Sergey Nikeshkin

Sergey Nikeshkin:

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A Laconic Image of Time
17.07.2025

Angelina Utter. 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”.
Warm Black and White
05.06.2025

Alyona Kuznetsova. 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.
The Sculpting of Spring Forest Matter
19.03.2025

Julia Tarabarina. 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.
The “Snake” Mountain
29.02.2024

Alyona Kuznetsova. The “Snake” Mountain

The competition project for the seaside resort complex “Serpentine” combines several typologies: apartments of different classes, villas, and hotel rooms. For each of these typologies, the KPLN architects employ one of the images that are drawn from the natural environment – a serpentine road, a mountain stream, and rolling waves.
A High-Rise Erector Set
04.08.2022

Julia Tarabarina, Tatiana Shovskaya. A High-Rise Erector Set

In this article, we are examining one of the projects submitted for a closed-door competition for a housing complex to be built in the north of Moscow. The KPLN architects proposed a simple volumetric pair of 100 meter high towers, united by a common sculptural design based on laconic contrast, yet dramatic at the same time. Another interesting thing is an oval yard that is “carved out” in the stylobate roof.
The Leisure Culture
27.07.2022

Alyona Kuznetsova. The Leisure Culture

In the new extra building of the Klyazma resort center, whose project was developed by KPLN, the aesthetics of Soviet modernist architecture is combined with modern ideas of how leisure activities should be organized.
​The Wavelength
13.01.2022

Julia Tarabarina. ​The Wavelength

Built in the town of Pushkino in the Moscow area, the “Turgeneva 13” housing complex, while fitting in with the surrounding context, differs from it with the rhythmic austerity of its dual composition, a slight wave of the façade, and the color design, in which one can see two images, winter and summer, both “growing” from the specifics of the place.
This Beetle Has Flown
30.04.2021

Julia Tarabarina. This Beetle Has Flown

The story of designing a business center in the Zhukov (“Beetle”) Drive: a number of attempts to preserve a hundred-year-old cold storage facility, at the same time introducing modern buildings interpreting the industrial theme. The project remained on paper, but the story behind it seems to be worth our attention.
​Towers in a Forest
27.11.2020

Natalia Koriakovskaia. ​Towers in a Forest

The authors of the housing complex “In the Heart of Pushkino” were faced with a difficult task: to preserve the already existing urban forest, at the same time building on it a compound of rather high density. This is how three towers at the edge of the forest appeared with highly developed public spaces in their podiums and graceful “tucks” in the crowning part of the 18-story volumes.
​The Aperture Effect
04.08.2020

Natalia Koriakovskaia. ​The Aperture Effect

For a housing complex built in the town of Pushkino in the Moscow metropolitan area, KPLN Architects designed facades that adjust the stream of light by using the wall geometry.
Earlier

Partner Architects of Archi.ru:

  • Sergey Kouznetsov
  • Andrey Romanov
  • Georgy Trofimov
  • Polina Voevodina
  • Andrey Gnezdilov
  • Ilia Mashkov
  • Rais Baishev
  • Natalia Shilova
  • Nikita Yavein
  • Andy Snow
  • Vladimir Plotkin
  • Alexander Asadov
  • Roman Leonidov
  • Natalia Sidorova
  • Vsevolod Medvedev
  • Julia  Tryaskina
  • Yuliy Borisov
  • Sergey Skuratov
  • Anton Nadtochiy
  •  Valery  Lukomsky
  • Vera Butko
  • Alexsey Ginzburg
  • Mikhail Kanunnikov
  • Dmitry Likin
  • Pavel Andreev
  • Alexandr Samarin
  • Rostislav Zaiser
  • Vassily Krapivin
  • Alexandra Kuzmina
  • Nikolay Pereslegin
  • Zurab Bassaria
  • Konstantin Khodnev
  • Daniel  Lorenz
  • Ekaterina Kuznetsova
  • Andrey Asadov
  • Stanislav Belykh
  • Oleg Shapiro
  • Tatiana Zulkharneeva
  • Igor  Shvartsman
  • Oleg Medinsky
  • Alexander Skokan
  • Sergey Pereslegin
  • Sergey  Trukhanov
  • Sergei Tchoban

Buildings and Projects: New Additions

  • Naberezhnaya Evropy, St. Petersburg
  • Pavilion for Chacha Ceremonies
  • “Replacement” Project
  • Residential complex
  • “Olympic Hall”Business Center
  • Residential complex
  • Residential complex ′Andersen′
  • Sports and residential complex “Olympic village Novogorsk”
  • The checkpoint and operation service building of “Novogorsk Olympic Village”