The Admiralty
Zakharov, Andreyan
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Alternative Title
Admiralteystvo
Date
1704-1711Description
Northeast corner pavilion, view from the Neva River; Zakharov’s most important work was the complete reconstruction of the new main Admiralty Building in St Petersburg in connection with the Admiralty’s new role as the Naval Ministry. This Neo-classical building, unfinished at Zakharov’s death and completed by the architects Ivan Gomzin and August Ricard de Montferrand, among others, embodies the best progressive features of Russian architecture and brought its designer international fame. Zakharov retained the dimensions and layout of the old Admiralty Building, which was founded during the reign of Peter I on the banks of the River Neva opposite the Peter and Paul Fortress and rebuilt by Ivan Kuz’mich Korobov (1700-1747) in the 1730s in the form of two long, parallel π-shaped buildings, a central tower crowned with a spire providing access between them. To reflect the dual role of the complex as a shipyard and main administration building, Zakharov preserved its division into two units, rebuilding the central tower and spire. Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordartonline.com/ (accessed 6/15/2009)
Type of Work
naval shipyard; ministry (government office building)Subject
architectural exteriors, engineering and industry, manufacturing, military, war, Peter I, Emperor of Russia, 1672-1725, Shipyards, Transportation, government, military, Russian fleet, Russian navy, Eighteenth century, Nineteenth century, Neoclassical
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only