Sergey Pereslegin
information:
-
country
Russia -
Firm’s Official Site
http://www.kleinewelt.ru/
Sergey Pereslegin graduated from Moscow Institute of Architecture; he studied under the guidance of the professors Kudryashov and Michael Eichner.
After graduation, he did a course in the Technische Universität München under the supervision of Peter Ebner.
Graduated from the post-graduate courses in the Research and Development Institute of Architecture and Urban Planning of Russian Academy of Architecture and Construction Sciences.
Sergey worked in the Austrian/German architectural company “E+E architecture+urban design” and in the Swiss company “Arch4”.
Since 2013, Sergey has been the partner of Kleinewelt Architekten. Sergey Pereslegin is the author of many built and in-construction projects, including the Winery House in Gai-Kodzor (Armenia), the Movie Theater in the Gorky Park, reconstruction of the former “communal kitchen” on the Novokuznetskaya Street in Moscow, Mercedes and Audi dealerships on the ZIL peninsula in Moscow, “Park of the Future” at Moscow’s VDNKh, and others.
Sergey Pereslegin holds classes at Moscow Institute of Architecture at the Department of Residential and Public Architecture.
After graduation, he did a course in the Technische Universität München under the supervision of Peter Ebner.
Graduated from the post-graduate courses in the Research and Development Institute of Architecture and Urban Planning of Russian Academy of Architecture and Construction Sciences.
Sergey worked in the Austrian/German architectural company “E+E architecture+urban design” and in the Swiss company “Arch4”.
Since 2013, Sergey has been the partner of Kleinewelt Architekten. Sergey Pereslegin is the author of many built and in-construction projects, including the Winery House in Gai-Kodzor (Armenia), the Movie Theater in the Gorky Park, reconstruction of the former “communal kitchen” on the Novokuznetskaya Street in Moscow, Mercedes and Audi dealerships on the ZIL peninsula in Moscow, “Park of the Future” at Moscow’s VDNKh, and others.
Sergey Pereslegin holds classes at Moscow Institute of Architecture at the Department of Residential and Public Architecture.
Archi.ru Texts:
19.02.2026
Julia Tarabarina. 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.10.02.2026
Alyona Kuznetsova. The Keystone of Khodynka
Kleinewelt Architekten has designed yet another office center for the last remaining plot on the former runway of Khodynka Airfield – a project that will complete the ensemble of the Stone business cluster on this site. The fourth phase includes a 250-meter landmark tower, a 16-story building, and a podium with a cascade of public spaces. The architects continue to develop their theme of contrasts, adding to the spatial pair “horizontal-vertical” a new opposition of warmth and cold, fragility and strength, calm and momentum.23.10.2025
Julia Tarabarina. 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.05.09.2025
. 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.03.07.2025
. 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.see All Archi.ru Texts / Sergey Pereslegin
