По-русски

Aleksei Ilyin: “I approach every task with genuine interest”

Aleksei Ilyin has been working on major urban projects for more than 30 years. He has all the necessary skills for high-rise construction in Moscow – yet he believes it’s essential to maintain variety in the typologies and scales represented in his portfolio. He is passionate about drawing – but only from life, and also in the process of working on a project. We talk about the structure and optimal size of an office, about his past and current projects, large and small tasks, and about creative priorities.

03 December 2025
Interview
mainImg
Archi.ru:
Your architectural office was founded – if I’m not mistaken – relatively recently, around 2020, correct? And yet it’s already well known for competition entries and major projects. What are you working on right now? Do you specialize primarily in high-rise construction in Moscow?

zooming


Aleksei Ilyin:
We prefer not to limit ourselves to any kind of specialization – on the contrary, we take on fundamentally different tasks, projects of various scales and functions. I myself, for example, was deeply interested in working on my own house, which has been included in the recently published TATLIN book “The Architect’s House”.

A private residence
Copyright: Photograph: provided by Aleksey Ilin


That said, yes – we do follow current trends of the Moscow architectural market, and right now we are working on several high-rise projects. A few large complexes are currently under construction: the Voice Towers residential development, Nagatino iLand. At Amber City, eight floors of the first phase have already been poured in concrete.

  • zooming
    Amber City housing complex
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Amber City housing complex
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects


For one of the blocks in the Shagal residential complex, we proposed quite diverse façades responding to the proximity of the water. All this is now in the implementation phase. The office for Rail.a in Perevedenovsky Lane is almost complete. We also have five large projects that we are not yet allowed to reveal.

What is the tallest height mark among your current projects?

At the moment – 360 meters.

I remember you took part in Moscow’s “Renovation Façades” competition and won in one of the categories. Later, the same sculptural idea – towers with a rounded, cylindrical top – appeared in your Voice project. I’ve been wanting to ask: what’s actually located in that upper part?

Under this “vault” there is a spacious double-height volume that accommodates both a penthouse apartment with a terrace and a technical floor. In that project, we didn’t have the opportunity to experiment with a varied-height composition – height restrictions were still in force. That’s why the buildings are all the same height, but they differ in color and are placed at a right angle to each other; this allows the semi-cylindrical tops to “animate” more actively. In addition, each tower gains distinctive end façades.

  • zooming
    Voice Towers housing complex
    Copyright: © Highlight Architecture & Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Voice Towers housing complex
    Copyright: © Highlight Architecture & Aleksey Ilin Architects


What fundamentals guide you when working with high-density complexes of this kind today, when designing for Moscow?

The set of these principles is fairly well known. Naturally, we aim for multifunctional public spaces at the pedestrian level, as well as for creating comfortable environments both outside and inside. This includes modern architecture that is diverse – when viewed up close and from a distance – in form, texture, and silhouette. Today, density can be distributed vertically: we can vary building heights from mid-rise to maximum, working with volumes at different levels to form something like “layers” of urban perception – near, middle, and distant. This gives us considerable freedom of maneuver.

When you speak of modern architecture, what do you mean? Glass and metal?

Glass and metal – among other things; you can’t avoid them in large-scale contemporary construction. But not only, and not primarily. Today, every architect finds their own solutions within a broad spectrum of the contemporary “alphabet”. I like modern materials, fluid lines, work with volume, color, and large, dynamic forms – but I also consider details, modeling, and small nuances to be equally important, especially those details that are usually perceived at the pedestrian level.

For example, on the tiny plot surrounding the Rail.a office building, we proposed embedding “rails” into the paving – both metal ones and “light rails”, illuminated strips. Both of them respond to the proximity of the actual railway.

Tell us about this project. Is it almost finished?

Yes, construction is already at an advanced stage; the building is half clad, and I think it should be completed this year. We’re currently watching the finishing process closely.

On three sides, there is a standing-seam façade with a streamlined, shell-like form – like a hull or a seashell, in the spirit of streamline or aerostream design. And the fourth façade, the one facing the railway tracks, is designed as a kind of showcase turned toward the passing trains. I must say, it’s quite a striking sight; I myself wouldn’t mind working in such an office. Rail.a designs bridges and roads, so the transportation theme is relevant to them.

  • zooming
    Rail.A. Office Center on Perevedenovsky Lane
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Rail.A. Office Center on Perevedenovsky Lane
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects


Listening to you, I get the sense that you take the quality of project execution very seriously. Do you always manage to retain on-site supervision?

So far, yes – and it’s an important stage. It’s also very inexpensive; site supervision isn’t economically justified, of course, but for us it is extremely important.

What stages of project documentation does your office handle? Concept, P, working documentation?

We always work on Stage P – the project stage – it’s essential; without it nothing will work. For the working documentation stage, we invite trusted colleagues.

We have long-term partners, “Project 2018”. The company was founded not by an architect, so we have no creative friction or overlap. They have chief engineers, structural specialists, a large team of designers, and we have a good working rapport with them – together we can quickly find the right solution. It’s convenient for both sides in many respects. All our major projects are done jointly.

If we were to take on the working documentation ourselves, the company would automatically have to grow to a hundred people – and I wouldn’t want that.

How many employees do you have now?

Thirty to thirty-five. Our turnover is very low, and the team is young. We have students working for us as well. One girl just went to Milan to take her exams… We have a chief architect of the studio, Igor Simoroz, who oversees all projects. And we have several lead architects too.

You mentioned diversity. What other projects contribute to it?

Here’s a complex project – the Space Conquerors Park in the Saratov Region, which we designed together with the company “Krasny Kvadrat”. It is supposed to be built, but it’s a public contract, which means the process is complicated and slow. It’s a gigantic entertainment complex with numerous pavilions. We tried to avoid the garish “Disneyland” aesthetic and instead create striking, interesting things – for example, we used printing on metal.

  • zooming
    Gagarin Space Conquerors Park. *Vostok-1* Pavilion. Daytime view.
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Gagarin Space Conquerors Park. *Vostok-1* Pavilion. Daytime view.
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects


Or take the project that we did for Mineralnye Vody. It never went into development, but it did win a Silver Sign at last year’s Zodchestvo festival. We even made a special wooden model for the exhibition – so the recognition was unexpected and pleasant.

What makes this project different? The curved form?

Not only that. The buildings weave around the valuable trees on the site, and that’s what defines the shape. The ground level is entirely public – you could walk through everywhere and reach a viewing platform, and the panorama there is spectacular: the platform is on a slope, high above the ground. The core of the complex was a multifunctional concert hall. There isn’t such a hall in Kislovodsk yet, so when celebrities come, there’s nowhere for them to perform.

In addition, we proposed running pipes with mineral water into the complex – you know, specialists say that bottled mineral water has barely more benefit than plain water. So we included a “mineral-water conduit”. Unfortunately, the project isn’t progressing at the moment.

  • zooming
    Hotel complex with serviced apartments, a concert hall, and a spa, project, 2022
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Hotel complex with serviced apartments, a concert hall, and a spa, project, 2022
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects


Do you take part in competitions?

That’s a complicated topic. In general, I really like competitions. Back in our student years, Alexander Tsimailo and I admired Brodsky and Utkin and their etchings; we practiced hatching with a rapidograph ourselves and sent our drawings to Japanese competitions – though we didn’t win there. But we did win in Chicago and even got a monetary prize of $7,000. We immediately spent it on a trip to Europe, and saw a lot at the time: Barcelona, Paris, different places. Later on, we worked on our diploma project together – ten boards with dense hatching; Nikolay Lyashenko helped us back then. He had just returned from Germany, and together we made a model, the likes of which simply did not exist at that time, in 1996 – with trees, with people, little wires…

However, not all competitions make you happy. For example, we took part in a closed-door competition for the riverfront quarter in Tushino, from Asterus. We designed buildings of different formats – from townhouses to towers, stepped forms, terraces, large through-openings, and for “dessert”, a round building called the Colosseum. We worked very hard. But we didn’t even make it to the final. We later tried to find out why – they told us it came out too complicated.

  • zooming
    Competition for the coastal quarters of the ALIA district
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Competition for the coastal quarters of the ALIA district
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects


Or take the recent competition for the Fili transport hub. After speaking with the clients, we came away confident that they wanted a bold building directly above the road. So that’s what we designed – a frame-like structure, and if you drove along Bagration Avenue, from a certain angle Moscow City would appear framed inside it.

  • zooming
    Multifunctional complex of the Fili Transport Hub, competition proposal
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Multifunctional complex of the Fili Transport Hub, competition proposal
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects




Together with our structural-engineer partners, we calculated how realistic the proposal was, including the possibility of building over the roadway without closing it for a long period: it would be possible to stop traffic for two hours, bring in the truss, and lift it with a crane. We also came up with a “snail” – a ramp descending from the overpass. It was an interesting project, two centimeters thick in documentation. And most importantly – completely feasible. We didn’t win; it’s possible the boldness of the proposal played a role. We also took part in the Garage Screen competition in 2022.

  • zooming
    Garage Screen 2022 competition proposal
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Garage Screen 2022 competition project
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects



Still, as an author who has taken part in many competitions – could you share some life hacks?

I think there are three. The first one, and I understood this quite a while ago: if a beautiful idea comes to mind immediately, you need to forget it. Ninety percent of participants will think of the same thing. The second: the presentation has to be great. The jury looks through hundreds of projects, as you know yourself – that’s a lot. The presentation has to catch their attention first and foremost. The third rule is a strong idea. Of course you need one. But it comes third because if you have a good idea but can’t present it properly, it’s all pointless.

Do you teach?

Not anymore. I taught for a year and a half at MARCH – it gave me tremendous experience, but it was also a huge workload. I took the task very seriously… Even though we had only twelve people in the group, I think. Two of them worked at the office afterwards; then one moved to St. Petersburg, the other to Switzerland.

Teaching is a good thing. When you start explaining something that seems completely obvious to you, you end up articulating it clearly. That’s the main benefit. But teaching demands a lot of effort, engagement, and participation in all processes. Maybe I’ll return to it a bit later.

You’re known as an architect who draws. What do you draw, and how?

I always draw only from life. Drawing from a photograph doesn’t interest me.

So, like the Impressionists, of whom Degas said they were ready to perch over a cliff and paint, paying no attention to anything?

Well, I’m more like Marquet, you know – there’s that painting where he’s sitting on the beach in a suit, bow tie, hat, painting while it’s hot and children are running around. Although I don’t like it when there are a lot of people around – that gets in the way.

And your subjects? Do you draw architecture?

Not necessarily architecture – anything that can be drawn. Although I’d put it this way: I’m more interested in cities than, say, natural landscapes. But I can’t manage it in Moscow – in Moscow it’s all work, so I mostly draw while traveling. I went to visit my daughter in Amsterdam, she’s studying there – and painted a bit too. Now she’s going to London on an exchange – I’ll go as well. My older daughter is already a professional artist, she loves working in oils and has had several exhibitions. Now I’m teaching my younger daughter, she’s six.

Your technique is a black outline combined with watercolor?

I generally like mixed media. For the outlines I use a Chinese brush – it’s similar to a felt pen; there’s a small reservoir inside that you fill with ink. It can produce very fine or very thick lines. Then I use watercolor, and refine things on top with a soft colored pencil; I usually have several. I love grisaille.

Have you had exhibitions as an artist?

A few. I took part in Archigraphics, and once even won first prize there. Then there was an exhibition at my friend’s gallery at Red October – I showed a series of lighthouses. At some point I got fascinated by lighthouses; and I should say, getting to a lighthouse – and the most interesting ones are mostly in Denmark and Norway – is quite a logistical challenge. In Iceland it was almost impossible to paint, although I managed to do something there too.

  • zooming
    Grand-Place, Brussels. Paper, watercolor, black charcoal, pastel, Chinese brush. 2019
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin
  • zooming
    Lighthouse on Hiiumaa Island. Estonia, 2016.
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin


Your enlarged watercolors are placed on the end walls of the Filatov Lug residential complex. Do you often draw for buildings?

Never on purpose. In the case of Filatov Lug, something had to be done with that building – as you can see, it’s quite simple in shape. We decided to make murals. Using someone else’s works would have been complicated because of copyright issues, so we chose from my own. There are fragments of views of Amsterdam and Copenhagen; I should say Copenhagen is my absolute favorite city… Everything was drawn in AutoCAD. We found a way to print on porcelain tile – and I must say, the color reproduction came out fantastically well, I didn’t expect it to turn out that good.

  • zooming
    Filatov Lug housing complex
    Copyright: Photograph: provided by SPEECH
  • zooming
    Filatov Lug housing complex
    Copyright: Photograph: provided by SPEECH


Actually, I’m not sure things like that should be done on buildings, but that’s how it turned out…

Why aren’t you sure? There’s a long tradition of murals and monumental art – at least in modernism…

Yes, but first of all, it needs to be done intentionally. And here the situation simply called for enlivening the end walls of the buildings; I was surprised myself that it turned out pretty well.

Have you had any other similar experiences?

There was one interesting story, although it never materialized. We took part in the competition for the Ostrov Mechty metro station. First place went to TOTEMENT/PAPER, we came second. But then something went wrong, they called us in, and then they rejected our proposal too – because of the black color. The final version was done by Mosinzhproekt.

But that’s not what I mean. While working on the project, we studied the site, went to Ostrov Mechty. Many people have a justified skepticism toward the building, but as an amusement park it’s considered the best in Moscow. And there are these corridors, malls leading to the main hall – and they’re decorated as recognizable cities: Moscow, Paris… So in our project we created a reminiscence of that: we placed my drawings of Amsterdam and Antwerp on the station, creating a kind of “watercolor city”.

  • zooming
    Competition design concept for the Ostrov Mechty metro station.
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Competition design concept for the Ostrov Mechty metro station.
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin Architects


Yes, that was another experience.

But all of these are isolated cases – the result of circumstances. I don’t create sketches specifically for my buildings, nor do I aim to. In the design process, yes, I draw a lot. I draw projects down to the details; drawing is a way of thinking for me.

What about drawing for architectural presentation?

You know, a hand-drawn presentation today is a luxury. It takes effort and time. Just like a physical model. Everything has been replaced by videos and renderings. The client wants to see a photorealistic render. Sometimes, if we urgently need to produce a variant, I can sketch something based on a template – but that happens rarely; I can’t even remember the last time I did it.

How did you get started? I see several very well-known buildings in your portfolio. What did working in large firms teach you?

It taught me a lot, of course.

I started working around 1993, during my third year at the institute. Most architectural firms at that time focused mainly on private interiors and houses. There were only three private companies that actively participated in urban development: SKiP, “Reserve Union”, and “Group ABV” – the company of Pavel Andreev, Nikita Biryukov, and Alexey Vorontsov. They became, without exaggeration, my “fathers” in the architecture profession: teaching me, explaining how things work. Nikita Biryukov always supported and valued me. We spent all our time in the studio, drawing by hand, without computers – but it was precisely working at ABV that allowed me to immediately engage in urban design.

One of my early successes was working in the early 2000s on the Dukat office building, which was being built as a Heinz office by Americans for Americans – they were very active here at the time. The design-development stage was done by SOM. We worked on adaptation and even went to the U.S., together with the structural engineers. Back then, modern offices in Moscow were almost nonexistent, and we learned a lot.

  • zooming
    Dukat business center
    Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin
  • zooming
    Dukat busineess center
    Copyright: Photograph © Aleksey Ilin


Our generation, raised in the USSR, was highly motivated: faster, higher, stronger… Everyone strived for success. It was a kind of boom. Now things are somewhat calmer, I suppose. But constant progress and striving for new achievements seemed completely natural back then.

Later, I happened to have a German partner – Sergei Tchoban – and we opened the company called “Ilyin Tchoban”. Together with Sergei Kuznetsov, we designed the La Saluta sports and recreation complex in Taganka – which, by the way, was the first building in Moscow with curved volumetric ceramic façades.

  • zooming
    Sports and training center on Solzhenitsyn Street
    Copyright: © SPEECH
  • zooming
    Sports and training center on Solzhenitsyn Street
    Copyright: © SPEECH


Then you collaborated with SPEECH and started leading Studio No. 1?

Exactly. In part, I even helped set up the studio system there. My studio functioned as a separate unit; I collaborated with the company as a project partner.

You’ve worked on “Lotos”, “Novatek-2”, and the Kollektsiya Museum at ZILArt. Which of these projects is your favorite?

The Kollektsiya Museum, in my opinion, turned out well in implementation. Although, that’s no longer really my merit – it was my colleagues who worked on the construction documentation and brought the project to fruition. As for Novatek-2, I must say I was lucky: I was the first the client listened to, the first to present options. The one chosen was, in my view, the most interesting.

  • zooming
    New headquarters building of Novatek, SPEECH
    Copyright: Photograph © Dmitry Chebanenko /provided by SPEECH
  • zooming
    Museum “Collection” at ZILArt, SPEECH
    Copyright: Photograph © Aleksey Ilin / Aleksey Ilin Architects


I value both the experience of realized projects and the professional collaboration with Sergei Tchoban.

Why did you decide to start your own firm? And when did that happen?

Why? I think it’s because I turned that page for myself. I needed to move forward. It happened during the pandemic, around 2020. A strange time: everyone was staying home, my family was out of town, and in the evenings I read A Hero of Our Time to them. At the same time, the pandemic period turned out to be turbulent. A lot happened during that time. But even before that, I already had independent projects.

Such as?

For example, the 2018 project – the Aalto House. It was built by the Finnish company YIT, and they brought quality materials from Finland, good-thickness metal without warping.

  • zooming
    Aalto housing complex
    Copyright: Photograph © Dmitry Chebanenko /provided by Aleksey Ilin Architects
  • zooming
    Aalto housing complex
    Copyright: Photograph © Dmitry Chebanenko / provided by Aleksey Ilin Architects


Let’s go back to the very beginning of your career. You have two “aspects” – artist and architect. How did it all start? Family? Art school?

My family isn’t architectural; my parents are engineers. I was “shoved” into art school. I can’t say I liked it at first, or that I was particularly good initially. I gradually got into it. But the key was my teacher, Vitaly Vsevolodovich Vernikovsky – a fairly well-known artist. He had his own style, painting with wood shavings – and he was trained as an architect. His students taught preparatory classes for entering MARHI (Moscow Architectural Institute) right there at the school. I observed and decided it was a good specialty: it gives a certain creative vision while still retaining a connection to reality, a healthy “grounded” quality. I realized early on that I wanted to combine these things, but I also knew I wanted to be an architect, not just a designer.

How do you distinguish between the two?

I’d say designers look at things fairly utilitarian. I, on the other hand, approach everything with interest. I’m always curious to come up with something new – whether it’s a small façade detail or a huge urban complex.

So, from the eighth grade, I started preparing, went to courses, and enrolled myself. I had no connections, no favors. I passed – at the passing score, I think 8 or 9 for head and composition, but in drawing, although I liked it and could draw, I made two projection errors – got a 4. Barely passed, in other words. Then I saw that half of my classmates couldn’t really draw at all… So, I realized I was incredibly lucky to have even gotten in.

Did you ever regret your choice?

Not at all. It just so happened that I never really planned to be anything else. So far, my work brings me nothing but joy.
Amsterdam, 2016, Watercolor, 60×45
Copyright: © Aleksey Ilin


03 December 2025

Headlines now
Aleksei Ilyin: “I approach every task with genuine interest”
Aleksei Ilyin has been working on major urban projects for more than 30 years. He has all the necessary skills for high-rise construction in Moscow – yet he believes it’s essential to maintain variety in the typologies and scales represented in his portfolio. He is passionate about drawing – but only from life, and also in the process of working on a project. We talk about the structure and optimal size of an office, about his past and current projects, large and small tasks, and about creative priorities.
​A Golden Sunbeam
A compact brick-and-metal building in the growing Shukhov Park in Vyksa seems to absorb sunlight, transform it into yellow accents inside, and in the evening “give it back” as a warm golden glow streaming from its windows. It is, frankly, a very attractive building: both material and lightweight at the same time, with lightness inside and materiality outside. Its form is shaped by function – laconic, yet far from simple. Let’s take a closer look.
Architecton Awards
In 2025, the jury of the Architecton festival reviewed the finalist projects through live, open presentations held right in the exhibition hall – a rather engaging performance, and something rarely seen among Russian awards. It would be great if “Zodchestvo” adopted this format. Below, we present all the winning projects, including four special nominations.
Garden of Knowledge
UNK architects and UNK design created the interiors of the Letovo Junior campus, working together with NF Studio, which was responsible for developing the educational technology that takes into account the needs and perception of younger and middle school children.
The Silver Skates
The STONE Kaluzhskaya office quarter is accompanied by two residential towers, making the complex – for it is indeed a single ensemble – well balanced in functional terms. The architects at Kleinewelt gave the residential buildings a silvery finish to match the office blocks. How they are similar, how they differ, and what “Silver Skates” has to do with it – we explore in this article.
On the Dynastic Trail
The houses and townhouses of the “Tsarskaya Tropа” (“Czar’s Trail”) complex are being built in the village of Gaspra in Crimea – to the west and east of the palaces of the former grand-ducal residence “Ai-Todor”. One of the main challenges for the architects at KPLN, who developed the project, was to respond appropriately to this significant neighboring heritage. How this influenced the massing, the façades, and the way the authors work with the terrain is explored in our article.
A New Path
The main feature of the Yar Park project, designed by Sergey Skuratov for Kazan, is that it is organized along the “spine” of a multifunctional mall with an impressive multi-height atrium space in its middle. The entire site, both on the city side and the Kazanka River embankment, is open to the public. The complex is intended not to become “yet another fenced enclave” but, as urban planners say, a “polycenter” – a new point of attraction for the whole of Kazan, especially its northern part, made up of residential districts that until now have lacked such a vibrant public space. It represents a new urban planning approach to a high-density mixed-use development situated in the city center – in a sense, an “anti-quarter”. Even Moscow, one might say, doesn’t yet have anything quite like it. Well, lucky Kazan!
Beneath the Azure Sky
A depository designed by Studio 44 will soon be built in Kenozersky National Park to preserve and display the so-called “heavens” – ceiling structures characteristic of wooden churches in the Russian North, painted with biblical scenes. For each of these “heavens”, the architects created a volume corresponding in scale and dimensions to the original church interior. The result is a honeycomb-like composition, with modules derived directly from the historic monuments themselves, allowing visitors to view the icons from the historically accurate angle – from below, looking upward. How exactly this works is the subject of our story.
​The Power of Lines
The building at the very beginning of New Arbat is the result of long deliberations over how to replace the former House of Communication. Contemporary, dynamic, and even somewhat zoomorphic in character, it is structured around a large diagonal grid. The building has become a striking accent both in the perspective of the former Kalinin Avenue and in the panorama of Arbat Square. Yet, unfortunately, the original concept was not fully realized. In 2020, the Moscow ArchCouncil approved a design featuring an exoskeleton – an external load-bearing structure, which eventually turned into a purely decorative element. Still, the power of the supergraphic “holds” the building, giving it the qualities of a new urban landmark with iconic potential. How this concept took shape, what unexpected associations might underlie the grid’s form, and why the exoskeleton was never built – all this is explored in our article.
Resort on the Kama River
Wowhaus has developed a project for the reconstruction of Korabelnaya Roshcha (“Mast Grove”), a wellness resort located on the banks of the Kama River.
Nests in Primorye
The eco-park project “Nests”, designed by Aleksey Polishchuk and the company Power Technologies, received first prize at the Eco-Coast 2025 festival, organized by the Union of Architects of Russia. For a glamping site in Filinskaya Bay, the authors proposed bird-shaped houses, treehouses, and a nest-shaped observation platform, topping it all with an entrance pavilion executed in the shape of an owl.
The Angle of String Tension
The House of Music, designed by Vladimir Plotkin and the architects of TPO Reserve, resembles a harp, and when seen from above, even a bass clef. But if only it were that simple! The architecture of the complex fuses two distinct expressive languages: the lattice-like, transparent, permeable vocabulary of “classical” modernism and the sculptural, ribbon-like volumes so beloved by today’s neo-modernism. How it all works – where the catharsis lies, which compositional axes underpin the design, where the project resembles Zaryadye Concert Hall and where it does not – read in the article below.
How Historic Tobolsk Becomes a Portal to the Future
Over the past decade, the architectural company Wowhaus has developed urban strategies for several Russian cities – Vyksa, Tula, and Nizhnekamsk, to name but a few. Against this backdrop, the Tobolsk master plan stands out both for its scale – the territory under transformation covers more than 220 square kilometers – and for its complexity.
St. Petersburg vs Rome
The center of St. Petersburg is, as we know, sacred – but few people can say with certainty where this “sacred place” actually begins and ends. It’s not about the formal boundaries, “from the Obvodny Canal to the Bolshaya Nevka”, but about the vibe that feels true to the city center. With the Nevskaya Ratusha complex – built to a design that won an international competition – Evgeny Gerasimov and Sergei Tchoban created an “image of the center” within its territory. And not so much the image of St. Petersburg itself, as that of a global metropolis. This is something new, something that hasn’t appeared in the city for a long time. In this article, we study the atmosphere, recall precedents, and even reflect on who and when first called St. Petersburg the “new Rome”. Clearly, the idea is alive for a reason.
On the Wave
The project of transforming the river port and embankment in the city of Cheboksary, developed by the ATRIUM Architects, involves one of the city’s key areas. The Volga embankment is to be turned into a riverside boulevard – a multifunctional, comfortable, and expressive space for work and leisure activities. The authors propose creating a new link with the city’s main Krasnaya (“Red”) Square, as well as erecting several residential towers inspired by the shape of the traditional national women’s headdress – these towers are likely to become striking accents on the Volga panorama.
Valery Kanyashin: “We Were Given a Free Hand”
The Headliner residential complex, the main part of which was recently completed just across from Moscow City, is a kind of neighbor to the MIBC that doesn’t “play along” with it. On the contrary, the new complex is entirely built on contrast: like a city of differently scaled buildings that seems to have emerged naturally over the past 20 years – which is a hugely popular trend nowadays! And yet here – perhaps only here – such a project has been realized to its full potential. Yes, high-rises dominate, but all these slender, delicate profiles, all these exciting perspectives! And most importantly – how everything is mixed and composed together... We spoke with the project’s leader Valery Kanyashin.
​The Keystone
Until quite recently, premium residential and office complexes in Moscow were seen as the exclusive privilege of the city center. Today the situation is changing: high-quality architecture is moving beyond the confines of the Third Ring Road and appearing on the outskirts. The STONE Kaluzhskaya business center is one such example. Projects like this help decentralize the megalopolis, making life and work prestigious in any part of the city.
Perpetuum Mobile
The interior of the headquarters of Natsproektstroy, created by the IND studio team, vividly and effectively reflects the client’s field of activity – it is one of Russia’s largest infrastructure companies, responsible for logistics and transport communications of every kind you can possibly think of.
Water and Light
Church art is full of symbolism, and part of it is truly canonical, while another part is shaped by tradition and is perceived by some as obligatory. Because of this kind of “false conservatism”, contemporary church architecture develops slowly compared to other genres, and rarely looks contemporary. Nevertheless, there are enthusiasts in this field out there: the cemetery church of Archangel Michael in Apatity, designed by Dmitry Ostroumov and Prokhram bureau, combines tradition and experiment. This is not an experiment for its own sake, however – rather, the considered work of a contemporary architect with the symbolism of space, volume, and, above all, light.
Champions’ Cup
At first glance, the Bell skyscraper on 1st Yamskogo Polya Street, 12, appears strict and laconic – though by no means modest. Its economical stereometry is built on a form close to an oval, one of UNK architects’ favorite themes. The streamlined surface of the main volume, clad in metal louvers, is sliced twice with glass incisions that graphically reveal the essence of the original shape: both its simplicity and its complexity. At the same time, dozens of highly complex engineering puzzles have been solved here.
Semi-Digital Environment
In the town of Innopolis, a satellite of Kazan, the first 4-star hotel designed by MAD Architects has opened. The interiors of the hotel combine elegance with irony, and technology with comfort, evoking the atmosphere of a computer game or maybe a sci-fi movie about the near future.
History never ends
The old railway station in Kapan, a city in southern Armenia, has been given new life by the Paris-based design firm Normal Studio. Today, it serves as a TUMO center.
A Deep, Crystal Shine
A new luxury residential development by ADM architects is set to rise in the Patriarch’s Ponds district, not far from Novopushkinsky Square. It will replace three buildings erected in the early 1990s. The project authors, Andrey Romanov and Ekaterina Kuznetsova, have placed their bets on the variety among the three volumes, modern design solutions, and attention to detail: one of the buildings will feature smoothly curved balconies with a ceramic sheen on their undersides, while another will be accented by glass “sculpture” columns.
Grigory Revzin: “What we should do with the architecture of the seventies”
Soviet modernism came in two flavors: the good, author-driven kind, and the bad, standardized kind. The good kind was “on the periphery”, while the bad kind was in the center – geographically, in terms of attention, scale, and everything else. Can we demolish it? “That would be destroying public consensus out of thin air”. So what should we do? Preserve it, but creatively: “Bring architecture into places where it hasn’t yet appeared”. Treat these buildings not as monuments, but as urban landscape. Read our interview with Grigory Revzin on the pressing topic of saving modernism – where he proposes a controversial, yet really intriguing, way of preserving 1970s buildings.
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.