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Coming From the Cold

The ArchBukhta Festival remains one of the few events in Russia where participants go through the entire process of creating an architectural object – from concept to construction. And they do so on the shores of Lake Baikal, in dedication to it. This year, GAFA took part and shared its experience: a local legend, a team-specific design code, friendship, as well as ice skating and endurance in freezing temperatures all contributed to gaining something more than just an award.

03 April 2026
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The festival has been held on the shores of Lake Baikal since 2007, yet it remains little known among architects from the “European” part of Russia. This year’s participants included teams from Irkutsk, Novosibirsk, Tomsk, Ufa, and Samara – a real treasure trove of new names for something like NEXT! Reading through the list, one cannot help but think: despite the many projects that pass through our editorial office, a vast layer still remains uncovered. It is as if letters from beyond the Ural Mountains never quite reach Moscow and St. Petersburg, leaving the architectural landscape of Russia’s “Asian” cities largely uncharted.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


A similar exploratory impulse likely drove GAFA to apply for the festival. The team would have to test itself “in the field”, without the comfort of a metropolitan office or software. The company delegated a group of seven – like a true expedition, where each member plays an essential role:
  • Natalia Eliseeva – team captain;
  • Vyacheslav Samsonov – head of technical implementation;
  • Yaroslav Kim – construction expert;
  • Renat Mukhametov – co-author of the concept, project architect;
  • Anna Stepanova – co-author of the concept, project architect;
  • Maria Klyueva – co-author of the concept, project architect;
  • Nikita Manyaev – lead cameraman
Such an experience is extremely rare in professional practice: instead of office work, site visits, and architectural supervision, here our heroes were confronted with frost, wind, limited time, and the need to work with one’s hands, all set against endlessly inspiring natural beauty of these parts.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


The theme of this year was “Recursion” – a term implying repetition, retrospection, and self-similarity. We have already covered the prize winners; in this article, we would like to take a closer look at the experience of a particular firm, offering insight into the festival as a whole and how it operates.

  • zooming
    ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
    Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA
  • zooming
    ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
    Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


GAFA’s installation, titled “Self-Generation of Baikal”, brings together three layers: the history of the place, the geometry of natural forces, and the inner life of the lake.

Seven vertical columns refer to the legend of the Island of Seven Poplars, which the team discovered while researching the village of Bolshoye Goloustnoye, where the festival took place this year. According to the story, the Buryat clan Ulaasa once lived here, and for each elder who reached the age of a hundred years old, a poplar tree was planted on a nearby island. The form is subdivided according to the principles of recursion into large and smaller triangles, creating a crystalline grid and alluding to the way that the wind, water, and ice shape space.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


Suspended from the beams are chains of mirrored “bubbles” of varying diameters – a visualization of the lake’s “breathing”. You have likely seen photographs of this natural phenomenon: gas rises from the bottom of Lake Baikal and freezes, recursively generating itself. The reflective surfaces turn a person passing through the structure from a mere observer into a co-author of this cycle.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


Preparation for construction on site began back in Moscow. The structure was engineered with sub-zero temperatures and strong winds in mind. Circular elements were fabricated in advance – made of mirrored acrylic with a layer of foamed PVC – and then shipped to Irkutsk.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


On site, the team worked in full construction mode for four days: recalculating on the go to adapt to changing conditions, assembling the frame in strong winds and temperatures of -20 degrees centigrade, and, when working outdoors became impossible, preparing connections indoors. Crucial support came from the team’s friends in Irkutsk, who actively participated in the construction, shared their knowledge of the place, and effectively became part of the team. Their involvement further rooted the object in its context.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA




During the day, the structure responded to sunlight: mirrored discs refracted the light, scattering reflections across the ice. In the evening, the lighting – also installed by the authors themselves – came on. The mirrored surfaces began to shimmer, and the object transformed into a giant disco ball. On the morning of the final day, the installation was covered with a delicate pattern of frost – a dialogue with nature that turned out to be both unexpected and striking.

Every day we found time to go out onto the ice – without tools, without tasks, simply to be alone with Lake Baikal. We went skating – the feeling is impossible to forget: the transparent mass beneath your feet, bubbles sinking into the depth, and the wind that either knocks you off balance or suddenly dies down, leaving you in complete silence. We watched the sunrises and saw off the sunsets. At night, we went out to look at the stars reflected in the ice. The expedition turned into an opportunity to be with nature on the level of a dialogue – not through concepts, but through physical presence.

Participants return here year after year, some for decades. Immersion in this environment, so far removed from the habitual office practice, proved to be a valuable experience in itself, regardless of the outcome. A dialogue with the place took place. The object happened.


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


It should also be noted that building a conceived object is not the only distinctive feature of the festival. It has three additional traditions that help crystallize the design idea. First, teams prepare a video introduction: in the process of creating it, they come to understand something about themselves, and at the festival it serves as a way to introduce and remember one another.

The second tradition is to develop a team identity. This partly creates a sense of carnival and celebration, but it also serves a practical purpose: across open landscapes, crowds, or construction sites, it makes it easier to find one another. GAFA created comfortable cloaks that could be worn over any clothing, decorated with a print echoing the graphic language of mirrored facets and bubbles.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


Finally, the third tradition is the presentation of the built object. Each team is given five minutes to stage a performance, a theatrical act, or simply present a straightforward explanation. GAFA spoke about their design approach and their work with landscape: a dialogue with nature, treating it as the main co-author, with a respectful and attentive attitude toward place and its traditions. The guiding principle was to listen to what is already there – wind, light, topography, history, and local myths all became part of the architectural statement.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


GAFA also produced a kind of post-production – a short film documenting those days on Lake Baikal. It captures what cannot be conveyed through photographs: the sense of endless ice, silence, light, moments of exhaustion and joy.



The GAFA installation was awarded second place by the jury. The project was implemented with the support of the company “ARCHITILE”. The installation remains on the site of the festival and now serves as an ornament of the territory of the “Azatay” park hotel.

ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA
ArchBukhta 2026. Recursion
Copyright: Photograph © Natalia Eliseeva, Nikita Manyaev / courtesy of GAFA


03 April 2026

Headlines now
Microdynamics of Macroprocesses
Given the proximity of the multifunctional complex SOLOS to Sokolniki Park and to a major transport hub, Kleinewelt Architekten embedded in the design of the two high-rise towers a sense of dynamism more characteristic of natural phenomena than of man-made objects. Without the authors’ diagrams, this logic is not easy to decipher, although the eye immediately detects a pattern and tries to grasp it. It seems to us that one tower contains the impulse of a bud about to open, while the other evokes the movement of a lithospheric plate. Let us try to unravel it together.
The Value of Open Space
For the site near the Barrikadnaya Metro Station, Sergey Skuratov developed five projects between 2020 and 2025. Two of them were ones that won the client’s invitation-only competitions. The fifth was recently selected by the Mayor of Moscow for implementation. The project is vivid and sculptural, expressive, eye-catching, and engaging – very much in line with the spirit of our time. And yet, this project is mid-rise rather than tall. In its northwestern part, near the metro and Druzhinnikovskaya Street, it shapes a comfortable urban environment. On the opposite side, it opens up, allowing sunlight into the courtyard and creating a spatial pause within the dense city fabric. How it is organized, what geometric principles underlie it, and why it takes this form – all this is explored in our article.
Coming From the Cold
The ArchBukhta Festival remains one of the few events in Russia where participants go through the entire process of creating an architectural object – from concept to construction. And they do so on the shores of Lake Baikal, in dedication to it. This year, GAFA took part and shared its experience: a local legend, a team-specific design code, friendship, as well as ice skating and endurance in freezing temperatures all contributed to gaining something more than just an award.
Wave and Vertical
The premium residential complex designed by GAFA for a site in the Khoroshevsky District responds to multiple constraints – the arc of a planned roadway, the water protection zone of the Khodynka River, and insolation requirements – through inventive massing. The composition is built on the interplay of two spatial layers: an elongated perimeter block and three towers concealed behind it generate the silhouette and key viewpoints, while also adding semantic depth reinforced by the façade solutions. Another defining feature is a large private courtyard, complemented by a citywide linear park.
Office on Trubnaya
We continue publishing projects by Valery Kanyashin. A building once described, a quarter century ago, as an example of “quiet modernism” has remained just that in some people’s memory. According to Anatoly Belov, its main quality is its unobtrusiveness. The architects from Ostozhenka say the leading role here is played by context and landscape – the change in elevation. Yet is it really so inconspicuous?
The First International
With this publication, we begin a series of texts dedicated to works by the late Valery Kanyashin, one of the founders of Ostozhenka Architects. As it happens, the projects he was involved in largely illustrate our understanding of the firm and its history. The first project in this series is the International Moscow Bank on Prechistenskaya Embankment.
In Memory of Valery Kanyashin
On Friday, February 27, architect Valery Kanyashin passed away – co-founder of Ostozhenka Architects and the author of many significant buildings in Moscow. We publish a text by Anatoly Belov in memory of Valery Kanyashin.
Hypertext in Space
As part of the exhibition “What We Have We (Do Not) Keep”, Sergey Tchoban, the Museum of Architecture, and the CHART studio experiment with an eco-conscious approach to exhibition design, with thematic cross-references and even with publicistic reflections on the necessity of preserving modernism, the roots of contemporary architecture, and the birth of ideas. All of this makes the exhibition, with its light and transparent design, look quite innovative. The elements – both “material” and conceptual – are familiar, yet their combination is far from conventional.
The Outline of “Foundation”
In their competition proposal for the Fili transport hub, the consortium led by Alexey Ilyin proposed an “inhabited arch” – a form that is simple yet complex. The architects emphasize that even at the competition stage, the project’s feasibility was fully calculated, taking into account the minimal nighttime closures of Bagration Avenue. How was this achieved? With what functions? Let us take a closer look. In our view, the building would have suited the heroes of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation novels perfectly.
The Flying Horizontal
“A house in the spirit of Wright”, as architect Roman Leonidov describes it, pointing to his source of inspiration, was built on a challenging wedge-shaped site. To achieve a sense of intimacy and secure good views from the windows, the entire volume had to be shifted toward the far boundary, turning the house “back” to the neighboring mansions. The main façade demonstrates time-tested techniques often employed by the company: articulated horizontals, a weightless roofline, and a triad of materials – light plaster, dark slate, and warm wood.
Needles of Horizon Contemplation
The “House of Horizons”, designed by Kleinewelt Architekten in Krylatskoye, is carefully thought out at the stereometric level – from the logic of how the volumes interlock (and, conversely, how gaps are articulated between them) to the triangular balconies that give the building its striking, slightly bristling silhouette.
The Red Thread
A linear park project prepared by Alexey Ilyin studio for the improvement of a riverbank in one of the residential districts seeks to reconnect people with nature. Two levels of the embankment invite visitors to contemplate the landscape while at the same time protecting the riverbank from excessive human impact. The “aerial street” links functional zones and the opposite banks, creating new points of attraction along the way: balconies, bridges, and even a “grotto”.
Spindle and Thread
The concept of the Waver residential complex in Yekaterinburg draws inspiration from the past of the Parkovy district. In order to preserve the memory of the late-19th-century flax spinning mill once located here, the architectural company KPLN turns to the theme of textiles and weaving. The project’s main expressive device is a system of ribbons made of perforated weathering steel – a material that, in such volumes, has arguably not yet been used in Russian residential projects.
From Ski Resorts to Year-Round Recreation Clusters
In mid-December, several architectural firms gathered to discuss a “seasonal” topic: the prospects for the development of domestic ski tourism. Where is modern infrastructure already in place, where do only remnants of the Soviet legacy remain, and where is there still nothing – but projects are underway and soon to be completed? This article explores these questions.
Woven Into Sokolniki
Over the past few years, high-rise residential construction in former industrial zones has become the main theme of Moscow architecture. Towers are springing up here and there – but the question is what kind of towers they are. The residential complex CODE Sokolniki, designed by Ostozhenka Architects, is a project where every detail has been taken care of. The authors are attentive to the history of the site, the continuity of the urban fabric, the skyline, and visual corridors. They also proposed a motif with the lyrical name “scarf”. We take a closer look at the volumetric composition and the large-scale décor “woven”, in this case, out of terraces and balconies.
Stepan Liphart and Yuri Gerth: “Our Program Is Aesthetic”
The studio of Stepan Liphart, an architect known for his distinctive signature style and one-off projects, now has a partner. Yuri Khitrov, a specialist with a broad range of competencies, will take on the part of the work that distracts one from creativity but drives the business forward. One of the aims of this partnership is to improve the urban environment through dialogue with clients and officials. We spoke with both sides about their ambitions, the firm’s development strategy, shared values, and the need for pragmatism. And why the studio is called “Liphart & Gerth” only became clear at the very end of the interview.
The Copper Mirror
The varied-toned sheen of “unsealed” copper, painterly streaks and fingerprints, exposed concrete, and the unusual proportions – when you study the ZILART Museum building by Sergei Tchoban and SPEECH architects, there is plenty to talk about. However, it seems to us that the most interesting thing is how the museum’s composition responds to the realities of the district itself. The residential district has been realized as an open-air exhibition of façade statements by contemporary architects – but without public access to the inner courtyards of the blocks. This building – that is, the museum – is exactly the opposite: on the outside, it is deliberately restrained, while inside it shines spectacularly, creating its own sunbeams in any weather.
“Strangers” in the City
We asked Alexander Skokan for a comment on the results of 2025 – and he sent us a whole article, moreover one devoted to the discussion we recently began on the “appropriateness of high-rises” – or, more broadly speaking, “contrasting insertions into the urban fabric”. The result is a text that is essentially a question: why here? Why like this?
Dmitry Ostroumov: “To use the language of alchemy, we are involved in the process of “transmutation...
What we ended up having was an extremely unusual conversation with Dmitry Ostroumov. Why? At the very least, because he is not just an architect specializing in the construction of Orthodox churches. And not just – which is an extreme rarity – a proponent of developing contemporary stylistics within this still highly conservative field. Dmitry Ostroumov is a Master of Theology. So in addition to the history and specifics of the company, we speak about the very concept of the temple, about canon and tradition, about the living and the eternal, and even about the Russian Logos.
A Glazed Figurine
In searching for an image for a residential building near the Novodevichy Convent, GAFA architects turned to their own perception of the place: it evoked associations with antiquity, plein-air painting, and vintage artifacts. The two towers will be entirely clad in volumetric glazed ceramic – at present, there are no other buildings like this in Russia. The complex will also stand out thanks to its metabolic bay-window cells, streamlined surfaces, a ceremonial “hotel-style” driveway, and a lobby overlooking a lush garden.
A Knight’s Move via the Cour d’Honneur
Intercolumnium Architects presented to the City Planning Council a residential complex project that is set to replace the Aquatoria business center on Vyborgskaya Embankment. Experts praised the overall quality of the work, but expressed reservations about the three cour d’honneurs and suggested softening the contrast between the facades facing the embankment and the Kantemirovsky Bridge.
Mountains, Groves, and Ancestral Towers
The year-round mountain resort Armkhi situated in Russia’s Republic of Ingushetia is positioned as a destination for calm family recreation and has well-established traditions shaped by its hundred-year history and the culture of the region. The development program prepared by the Genplan Institute of Moscow preserves the resort’s identity while expanding its offerings and introducing new types of tourist leisure. In the near future, the resort will feature a balneological center, a thermal complex, an interactive museum, an extreme park, and, of course, new ski slopes.
A Small Country
Mezonproekt is developing a long-term master plan for the MEPhI campus in Obninsk. Over the next ten years, an enclave territory of about 100 hectares, located in a forest on the northern edge of the city, is set to transform into a modern center for the development of the nuclear energy sector. The plan envisions attracting international students and specialists, as well as comprehensive territorial development: both through the contemporary realization of “frozen” plans from the 1980s and through the introduction of new trends – public spaces, an aquapark, a food court, a school, and even a nuclear medicine center. Public and sports facilities are intended to be accessible to city residents as well, and the campus is to be physically and functionally connected to Obninsk.
Pearl Divers
GAFA has designed an apartment complex for Derbent intended to switch people from a work mode to a resort mindset – and to give the surrounding area a much-needed jolt. The building offers two distinct faces: restrained and laconic on the city side, and a lushly ornate façade facing the sea. At the heart of the complex, a hidden pearl lies – an open-air pool with an arch, offering views of a starry sky, and providing direct access to the beach.
A Satellite Island
The Genplan Institute of Moscow has prepared a master plan for the development of the Sarpinsky and Golodny island system, located within the administrative boundaries of Volgograd and considered among the largest river islands in Russia. By 2045, the plan envisions the implementation of 15 large-scale investment projects, including sports and educational clusters, a congress center with a “Volgonarium”, a film production cluster, and twenty-one theme parks. We explain which engineering, environmental, and transportation challenges must be addressed to turn this vision into reality. The master plan solutions have already been approved and incorporated into the city’s general development plan.
The Amber Gate
The Amber City residential complex is one of the redevelopment projects in the former industrial area located beyond Moscow’s Third Ring Road near Begovaya metro station. Alexey Ilyin’s studio proposed an original master plan that transformed two clusters of towers into ceremonial propylaea, gave the complex a recognizable silhouette, and established visual connections with new high-rise developments on both right and left – thus integrating it into the scale of the growing metropolis. It is also marked by its own futuristic stylistic language, based on a reinterpreted streamline aesthetic.
A Theater Triangle
The architectural company “Chetvertoe Izmerenie” (“Fourth Dimension”) has developed the design for a new stage of the Magnitogorsk Musical Theater, rethinking not only theater architecture but also the role of the theater in the contemporary city.
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.