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​Moscow Architectural Institute: 10 School Building Projects

A school for children with disabilities, a juvenile correctional facility, an orphanage… the students of Moscow Architectural Institute are creating a new image of modern education.

05 June 2019
Overview
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In the past academic year of 2018/2019, the students of the industrial architecture course of Moscow Architectural Institute, under the guidance of Vsevolod Medvedev, Mikhail Kanunnikov, and Elisaveta Medvedeva, worked on their projects of youth educational institutions. The teachers offered the students three project options to choose from: a school for children with disabilities, a juvenile correctional facility, and an orphanage.

Vsevolod Medvedev
The leader of the architectural company “Fourth Dimension”, assistant professor of the undustrial architecture department of Moscow Architectural Institute:

“We decided to develop projects of special schools. Each of these projects is interesting for its own peculiarities. For example, a juvenile correctional facility is a school with a strict division of groups of teenagers and a professional training center, as well as a guarded perimeter of the entire territory. An orphanage is a complex combination of school and home. And a school for children with disabilities is a complex of rigorous communication, social, and sanitary rules and regulations.

As the venues for design, we chose real land sites in Moscow and its nearest suburbs: derelict “young pioneer camps”, juvenile correctional facilities that are in need of reconstruction, unused school and orphanage buildings.

As for the lineup of the project, we traditionally decided to expand it in relation to the basic task given by institute. The main message of each of the projects is a search for the new image of the school and its planning structure. The students had to understand, feel, and find their own approach to solving the problem of interaction between special children and society, even if at the expense of being at odds with some of the construction norms. They are subject to change. The approach to education is always changing, the construction technologies and structures are constantly improved. And it makes perfect sense that schools must also change – starting from the school building and ending with the methods of teaching special children”.

Below, we are publishing the top 10 School Building Projects prepared by the students:

Anna Vorobyeva:

A school for children with autistic spectrum disorders


A school for children with autistic spectrum disorders. Author: Anna Vorobyeva


The main idea of the project is creating a positive environment for successful education of autistic children. The main tool here is a special approach to forming and filling the inside space or the school.

The classrooms have a calm and secluded character, which makes it possible to focus as much as possible on the educational process. All the classrooms are different in their shape and size. The commonly used classrooms look more like traditional ones. The special laboratory-equipped classrooms and creative studios for music and drawing lessons have rounded or curvilinear profiles. Customized design solutions developed for each of the premises allow the children to easier get their bearings.

A school for children with autistic spectrum disorders. Author: Anna Vorobyeva


The classrooms are equipped with transformable furniture and pull-out partitions. This way, the space adjusts to the needs of a specific child. An important detail is the so-called “seclusion islands”, sensor rooms that are meant to give the child an opportunity to stay alone with himself or herself.

The classrooms are joined by the lounges – also transformable – with winter gardens, communication territories and “seclusion islands”.

A school for children with autistic spectrum disorders. Author: Anna Vorobyeva


The educational part is connected to the so-called “zone of urban adaptation”, a glass atrium, where all the games and entertaining activities are vertically placed. According to the author’s concept, this is a peculiar window to the outside world that at the same time keeps up the feeling of security.

The architectural image of the building is also highlighted by its transparency. Autistic children do not always make contacts with people easily. And it looks as though the building itself is trying to make up for it. Its laconic rectangular body is literally sliced with glass concave parabolic skylights. And only the façade surface of perforated panels makes some sort of borderline between the school and the city, allowing the children to feel safe and comfortable.

A school for children with autistic spectrum disorders. Author: Anna Vorobyeva
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Yana Kurilova

Hidden School


Hidden School. Author: Yana Kurilova


This project of a forest school was developed for children with respiratory diseases. The land site is situated in a healthy environment – in a pine forest in the territory of Bykovo Township in the Moscow Region. Currently, there is an active educational orphanage there.

Hidden School. Author: Yana Kurilova


The author of the project tried to keep all the trees growing on the land site. Therefore, the body of the school building turned out to be rather prostrate, with a noticeable shift of some of its elements. The bulk of the building with a flat roof is raised one floor above the ground on slender legs that also look like the trunks of pine trees. The façades are made of glass and mirror panels. All this minimizes the architectural “intrusion” into the forest.

Hidden School. Author: Yana Kurilova


Inside, the building is divided into self-sufficient modules of classrooms and auditoriums. It was the shift of these modules that made it possible to keep the pine forest virtually intact. The classrooms are connected by a single lounge. It is turned into a large library with bookshelves running along the walls, secluded corners for reading and zones for communicating with friends.

The second floor is belted by a balcony. In warm weather, one can step outside on it to get a breath of fresh air. In addition, the classrooms are equipped with pull-out glass partitions. With their help, the classrooms are transformed into open-air summer premises. There are also three greenhouses installed on the level of the ground floor for winter walks.

Hidden School. Author: Yana Kurilova
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Varya Nebolsina

A school for children with hearing, seeing, and speech disorders

Author: Varya Nebolsina


The main idea of the project consists in creating an integrated educational space for healthy children and children with hearing, seeing, and speech disorders. The joint education, according to the author of the project, is an important socialization experience, which will prepare the children for independent life in the future.

The school is situated in Moscow, on the Vosmogo Marta Street, next to a rehabilitation center for children with disabilities. According to the author of the project, such vicinity will allow the school to work in cooperation with the center.

Author: Varya Nebolsina


The school building is essentially an elongated volume covered by a gable roof. On the plan, it looks like an incomplete infinity sign. One of the “tails” of the sign hosts the elementary school, closer to the Vosmogo Marta Street. The other wing hosts a junior high school with an independent entrance from the yard. The wings of the school are joined by a common yard.

Author: Varya Nebolsina


Inside, there are no stairways. One can get from the first floor to the second by walking down a “ramp” corridor. Thanks to the gradual increase of the floor level, the loop-like two-story building reaches a four-story height in its highest point.

The zigzagged trajectory of the walls in the wing of the junior high school makes it easier for the children with eyesight disorders to find their bearings. For the students of the elementary school, on the other hand, the walls are rounded, and there are no corners at all.

Besides the school itself, the territory of the school hosts buildings on it, where after classes the children can also study painting, sculpture, robot science, dancing, and zoology. They can also study Braille or sign language here.

Author: Varya Nebolsina
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Denis Omelchenko

The School of Performance for Problem Teenagers

Performance school. Author: Denis Omelchenko


The juvenile correctional facility is situated next to the “Rechnoi Vokzal” metro station. It is planned that the building will provide board, lodging, and education to 272 teenagers aged from 11 to 14.

Performance school. Author: Denis Omelchenko


The six-story building of the school looks like a fragment of a giant bridge, from which ten glass cubes of auditoriums are suspended. The cubes are hovering over the ground. According to the author, this is meant to inspire in the problem teenagers a feeling of being detached from the problems and bad thoughts. In the glass auditoriums, the kids will be able to meditate, master anger management, and do sports. For juvenile offenders, this is the best way to come to grips and overcome their hardships.

Performance school. Author: Denis Omelchenko


The “support of the bridge” contains the students’ dormitory. The entire sixth floor is occupied by classrooms for general education. On the first floor, there is an entrance zone and amphitheater, where various performances are staged. For the students, this is an opportunity to make a statement and express their identity.

Performance school. Author: Denis Omelchenko
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Alena Sorokina

Orphanage school


Orphanage school. Author: Alena Sorokina


A vertical school for orphans is designed on the Povarskaya Street in Moscow. Its main bulk is broken into three large blocks towering one above another. The lower block contains the elementary school. The next one contains classrooms of the junior high. In the top part of the building, specialized classrooms are situated for chemistry, physics, biology, and computer science. This level also contains the teachers’ room and the management offices. One floor of each blocks contains two classrooms.

Orphanage school. Author: Alena Sorokina


The space of the floors between the glass blocks is occupied by winter gardens. This is a place where the children can spend their free time after the classes or during the breaks. The horizontal of the first floor, from which the multistory trunk of the school grows, contains the entrance group, the cafeteria, a gym, and an auditorium.

Orphanage school. Author: Alena Sorokina


The building itself motivates the children to learn and grow. Each year, going over to the next level of knowledge, the children get one floor higher, opening up new horizons.

Orphanage school. Author: Alena Sorokina
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Sasha Terekhova

“Tree” Orphanage School


The “Tree” project – an orphanage school. Author: Sasha Terekhova


The educational orphanage is situated near the Moscow-area town of Istra. The author of the project depicted the plan of the school as a tree, where a complex root system is the school building, while the large oval fruits on the branches are residential “capsules”.

The “Tree” project – an orphanage school. Author: Sasha Terekhova


The shape of the four-story school building is complex and curvilinear, looking like mountain terrain. Each next floor is shifted in respect to the previous one. In the places where floors are shifted, open-air terraces are formed.

The elementary, the junior high, and the senior high schools occupy an independent tier each. Everywhere, the classrooms and auditoriums open up to a common lounge. The lounge areas provide all sorts of pastime scenarios – from entertaining to educational. There are also creative studios and trade shops.

The interiors of the school rooms are spacious and light. The panoramic windows with automatically controlled shutters fill the classrooms with ambient light.

The “Tree” project – an orphanage school. Author: Sasha Terekhova


The children’s homes are designed as oval capsules of different sizes and housing capacity. The younger students have larger capsules designed for 18-20 children with individual rooms for the teachers. For the junior high students, the capsules house 6-12 people. The most compact houses are designed for the high school students – they house from 2 to 4 people. This way the author of the project solves the problem of socializing the children who grow without parents.

The school and the housing block are separated by a large yard with sports fields and playgrounds.

The “Tree” project – an orphanage school. Author: Sasha Terekhova
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Masha Cheltsova-Bebutova

An orphanage school in the North Tushino


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Orphanage school. Author: Masha Cheltsova-Bebutova


The educational orphanage is situated in Moscow’s district of North Tushino. The land site lies on the border between the city and a large park. The location defined the main idea of the project to unite urban and rural space in one place.

Orphanage school. Author: Masha Cheltsova-Bebutova


The city side is faced by the façade of the school that constitutes the front of the street. This main façade is about 300 meters long. It recreates a fragment of the construction that consists of low-rise houses with stained glass windows standing next to one another. The silhouette is formed by the rooftops: the pitched gable ones, chamfered, flat, and even semicircular. The park is faced by small two or three-story houses. They create an atmosphere of peaceful rural life.  

Orphanage school. Author: Masha Cheltsova-Bebutova


At school, the children study in two shifts, do research work in the laboratories, and do extracurricular activities in art class, finding like-minded kids of the same age, thus making up for the lack of communication with the family. 

The residential and the academic parts are united by a common yard. The yard is crossed by a man-made brook, over which a few pedestrian bridges are thrown. The brook is a conditional border between town and country. The “city-side” bank of the brook is occupied by sports fields and playgrounds, while the green rural bank is created for rural pastime activities.

Orphanage school. Author: Masha Cheltsova-Bebutova
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Dima Chudaev

Boarding school for juvenile delinquents


Boarding school for juvenile delinquents. Author: Dima Chudaev


The juvenile correctional facility for 288 delinquents is situated at the western suburb of the South Butovo, in the stead of the existing ravine. The author of the project proposes to fill this ravine with water. Very much like a moat, it will encircle the five-story school building. It is planned that the connection with the city will be kept up at the expense of four drives that will be coming together in the center of the site.

zooming
Boarding school for juvenile delinquents. Author: Dima Chudaev


According to the author of the project, the architectural image was born “from associations with barb and proneness to conflict of delinquent children”. Therefore, the elongated rectangular volume is literally sliced with vertical bristling plates of rusty metal. At the same time, there are panoramic windows installed in the classrooms and children’s residential cells. And this is also an attempt to overcome the conflict with the outside world.

The boys and girls live and study separately. Their residential and training zones are placed at different floors. The third floor is occupied by 18 residential blocks for boys. In each block, there are two bunk spaces, four students sharing each one. The classrooms for boys are situated one floor below. Similarly, only for girls, the fourth residential level is designed. The girls’ classrooms are situated on the top fifth floor.

The only tier that is common for all the students is the ground floor that includes a hall, a canteen, an auditorium, a gym, and meeting rooms for parents. The promenade area is organized on the usable roof. The lack of space around the building is made up for by the cold walking galleries on each of the residential levels.

Boarding school for juvenile delinquents. Author: Dima Chudaev


An important part of the project is classrooms for creative-minded children and teenagers. The unheated galleries have special spaces for graffiti in them. There is also a small expo center on the territory of the facility, where the children’s creations will be exhibited on a permanent basis. According to the author’s idea, it art that will break the barrier between the children and society.

Boarding school for juvenile delinquents. Author: Dima Chudaev
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Evgeny Chumachenko

School for children with cerebral palsy


Boarding school for juvenile delinquents. Author: Dima Chudaev


The school for children with cerebral palsy will be built on the Vosmogo Marta Street in Moscow. The building will function not just as a school but also as a rehabilitation center, where the children will live on a permanent basis during the academic year and get all the treatment they need.

School for children with cerebral palsy. Author: Evganiy Chumachenko


The three-story volume with slanted stained glass windows is divided into three main sectors: the academic, the residential, and the medical one. The smoothly outlined buildings are connected by a heated glass gallery.

The block on the first floor is designed for the studies of the younger ones. For them, the author of the project provided an independent exit into the yard and playgrounds. Also, the first floor contains specialized classrooms for high school students. The children’s multifunctional hall is placed in a single outdoor volume but it can also be accessed from the building on the level of the second floor. The classrooms of the junior high school and the auditorium occupy almost the entire second floor. The third floor includes a library and a gym. The central nucleus of the school is a large atrium with a few lounges.

School for children with cerebral palsy. Author: Evganiy Chumachenko


The residential sector contains 8 rooms per floor. The children live in groups of 4 (2 children and two monitors). In addition, there is a small movie theater and a cafeteria. The housing block is linked to the medical with a heated overpass.

For permanent and prompt medical attention, in all the parts of the school, so-called “relaxation capsules” are created – places where a child will not only get medical help but also will be able to be alone with himself if he or she chooses to. There are also lots of game lounges and playgrounds inside the building.

School for children with cerebral palsy. Author: Evganiy Chumachenko
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Anna Shikova

An orphanage school


Orphanage school. Author: Anna Shikova


The orphanage is situated in the district of Metrogorodok, next to the enormous Losiny Ostrov (“Elk Island”) Park. The complex consists of three parts: the academic block and residential rooms for the little children, a junior high school and homes for teenagers, and a youth center. A common yard and a walking zone serve as a link to the Losiny Ostrov.

Orphanage school. Author: Anna Shikova


In her project, Anna Shishkova is trying to solve the problem of the “guest complex” that orphans develop, devoid of their own homes. The new orphanage is not only meant to become a real home for the students but also an attraction center for students of other schools from other neighborhoods. The main centers of attraction are sports fields that are there on the territory of the orphanage, a rope park, and the youth center.

The residential space is organized in such a way that the children can easily invite guests in. For this, in their rooms, designed for four people each one, there are cozy living rooms.

Orphanage school. Author: Anna Shikova


The school also has transformable classrooms and multifunctional auditoriums. The heated underground corridor connects the senior high school with the youth center. Also, in this corridor, there are studies for secluded music practices.

Orphanage school. Author: Anna Shikova
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05 June 2019

Headlines now
The Forum of Time
The competition project for the Russian Pavilion at EXPO 2025 in Osaka designed by Aleksey Orlov and Arena Project Institute consists of cones and conical funnels connected into a non-trivial composition, where one can feel the hand of architects who have worked extensively with stadiums and other sports facilities. It’s very interesting to delve into its logic, structurally built on the theme of clocks, hourglasses and even sundials. Additionally, the architects have turned the exhibition pavilion into a series of interconnected amphitheaters, which is also highly relevant for world exhibitions. We are reminding you that the competition results were never announced.
The Steppe Is Full of Beauty and Freedom
The goal of the exhibition “Dikoe Pole” (“Wild Field”) at the State Historical Museum was to move away from the archaeological listing of valuable items and to create an image of the steppe and nomads that was multidirectional and emotional – in other words, artistic. To achieve this goal, it was important to include works of contemporary art. One such work is the scenography of the exhibition space developed by CHART studio.
The Snowstorm Fish
The next project from the unfinished competition for the Russian Pavilion at EXPO 2025, which will be held in Osaka, Japan, is by Dashi Namdakov and Parsec Architects. The pavilion describes itself as an “architectural/sculptural” one, with its shape clearly reminiscent of abstract sculpture of the 1970s. It complements its program with a meditative hall named “Mendeleev’s Dreams”, and offers its visitors to slide from its roof at the end of the tour.
The Mirror of Your Soul
We continue to publish projects from the competition for the design of the Russian Pavilion at EXPO in Osaka 2025. We are reminding you that the results of the competition have not been announced, and hardly will ever be. The pavilion designed by ASADOV Architects combines a forest log cabin, the image of a hyper transition, and sculptures made of glowing threads – it focuses primarily on the scenography of the exhibition, which the pavilion builds sequentially like a string of impressions, dedicating it to the paradoxes of the Russian soul.
Part of the Ideal
In 2025, another World Expo will take place in Osaka, Japan, in which Russia will not participate. However, a competition for the Russian pavilion was indeed held, with six projects participating. The results were never announced as Russia’s participation was canceled; the competition has no winners. Nevertheless, Expo pavilion projects are typically designed for a bold and interesting architectural statement, so we’ve gathered all the six projects and will be publishing articles about them in random order. The first one is the project by Vladimir Plotkin and Reserve Union, which is distinguished by the clarity of its stereometric shape, the boldness of its structure, and the multiplicity of possible interpretations.
The Fortress by the River
ASADOV Architects have developed a concept for a new residential district in the center of Kemerovo. To combat the harsh climate and monotonous everyday life, the architects proposed a block type of development with dominant towers, good insolation, facades detailed at eye level, and event programming.
In the Rhombus Grid
Construction has begun on the building of the OMK (United Metallurgical Company) Corporate University in Nizhny Novgorod’s town of Vyksa, designed by Ostozhenka Architects. The most interesting aspect of the project is how the architects immersed it in the context: “extracting” a diagonal motif from the planning grid of Vyksa, they aligned the building, the square, and the park to match it. A truly masterful work with urban planning context on several different levels of perception has long since become the signature technique of Ostozhenka.
​Generational Connection
Another modern estate, designed by Roman Leonidov, is located in the Moscow region and brings together three generations of one family under one roof. To fit on a narrow plot without depriving anyone of personal space, the architects opted for a zigzag plan. The main volume in the house structure is accentuated by mezzanines with a reverse-sloped roof and ceilings featuring exposed beams.
Three Dimensions of the City
We began to delve into the project by Sergey Skuratov, the residential complex “Depo” in Minsk, located at Victory Square, and it fascinated us completely. The project has at least several dimensions to it: historical – at some point, the developer decided to discontinue further collaboration with Sergey Skuratov Architects, but the concept was approved, and its implementation continues, mostly in accordance with the proposed ideas. The spatial and urban planning dimension – the architects both argue with the city and play along with it, deciphering nuances, and finding axes. And, finally, the tactile dimension – the constructed buildings also have their own intriguing features. Thus, this article also has two parts: it dwells on what has been built and what was conceived
New “Flight”
Architects from “Mezonproject” have developed a project for the reconstruction of the regional youth center “Polyot”(“Flight”) in the city of Oryol. The summer youth center, built back in the late 1970s, will now become year-round and acquire many additional functions.
The Yauza Towers
In Moscow, there aren’t that many buildings or projects designed by Nikita Yavein and Studio 44. In this article, we present to you the concept of a large multifunctional complex on the Yauza River, located between two parks, featuring a promenade, a crossroads of two pedestrian streets, a highly developed public space, and an original architectural solution. This solution combines a sophisticated, asymmetric façade grid, reminiscent of a game of fifteen puzzle, and bold protrusions of the upper parts of the buildings, completely masking the technical floors and sculpting the complex’s silhouette.
Architecture and Leisure Park
For the suburban hotel complex, which envisages various formats of leisure, the architectural company T+T Architects proposed several types of accommodation, ranging from the classic “standard” in a common building to a “cave in the hill” and a “house in a tree”. An additional challenge consisted in integrating a few classic-style residences already existing on this territory into the “architectural forest park”.
The U-House
The Jois complex combines height with terraces, bringing the most expensive apartments from penthouses down to the bottom floors. The powerful iconic image of the U-shaped building is the result of the creative search for a new standard of living in high-rise buildings by the architects of “Genpro”.
Black and White
In this article, we specifically discuss the interiors of the ATOM Pavilion at VDNKh. Interior design is a crucial component of the overall concept in this case, and precision and meticulous execution were highly important for the architects. Julia Tryaskina, head of UNK interiors, shares some of the developments.
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.
Opal from Anna Mons’ Ring
The project of a small business center located near Tupolev Plaza and Radio Street proclaims the necessity of modern architecture in a specific area of Moscow commonly known as “Nemetskaya Sloboda” or “German settlement”. It substantiates its thesis with the thoroughness of details, a multitude of proposed and rejected form variants, and even a detailed description of the surrounding area. The project is interesting indeed, and it is even more interesting to see what will come of it.
Feed ’Em All
A “House of Russian Cuisine” was designed and built by KROST Group at VDNKh for the “Rossiya” exhibition in record-breaking time. The pavilion is masterfully constructed in terms of the standards of modern public catering industry multiplied by the bustling cultural program of the exhibition, and it interprets the stylistically diverse character of VDNKh just as successfully. At the same time, much of its interior design can be traced back to the prototypes of the 1960s – so much so that even scenes from iconic Soviet movies of those years persistently come to mind.
The Ensemble at the Mosque
OSA prepared a master plan for a district in the southern part of Derbent. The main task of the master plan is to initiate the formation of a modern comfortable environment in this city. The organization of residential areas is subordinated to the city’s spiritual center: depending on the location relative to the cathedral mosque, the houses are distinguished by façade and plastique solutions. The program also includes a “hospitality center”, administrative buildings, an educational cluster, and even an air bridge.
Pargolovo Protestantism
A Protestant church is being built in St. Petersburg by the project of SLOI architects. One of the main features of the building is a wooden roof with 25-meter spans, which, among other things, forms the interior of the prayer hall. Also, there are other interesting details – we are telling you more about them.
The Shape of the Inconceivable
The ATOM Pavilion at VDNKh brings to mind a famous maxim of all architects and critics: “You’ve come up with it? Now build it!” You rarely see such a selfless immersion in implementation of the project, and the formidable structural and engineering tasks set by UNK architects to themselves are presented here as an integral and important part of the architectural idea. The challenge matches the obliging status of the place – after all, it is an “exhibition of achievements”, and the pavilion is dedicated to the nuclear energy industry. Let’s take a closer look: from the outside, from the inside, and from the underside too.
​Rays of the Desert
A school for 1750 students is going to be built in Dubai, designed by IND Architects. The architects took into account the local specifics, and proposed a radial layout and spaces, in which the children will be comfortable throughout the day.
The Dairy Theme
The concept of an office of a cheese-making company, designed for the enclosed area of a dairy factory, at least partially refers to industrial architecture. Perhaps that is why this concept is very simple, which seems the appropriate thing to do here. The building is enlivened by literally a couple of “master strokes”: the turning of the corner accentuates the entrance, and the shade of glass responds to the theme of “milk rivers” from Russian fairy tales.
The Road to the Temple
Under a grant from the Small Towns Competition, the main street and temple area of the village of Nikolo-Berezovka near Neftekamsk has been improved. A consortium of APRELarchitects and Novaya Zemlya is turning the village into an open-air museum and integrating ruined buildings into public life.
​Towers Leaning Towards the Sun
The three towers of the residential complex “Novodanilovskaya 8” are new and the tallest neighbors of the Danilovsky Manufactory, “Fort”, and “Plaza”, complementing a whole cluster of modern buildings designed by renowned masters. At the same time, the towers are unique for this setting – they are residential, they are the tallest ones here, and they are located on a challenging site. In this article, we explore how architects Andrey Romanov and Ekaterina Kuznetsova tackled this far-from-trivial task.
In the spirit of ROSTA posters
The new Rostselmash tractor factory, conceptualized by ASADOV Architects, is currently being completed in Rostov-on-Don. References to the Soviet architecture of the 1920’s and 1960’s resonate with the mission and strategic importance of the enterprise, and are also in line with the client’s wish: to pay homage to Rostov’s constructivism.
The Northern Thebaid
The central part of Ferapontovo village, adjacent to the famous monastery with frescoes by Dionisy, has been improved according to the project by APRELarchitects. Now the place offers basic services for tourists, as well as a place for the villagers’ leisure.
Brilliant Production
The architects from London-based MOST Architecture have designed the space for the high-tech production of Charge Cars, a high-performance production facility for high-speed electric cars that are assembled in the shell of legendary Ford Mustangs. The founders of both the company and the car assembly startup are Russians who were educated in their home country.
Three-Part Task: St. Petersburg’s Mytny Dvor
The so-called “Mytny Dvor” area lying just behind Moscow Railway Station – the market rows with a complex history – will be transformed into a premium residential complex by Studio 44. The project consists of three parts: the restoration of historical buildings, the reconstruction of the lost part of the historical contour, and new houses. All of them are harmonized with each other and with the city; axes and “beams of light” were found, cozy corners and scenic viewpoints were carefully thought out. We had a chat with the authors of the historical buildings’ restoration project, and we are telling you about all the different tasks that have been solved here.
The Color of the City, or Reflections on the Slope of an Urban Settlement
In 2022, Ostozhenka Architects won a competition, and in 2023, they developed and received all the necessary approvals for a master plan for the development of Chernigovskaya Street for the developer GloraX. The project takes into account a 10-year history of previous developments; it was done in collaboration with architects from Nizhny Novgorod, and it continues to evolve now. We carefully examined it, talked to everyone, and learned a lot of interesting things.
A Single-Industry Town
Kola MMC and Nornickel are building a residential neighborhood in Monchegorsk for their future employees. It is based on a project by an international team that won the 2021 competition. The project offers a number of solutions meant to combat the main “demons” of any northern city: wind, grayness and boredom.