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​Dialectical Manifesto

The high-rise housing complex MOD, whose construction has begun in Moscow’s district of Maryina Roshcha next to the site, on which the new Russian Railways headquarters will be built, is responding to the “central” context of the future city surroundings, and at the same time is positioned by the architects as a “manifesto of Modernist minimalist principles in architecture”.

Julia Tarabarina

Written by:
Julia Tarabarina
Translated by:
Anton Mizonov

06 September 2021
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The place for constructing the new premium-class housing complex MOD, designed for MR Group by Kleinewelt Architekten, is far from simple but very promising. 400 meters west from it, a new exit from “Maryina Roshcha” metro station belonging to the Moscow Big Circle is being constructed, 300 meters north – yet another exit belonging to the Moscow Central Diameter. A large-scale transport hub is expected to appear here. In short, this place has potential.

The MOD residential complex is being built on the grounds of the former industrial estate with an area of about 2.4 hectares. The land site stretches in the most convenient direction of “south-north” – which yields a maximum number of west and east facades, not too overshadowed and not too hot. Before the beginning of the construction, the land site hosted two elongated volumes parallel to each other – the new complex is inheriting that configuration: the residential towers, two 200 meters tall, one 165, and buildings of a smaller height stand in two parallel lines and alternate in a near-chessboard order.

The final diagram of the entire complex. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams.
Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


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    Building D. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Building D. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Building D. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Building C. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Building M. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Buildin M. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


Interestingly, the “lines” are treated differently, proceeding from the architects’ understanding of the specifics of the context – not today’s one, but the one that will be formed after the construction of the Russian Railways headquarters will be completed in the place of the former loading bay. According to Nikken Sekkei’s plan, the headquarters building must be strung upon an inner covered roof, creating a new center for business and other activities. This way, the future east side, turned to the headquarters, will be more of the “city” kind typology-wise.

Accordingly, the authors of the project gave this part more of a city character. One tower and two 9-story houses 38.3 meters high each spring from an elongated two-story stylobate 9 meters high with cafes and shops in it. Its facades are designed as an austere pylonnade; there is a pedestrian gallery stretching along the shop windows from the headquarters side. In the north part, the stylobate makes a break: here, further away from the center of the headquarters, a square public plaza appears, open eastward, and stopped by a transversal 2-story volume, which looks like a fragment of the stylobate set aside, at the other end of the site.

MOD housing complex. The project
Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


The plaza is situated on the territory of the housing complex, but it is open for everyone, and is meant, just as the “Rivoli Street” of shops and cafes in the stylobate, contribute to integrating the complex into the future city life.

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    The functional zoning flowchart. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    A simplified master plan. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The master plan. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


Further north between the two lines of houses, stretches the complex’s private yard, that looks more even like an inner promenade. It is separated from the plaza by a fence, but it is situated on the same level. On the roof of the stylobate in its eastern part, there will be two small private parks between the two windows – the architects call them “the second level of the private garden”; from here, one will be able to look at the “promenade” yard and at the city below. This way, several levels of openness / privacy are formed, as well as several emotional levels of perception of the space from within and from without.

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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


The “promenade” yard is packed with functions, zoned by geoplastics, and is connected by a network of trails; playgrounds alternate with workouts, hills alternate with small ponds. The center of the complex is a spiral walkway raised above the ground – a spatial attraction that allows one to rise to the height of the roof of the eastern stylobate and then descend along a gentle curve.

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    View from north to south. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The yard. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The inner promenade. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The landscaped roof of the stylobate of the eastern part. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


In the eastern part, adjoining the stylobate, the planning lines are straighter and more austere, while in the west part, turned to the city in its current state, and to Maryina Roshcha with its abundant greenery and low-rise buildings, everything becomes more flexible and open. The architects are clearly treating this part of the city as a park, something like a “garden city”, as opposed to the business activity of the opposite side. Here two towers are situated, 200 and 165 meters high, with a 3-story volume 19 meters high between them – a school and a kindergarten.

From the west side, there is no “beam” of the stylobate – hence, there are spaces between the buildings that allow you to peek from the street into the yard, while the school in the lower tier rests on glass supports of an oval section – short breaks appear between them as well, allowing you to look from the yard in the direction of Maryina Roshcha and vice versa, which forms “interflowing of spaces”, visual at least. The main facade of the school facing the inner promenade was formed, as the architects’ diagrams show, through a dialogue with a green hill under a spiral ramp – it seems to be “pressed through”, which makes it acquire a flexible outline that fits so well with milk lamellas, especially in perspective.

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    The landscaping of the roof and the stylobate. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The landscaping of the errotory and the stylobate roof. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The organization of the territory and the stylobate roof. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The landscaping of the errotory and the stylobate roof. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The organization of the territory and the stylobate roof. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


The facade plastique of the minor volumes picks up this theme: they are designed in deliberately different ways of emotional energetics, which will be formed on two different sides of the complex. The two 9-story houses, just like the school, grow from circular glass podiums – but their “legs” are strictly elliptical and rest on a stylobate. They carry parallelepipeds with a complex sculptural surface.

The facades of a red copper hue are composed of triangular bay windows framing each window as a relief cell; in each of the levels, the turning angle is different, which is why the top six floors begin to look like bands of conveyor belts, each one rotating in its own cycle, gradually changing pitch. The plastique is active; at the corners, at top and bottom, the volumetric elements stand almost at a 45-degree angle. The corner volume “works” as a giant sculpture.

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    The school building. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The concept of the school building. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams.
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The school building. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams.
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The school building. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams.
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The school building. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams.
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The school building. MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams.
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


In the opposite building, which is golden yellow, the same techniques are softened, the offsets and the turns of the triangular bay windows are identical, even though aligned in a chessboard order – the image is less dramatic, and maybe even partly “jewelry-precious”.

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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


Together, the two houses and the tower that they flank create an axial composition with variations, which not only do not violate but even enhance the symmetry of the volumes on the sides of the significantly elevated center. 

The third, relatively low-rise, volume, situated, as we remember, from the side of Maryina Roshcha between the two other residential towers, has a uniquely small – by the standards of this complex – height of 19.3 meters, a long length, a transparent bottom tier, as well as some flexibility and even softness of form. Unlike the other buildings, it stands not upon the stylobate but on the ground; the rounded glass volumes of the first floor are asymmetrical, and the wavy facade of the two upper floors is formed by milky glass and thin vertical lamellas. The third volume can be understood as something that is opposed to the two 9-story houses: those two are all glittering metal and jagged edges, and this volume is all flowing, enshrouded in a gentle opaque glow.

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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The conceptual diagrams
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


MOD housing complex. The project
Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


The contrastive and individual design of each small volume as part of the complex seems to make perfect sense: it is these small buildings that we subconsciously perceive as “human-friendly” – and they are responsible for building up a dialogue with the surrounding space. The towers, on the other hand, are a different matter – “soaring upwards”, they go to a whole new level of abstraction. The high-rise volumes are rather similar to one another; their planning solutions are optimized and all but identical, and their facades are subjugated to a fine light-colored grid with a significant, about 70 cm, offset of the ribs and a high degree of distribution. The difference between the grids is based on a decrease in the step from south to north: in the third tower of smaller height, the grid is crushed, the width is decreased by half, and the height by three times. The edges of the facade grid will be covered with light limestone.

MOD housing complex. The project
Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


The towers are stretched lengthwise, the aspect ratio being one to two-something; in this, they echo the elongated shape of the site, so, when viewed en face, the volumes are slender, and, if you look from east or west, rather imposing.

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    MOD housing complex
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex.
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Plan of the standard floor. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


All the three towers are crowned with golden “heads” of the attics with slender lamellas of anodized aluminum, which host 6 floors of penthouses: the ceilings height here is 4.8 meters instead of the standard 3.3 in the main part. These apartments can easily include lofts or double-height rooms.

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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


Special mention should be given to the interiors – they are drawn for the lobbies for the standard floors even for the parking garages. They are laconic and are generally based on the optic contrast between black and white. From time to time an inversion occurs: black replaces weight and vice versa. This happens in the minor units and in the parking garages.

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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


However, as the significance of the space grows, more significance is attached to the texture of various degrees of “preciousness”. It marks various important elements, chief of them being the reception desk; then it becomes more complex and richer in color in the towers. The height of all of the lobby ceilings is 6 meters. 

The intensity of color and the complexity of the pattern of stone streaks grow every so smoothly, from building to building, in order to make a “crescendo” in the dark crimson reception desk of Building 7, glowing from the inside. At the same time, the architects carefully observe the uniformity principle: the proportions of all the lobbies stay within the same limits.

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    Building S. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    Building S. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The guest bathroom. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The interior of the parking garage. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    the interior of the parking garage. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The interior of the parking garage. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The interior of the parking garage. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The interior of the parking garage. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    The storage. MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten
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    MOD housing complex. The project
    Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


It comes as no surprise that Kleinewelt Architekten describe their project as a “manifesto of Modernist minimalist principles in architecture”, and at the same time as “living, tactile, even romantic” – “sensual functionalism”. It includes a wide variety of techniques, its harmonies being based on a balance between bright and austere, strict repetitiveness and lively agility. Interestingly, the “lively” rather gravitates towards minor volumes and shapes: 9-story houses and the school, while the “lively” – towards the big ones, such as towers, even though they still react, albeit not without majestic calm, to this game – for example, with the differences of pitch of the facade grid, formed by the ventilation module sometimes on the left and sometimes on the right.

MOD housing complex. The project
Copyright: © Kleinewelt Architekten


Possibly, one could even say that this “activity gradient”, fading away in the volumes from small to large, takes a reverse path in the interiors, and completes the motion, offering the brightest accent inside one of the two largest towers. This is how a kind of dialectical spiral arises, within the framework of which a series of oscillations from regular and calm to bright and mobile are placed. It is possible that the ramp in the middle of the boulevard serves not only as the main attraction and the key to the emotional/spatial interaction between the courtyards, but also in some way a sign of the ambivalence of the architects’ manifesto presented here, combining a firm adherence to a strict “modernist” form and a willingness to “rock” it in order to breathe life into it.
The construction of the MOD housing complex began in June 2021.

06 September 2021

Julia Tarabarina

Written by:

Julia Tarabarina
Translated by:
Anton Mizonov
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We’ve been wanting to examine the RuArts Foundation space, designed by ATRIUM for quite a long time, and we finally got round to it. This building looks appropriate and impressive; it amazingly combines tradition – represented in our case by galleries – and innovation. In this article, we delve into details and study the building’s historical background as well.
Molding Perspectives
Stepan Liphart introduces “schematic Art Deco” on the outskirts of Kazan – his houses are executed in green color, with a glassy “iced” finish on the facades. The main merits of the project lie in his meticulous arrangement of viewing angles – the architect is striving to create in a challenging environment the embryo of a city not only in terms of pedestrian accessibility but also in a sculptural sense. He works with silhouettes, proposing intriguing triangular terraces. The entire project is structured like a crystal, following two grids, orthogonal and diagonal. In this article, we are examining what worked, and what eventually didn’t.
An Educational Experiment for the North
City-Arch continues to work on the projects that can be termed as “experimental public preschools”: private kindergartens and schools can envy such facilities in many respects. This time around, the project is done for the city of Gubkinsky, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District. A diverse educational and play environment, including a winter garden, awaits future students, while the teachers will have abundant opportunities to implement new practices.
Alexandra Kuzmina: “Working is easy when the rules are the same for everyone”
The subject matter of Moscow Region’s booth and presentations at Zodchestvo Festival was the concept of “Integrated Land Development”, and for a good reason: this task is very challenging, very relevant, and Moscow Region has already accumulated quite a formidable experience in this regard. In this article, we are speaking to the main architect of the region: about master plans and who makes them, about where you obtain resources for creating a comfortable environment, about her favorite projects, about why there are so few good architects, and what we should do with the bad ones.
The Cemetery: Inside and Outside
The workshop organized by the Genplan Institute of Moscow scored one of the two first places at the “Open City” festival. Its subject is reorganization of municipal cemeteries. Two action plans were proposed, diametrically opposite: one for the downtown and one for the suburbs.
Our Everything
Who is Alexey Shchusev? In the last couple of weeks, since the architect’s 150th birthday, different individuals have answered this question differently. The most detailed, illustrated, and elegantly presented response is an exhibition held in two buildings of the Museum of Architecture on Vozdvizhenka. Four curators, a year and a half of work performed by the entire museum, and exhibition design by Sergey Tchoban and Alexandra Sheiner – in this article, we take you on a tour of the exhibition and show what’s what in it.
For Mental Reboot
At the architectural competition held in 2023 in Novosibirsk, the project by GORA Architects – a pedestrian bridge leading to the town of Bor – was awarded the “Golden Capital” prize. In this country, more than a hundred pedestrian bridges are constructed each year. What makes the Bor bridge different?
Gold Embroidery
A five-story housing complex designed by Stepan Liphart in Kazan, responds to the stylistically diverse context with its form, both integral and agile, and as for the vicinity of the “Ekiyat” movie theater, the complex responds to it with a semblance of theater curtain folds, and active plastique of its balconies, that bear some resemblance to theater boxes. Even if excessively pompous a little bit, the complex does look fresh and modern. One will have a hard time finding Art Deco elements in it, even though the spirit of the 1930s, run through the filter of neo-modernism, is still clearly felt, just as a twist of the Occident.
Reconciliation
The restoration of the Salt Warehouse for the Zvenigorod Museum, on the one hand, was quite accurately implemented according to the design of the People’s Architect, and, on the other hand, it was not without some extra research and adjustments, which, in this case, was quite beneficial for the project. The architects discovered the original paint color, details of the facades, and studied the history of rebuilds of this building. As a result, the imposing character of the empire building, the oldest one in the city, and the differences of later additions were accurately revealed. Most importantly, however, the city got a new cultural and public space, which is already “working” in full swing.
From Moscow to Khabarovsk
This year, the works submitted by the students of the Genplan Institute of Moscow included a proposal for revitalizing Moscow’s “Pravda” complex with its structures designed by Ilia Golosov, landscaping an East Siberian town, located a 12-hour drive away from the nearest big city, and three versions of turning a derelict “pioneer camp” into an educational hub, similar to “Sirius”. Two sites out of three have an interested client, so chances are that the students’ works will be ultimately implemented.