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​Evgeny Gerasimov: “Each land site has an intrinsic need for change; you need to learn to hear the whisper of the place”.

Saint Petersburg’s Krestovsky Island has seen the completion of “Verona” house designed by Evgeny Gerasimov architects. In this issue, we are speaking to the architect about why he likes building in historical styles and how he manages to do that on such a high quality level.

11 September 2018
Interview
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Archi.ru
When we first analyzed the project of “Verona” house a couple of years ago, we discovered a lot of allusions: the Palladian order in combination with flutes, which are characteristic of historicism, the Saint Petersburg rock-face façades, the entrance stanza of lowered proportions, also characteristic of the northern Art Nouveau, the “Mussolini” approach toward combining brick and white stone on the side façades... What was the primary thing for you back then, and how did you build up the image of a palazzo house, which, obviously, in accordance with the client’s brief, was to look very much like the neighboring “Venice”?

Evgeny Gerasimov: 

It was important for our client to boost the momentum of the commercially successful “Venice” house. What is Venice, anyway? As Brodsky put it, it is all about “huge wood-carved trunks standing alongside a channel”. And this is exactly what we got in our case. The aspect ratio of the width and the height of the building is two to one. Together with its reflection in the water, it becomes a quadrant – a totally Venetian technique. There is a staircase that survived from the Sportivnaya Hotel, which stood where the house was built; it descends down to the water, and there are posts sticking out of the water – you can tie gondolas to them.

"Venice" residential house © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners
"Verona" housimg complex © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


First, while designing “Verona” house, we took into account the stylistic preferences of our client: “historicism” in a broad sense. Second, we proceeded from the land site; it became our starting point. Its trapeze-like shape prompted us the ideas of baroque architecture. We clearly saw the main façade overlooking the Morskoy Prospect, and the secondary ones from the side of the Prozhektornaya Street and the parks lying nearby. Hence the idea to do something in the vein of an Italian house. A few Italian churches also came to mind, such as San Giorgio Maggiore, houses on the Via del Corso, whose main façades are made of stone, while the lateral and the rear ones are made of brick. It was a practice usual for those days. As far as the building materials for both houses are concerned, we use the locally produced materials, manufactured in the Leningrad region: the Klinker brick is produced by the LSR Company; in the “Venice” project, Jurassic marble was used, while in “Verona” we used Gatchina Plaster.

"Verona" housimg complex © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


"Verona" housimg complex © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


How would you define the stylistic character of “Venice” and “Verona”: is it Palladian architecture, historicism, Venetian style?

I would not go as far as to narrow this whole thing down to Palladian architecture, and I would not call it neoclassical architecture either. This is historicism, our meditation on the subject of the traditional “order” architecture. We have been observing this process all throughout the history. It was originated by Palladio, then it was picked up by Quarenghi, who is known to have jokingly sign his works as “Shadow of Palladio”. Or take Ivan Fomin, for example – isn’t he neoclassical? If classics are Greece and Rome, then Palladio is neoclassical, Quarenghi is neo-neoclassical, and Ivan Fomin, well, you get it. The Stalin-era architecture is already the fourth or fifth revision of this tradition – if we are to divide the Stalin architecture into the prewar of the 1930’s and the postwar of the 1950’s. So, why not get back to this process in the beginning of the XXI century? As Alexander block would say, no art is “not new”.

"Verona" housimg complex © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


There are architects who preach classics as the only possible principle, such as Mikhail Filippov, Maxim Atayants, Mikhail Belov... There are also those who deliberately break up from the classical tradition. And there are very few architects out there who do sturdy historicism, and who are equally at home with Art Nouveau. How do you manage to do that?

A professional architect is supposed to be able to work in a variety of styles. Whether or not it is interesting to him is a different question. Speaking about historicism doesn’t yet mean that you are able to work in this style. Knowing notes alone does not make you a composer, and if you draw Piranesi Paestums, this doesn’t mean that you can design buildings. To me, words mean nothing and the result means everything. There are no taboos for me. In this day and age of pluralism, thank God, nobody owes anybody anything, and this is equally applicable to architecture. And art does not owe anyone anything either, it is self-sufficient. Good historicism is better than amateurish art nouveau, and vice versa. I vote for quality.

The hotel at the Ostrovsky Square © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


Do you perceive your historicist and modernist projects as equal? Which projects are more comfortable for you to work with, and which are more interesting?

It’s interesting to me to do creative search in both fields. I feel stale within just one paradigm, and I don't understand why I must narrow the field of my creative interests. Call this a lack of integrity if you want to but you can also remember Oscar Wilde who said “I like persons better than principles, and I like persons with no principles better than anything else in the world”. It’s the same way as it is with food: you cannot eat one dish during your whole life, even if it is your favorite. There are brilliant architects out there, like Richard Meier, for example, who do just one thing throughout their whole life – in his specific case, architecture that solely consists of white squares. But I’d be bored to death if I found out that my whole life I would only be drawing pilasters. I definitely want more.

To me, historicism is one of the branches of modern architecture that has a market segment of its own. Our company is also interested in rethinking and revisiting the traditional techniques in new building materials and technologies; we are interested in drawing and meditating. In addition, everyone thinks that something is beautiful is he or she is used to thinking that it’s beautiful. If we ask a hundred people what they like better: the neoclassical architecture of Ivan Fomin or August Perret or, say, a neo-constructivist building, the answer will be quite predictable. In this connection, Leon Krier asked himself a question: in which houses do “star” architects live, like Norman Foster or Jean Nouvel? You will find that nine out of ten will live in houses built in the XVIII and XIX centuries. And we as a company (and I as an architect) enjoy this search in both modernist and traditional architecture that rests on the human-friendly scale and the fundamentals that our ancestors found back in the day.

The residential house in the Kovensky Lane © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


As a continuation of the previous question – possibly, the house in the Kovensky Alley is indeed the perfect solution of a reserved regard to the context and the modern glass?

This area of the city includes a timeless heritage site – the Church of the Lourdes God’s Mother, designed by Leontiy Benoit and Matian Petetyatkovich. Competing with it in any way seemed to us the wrong thing to do. This place already had a gem in it – what we did was we came up with a worthy frame for it: we convinced the client to lower the building’s height, step back from the red line and make a piazzetta in the vacated room – the gem of the project. As a result, we opened up the west façade of the church, light started streaming through the windows into the central nave, and the stained glass windows came alive – this is something that this place had not seen before. The residential part, which steps out on the red line, is executed in the rhythm of Saint Petersburg: the pier is equal to the width of the window. The sunken-in part was also treated as a “Saint Petersburg firewall”: it is slightly higher, more flat, its windows are more chaotic, and there is less details upon it.

The residential house in the Kovensky Lane © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


What do you think of the very notion of “stylization”? Because you basically can stylize anything – including the modernist techniques.

Pretty much everything that came after the Ancient Greece and Rome is essentially stylization. It’s only a matter of whether it is appropriate or not. We see stylizations of gothic things, romanticism, and whatnot. Or take something that Matvey Kazakov did in Moscow. Try and open any modern magazine – what will you see in it if not stylization? Will you see anything that wasn’t done in the 1930’s or the exploits of the modernists of the 1960-1970’s? All the modern architecture comes down to a handful of techniques. Students from Finland to Portugal draw in the same way.

The residential house in the Kovensky Lane © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


If we are to take today’s stylizations, we will see an odd note of Stalin architecture showing through now and then. What is your attitude towards it? Do you try to chase it away without much success, or do you accept it as a historical given?

I am quite happy with it, in fact. One of the characteristic features of the Stalin architecture is the constant floor height. In classicism before the First World War, in the Russian empire style, and in the works by Quarenghi, the first floor inevitably performs the auxiliary function, while the second floor is a grander one with halls and luxury apartments. As you went higher up, the height of the floors would shrink, and, finally, the mansards were inhabited by students and small-time clerks. Then, as the social structure was leveled out by the October Revolution, the floor height was standardized as well. The floors became equally high, usually from the second to the last-but-one: while in the past century the mansards were for the Raskolnikovs, today the top floors are penthouses. This typology makes today’s architects akin to the Stalin’s.

The residential house, Pobedy, 5 © Evgeny Gerasimov & Partners


The Stalin-era architecture, whether we like it or not, is one of the greatest successes of this country. When we turned our backs on it, the great architects of the modernist tradition were surprised, to put it mildly: you Russians are weird, they’d say, you have such a great achievement, and you throw it overboard without thinking twice about it.
Take the acclaimed herzog & de meuron, who say: your Stalin architecture is so chic! It’s the apogee that most of today’s architects don’t even come close to.

It really stood the test of time. As for the Soviet architecture of the 1960-1970’s, which seemed to be advanced at the time, we now dismissively call it “khrushchevki” (“Khrushchev hacks”) – it did not stand the test of time. The Stalin architecture, on the other hand, is still standing strong; it does not annoy you, and this factor alone is quite a lot – not to annoy people with your appearance.

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You have almost completed your “Russian House” project from the same historicist series. Which parts of this project do you consider to be successful and which could require some improvement?

The task was to build a big complex on a big land site. Essentially, its typology can be traced back to the Saint Petersburg tenement house: like the ones that you can see on Mokhovaya 27-29, Kamennoostrovsky 26-28, or like the Tolstoy House on the Rubinshteina Street. What we designed was one open courtyard and two private yards, from where the residents make it to their homes – the most traditional Saint Petersburg technique, really.

Multi-apartment building with integrated premises in Baskov Alley © Eugene Gerasimov and partners


The house is symmetrical from end to end, it has a main axis, each element and sub-element having an axis of its own, according to the same principle that the buildings of the Senate and Synod are designed upon. It’s flesh and blood Saint Petersburg.

The façades are essentially an attempt to rethink the pre-Peter the Great architecture, the so-called à la russe, on the Petrograd Side, on the Staronevsky Prospect, like the church built for the 300 anniversary of the Romanovs Royal House, or the Fedorovsky Gorodok in Tsarskoe Selo. 

Saint Petersburg has always been trying to “rethink” its pre-Peter the Great architecture; we are getting back to the tradition that was broken for a hundred years for obvious reasons. This was provocative to the point of being risky: it’s easy to stoop down to kitsch in such cases. But we hope that we were ultimately able to keep the good manners.

Multi-apartment building with integrated premises in Baskov Alley © Evgeny Gerasimov and Partners


When I walk past this building, I see genuine interest: people are taking their pictures against the background of this building, examine its façade, and try to make out what it is made of. A person feels it in his gut, you cannot make somebody have their picture taken against the background of a black quadrant – even if a dozen critics explain that this is the latest big thing. And in this case, people come around of their own free will, without us having to talk to them and convince them. This means that there is something to it.



Do you have plans for developing this historicism theme? You have in your portfolio Renaissance historicism, the new-Russian style, and northern Art Nouveau, and even a “Stalin” house on the Pobedy Street – do want to give preference to any particular direction?

There is no such a given like “you need to develop this” carved in stone – we always proceed from the land site and from that fleeting feeling when you just see the right thing in a flash, from our intuition. We keep walking around the future construction site for a long time, looking and trying to imagine just what will be the right thing for the customer, and what will also be an exciting thing for us to do. Each land site has a latent need for change in it; you need to be able to hear the whisper of the place.

11 September 2018

Headlines now
Birds and Streams
For the competition to design the Omsk airport, DNK ag formed a consortium, inviting VOX architects and Sila Sveta. Their project focuses on intersections, journeys, and flights – both of people and birds – as Omsk is known as a “transfer point” for bird migrations. The educational component is also carefully considered, and the building itself is filled with light, which seems to deconstruct the copper circle of the central entrance portal, spreading it into fantastic hyper-spatial “slices”.
Faraday Grid
The project of the Omsk airport by ASADOV Architects is another concept among the 14 finalists of a recent competition. It is called “The Bridge” and is inspired by both the West Siberian Exhibition of 1911 and the Trans-Siberian Railway bridge over the Irtysh River, built in 1896. On one hand, it carries a steampunk vibe, while on the other, there’s almost a sense of nostalgia for the heyday of 1913. However, the concept offers two variants, the second one devoid of nostalgia but featuring a parabola.
Midway upon the Journey of Our Life
Recently, Tatlin Publishing House released a book entitled “Architect Sergey Oreshkin. Selected Projects”. This book is not just a traditional book of the architectural company’s achievements, but rather a monograph of a more personal nature. The book includes 43 buildings as well as a section with architectural drawings. In this article, we reflect on the book as a way to take stock of an architect’s accomplishments.
Inverted Fortress
This year, there has been no shortage of intriguing architectural ideas around the Omsk airport. The project developed by the architectural company KPLN appeals to Omsk’s history as a wooden fortress that it was back in the day, but transforms the concept of a fortress beyond recognition: it “shaves off” the conical ends of “wooden logs”, then enlarges them, and then flips them over. The result is a hypostyle – a forest of conical columns on point supports, with skylights on top.
Transformation of Annenkirche
For Annenkirche (St. Anna Lutheran Church in St. Petersburg), Sergey Kuznetsov and the Kamen bureau have prepared a project that relies on the principles of the Venice Charter: the building is not restored to a specific date, historical layers are preserved, and modern elements do not mimic the authentic ones. Let’s delve into the details of these solutions.
The Paradox of the Temporary
The concept of the Russian pavilion for EXPO 2025 in Osaka, proposed by the Wowhaus architects, is the last of the six projects we gathered from the 2022 competition. It is again worth noting that the results of this competition were not finalized due to the cancellation of Russia’s participation in World Expo 2025. It should be mentioned that Wowhaus created three versions for this competition, but only one is being presented, and it can’t be said that this version is thoroughly developed – rather, it is done in the spirit of a “student assignment”. Nevertheless, the project is interesting in its paradoxical nature: the architects emphasized the temporary character of the pavilion, and in its bubble-like forms sought to reflect the paradoxes of space and time.
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.
Mirrors Everywhere
The project by Sergey Nebotov, Anastasia Gritskova, and the architectural company “Novoe” was created for the Russian pavilion at EXPO 2025, but within the framework of another competition, which, as we learned, took place even earlier, in 2021. At that time, the competition theme was “digital twins”, and there was minimal time for work, so the project, according to the architect himself, was more of a “student assignment”. Nevertheless, this project is interesting for its plan bordering on similarity with Baroque projects and the emblem of the exhibition, as well as its diverse and comprehensive reflectiveness.
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.
Arch, Pearl, Wing, Wind
In the social media of the governor of the Omsk region, voting was conducted for the best project for the city’s new airport. We asked the finalists to send over their projects and are now showcasing them. The projects are quite interesting: the client requested that the building be visually permeable throughout, and the images that the architects are working with include arches, wings, gusts of wind, and even the “Pearl” painting by Vrubel, who was actually born in Omsk.
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.