doctoral candidate from 01.01.2006 to 01.01.2021
Sankt-Peterburg, Russian Federation
employee
Saint-Petersburg, Russian Federation
employee
Sankt-Peterburg, Pavlovsk, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
UDK 72 Архитектура
GRNTI 67.07 Архитектура
OKSO 07.09.02 Реконструкция и реставрация архитектурного наследия
BBK 38 Строительство
TBK 54 Строительство
BISAC ARC022000 Adaptive Reuse & Renovation
This paper discusses the urban planning history of an area in Saint Petersburg around the former Moskovskaya Zastava, a historical gateway that travelers passed through when approaching Saint Petersburg from the direction of Moscow. Specifically, authors are interested in the architecture of the carriage building plant. By the end of the 19th century, this part of the city had turned into an industrial area, which saw dense development from 1897 to 1917. The development of heavy industry and the expansion of domestic railways led to an emerging demand in new freight cars. In this regard, it was decided to expand the car building at the existing factories, as well as to organize the construction of new ones. A small factory in St. Petersburg, which produced phaetons, cartridge boxes and field kitchens, in 1897 was significantly expanded and transformed into the St. Petersburg railcar plant. The characteristic features of the architectural and town-planning techniques of the late 19th - early 20th centuries were embodied in the volumetric-spatial composition of the carriage-building plant complex. The strong romantic tendencies characteristic for the industrial architecture of St. Petersburg of this period were clearly traced in its composition. For the next one hundred years, this vast space did not see any transformations, constituting a complete, self-sufficient environment. The railcar plant, originally constructed at the very end of the 19th century, remained standing near Moscovskaya Zastava until the early 21st century. In 2013, the industrial area ceased its existence, and the former plant was given away for residential development.
industrial enterprises, historical industrial zone, Moskovskiye Vorota, environment-forming buildings, railcar plant
1. Pilyavsky V.I. Russian triumphal monuments [Russkie triumfal`ny`e pamyatniki]. L., 1960. 160. (rus)
2. Russian State Historical Archives [RGIA]. Fund 350. Inv. 94. Case 161. 1877. (rus)
3. Kirikov B.M., Stieglitz M.S. Petersburg of German architects from baroque to avant-garde [Peterburg nemeczkikh arkhitektorov ot barokko do avangarda] SPb. Blank sheet. 2002. 414 p. (rus)
4. General plan of the capital city of St. Petersburg from Zuev's atlas. [General`ny`j plan stolichnogo goroda C. Peterburga iz atlasa Zueva]. URL: http://www.etomesto.ru/map-peterburg_1858-zuev/ (date of treatment: 04.11.2020) (rus)
5. Stieglitz M.S. Industrial architecture of St. Petersburg in the field of "industrial archeology"[Promy`shlennaya arkhitektura Peterburga v sfere «industrial`noj arkheologii]. St. Petersburg, "White and Black", 2003. 265 p. (rus)
6. History of car building in Russia (before the beginning of the twentieth century). [Istoriya vagonostroeniya v Rossii]. URL: http://rzd-expo.ru/history/istoriya_vagonostroeniya_Rossii (date of treatment: 04.11.2020) (rus)
7. Architectural site of St. Petersburg [Arhitekturnyj sajt Sankt-Peterburga]. URL: https://www.citywalls.ru/house5195.html (date of treatment: 04.11.2020) (rus)
8. Central State Archives of St. Petersburg [CzGIA]. Fund 1206. Inv. 1. Case 234. (rus)
9. Baryshnikov M.N. The business world of St. Petersburg [Delovoj mir Peterburga]. SPb., 2000. 342 p. (rus)
10. Central State Archives of St. Petersburg [CzGIA]. Fund 515. Inv. 1. Case 5029.1879-1897. (rus)
11. Central State Archives of St. Petersburg [CzGIA]. Fund. 513. Inv. 145, Case 93, 1898; Inv. 146, Case 332, 1899. Case 421.1899. Fund 1206. Inv. 1. Case 239. 1897. Case 243. 1898. Case 244. 1888. Case 247. 1899. Case 248. 1899-1912. Inv. 2. Case 27. 1917. (rus)
12. Central State Archives of St. Petersburg [CzGIA]. Fund 513. Op. 148, D. 145. 1902. Fund 1206, Op. 1. D. 261 1903-1904. (rus)