Kleinewelt Architekten

information:

About Firm:

Kleinewelt Аrchitekten is an architectural and research company.
Our method is based on the analytical approach to designing things. Every time when we start a new project we do a cross-discipline survey that helps us to come up with adequate and at the same time interesting and unconventional solutions.

Our portfolio includes strategies for developing whole cities (Krasnoturyinsk and Michurinsk), unusual public buildings (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, pavilions in the Tagansky Park and at the VDNKh exhibition, a residential building on the Sivtsev Vrazhek, and a housing project in the Olsufyevsky Side-street.

We see our projects from beginning to end – starting with the preliminary survey and the first sketches and ending with author supervision of the construction. This is why we stand by our performance.

We create a cozy atmosphere and human-friendly environments regardless of the scale of our project – be that a housing project or a single office building. Each of our projects is a microcosm – a small world in, die kleine Welt.

Archi.ru Texts:

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.
04.06.2025

Julia Tarabarina. ​Skylights and Staircase

Photos from March show the nearly completed headquarters of FSK Group on Shenogina Street. The building’s exterior is calm and minimalist; the interior is engaging and multi-layered. The conical skylights of the executive office, cast in raw concrete, and the sweeping spiral staircase leading to it, are particularly striking. In fact, there’s more than one spiral staircase here, and the first two floors effectively form a small shopping center. More below.
06.05.2025

Julia Tarabarina. The Colorful City

While working on a large-scale project in Moscow’s Kuntsevo district – one that has yet to be given a name – Kleinewelt Architekten proposed not only a diverse array of tower silhouettes in “Empire-style” hues and a thoughtful mix of building heights, creating a six-story “neo-urbanist” city with a block-based layout at ground level, but also rooted their design in historical and contextual reasoning. The project includes the reconstruction of several Stalin-era residential buildings that remain from the postwar town of Kuntsevo, as well as the reconstruction of a 1953 railway station that was demolished in 2017.
17.04.2025

Julia Tarabarina. The Arch and the Triangle

The new Stone Mnevniki business center by Kleinewelt Architekten – designed for the same client as their projects in Khodynka – bears certain similarities to those earlier developments, but not entirely. In Mnevniki, there are more angular elements, and the architects themselves describe the project as being built on contrast. Indeed, while the first phase contains subtle references to classical architecture – light touches like arches, both upright and inverted, evoking the spirit of the 1980s – the second phase draws more distantly on the modernism of the 1970s. What unites them is a boldly expressive public space design, a kaleidoscope of rays and triangles.
see All Archi.ru Texts / Kleinewelt Architekten

Partner Architects of Archi.ru:

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

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”