into a statement “on the theme of a house as such”. Let’s figure out how this happened.
Water and Wind Whet the Stone
The Arisha Terraces residential complex, designed by Asadov Architects, will be built in a district of Dubai dedicated to film and television production. To create shaded spaces and an intriguing silhouette, the architects opted for a funnel-shaped composition and nature-inspired forms of erosion and weathering. The roofs, podium, and underground spaces extend leisure opportunities within the boundaries of a man-made “oasis”.