- Source: Dmitry Chechulin
Dmitry Nikolaevich Chechulin (Russian: Дми́трий Никола́евич Чечу́лин; 22 August [O.S. 9 August] 1901, in Shostka – 29 October 1981, in Moscow) was a Russian Soviet architect, city planner, author, and leading figure of Stalinist architecture.
Life
Born in Shostka (Sumy Oblast, today in Ukraine) to a working-class family, after service in the Red Army Chechulin enrolled in the state school Vkhutemas and graduated in 1929, doing post-graduate work under Alexey Shchusev.
In the 1930s Chechulin was awarded commissions for four stations of the Moscow Metro, and developed his career to design a list of familiar Moscow landmarks. From 1945 through 1949 he served as chief architect of Moscow.
Chechulin's work intersects with the Palace of the Soviets competition (the major event in Soviet architectural history) at multiple points. He was among the twelve finalists in the final round. He is credited for the Kotelnicheskaya Embankment Building, one of the seven Moscow vysotki (tall buildings) commissioned by Stalin after World War II as a "frame" for, and then in lieu of, the unbuilt Palace. Chechulin had produced plans for the unbuilt eighth tower, the Zaryadye skyscraper, in 1947. And when, after decades of neglect and delay, the huge excavation for the Palace of the Soviets finally became the world's largest open-air swimming pool in 1958, he was the architect.
Chechulin wrote nearly 40 books, pamphlets, monographs and articles on architecture, urban planning and design issues. Among his many awards were Hero of Socialist Labour (1976), People's Architect of the USSR (1971), two Orders of Lenin, two Orders of the Red Banner of Labour, the Order of Honour, and three Stalin Prizes (1941, 1949, 1953).
He died 29 October 1981 and is buried at Novodevichy Cemetery.
Work
The following works are in Moscow unless otherwise indicated:
Komsomolskaya (Sokolnicheskaya Line) station, Moscow Metro, 1935
vestibules for Okhotny Ryad Metro station, 1935
Kievskaya (Filyovskaya Line) Metro station, 1937
vestibules for the Dynamo Metro station, 1938
the Moscow Pavilion at the All-Union Agricultural Exhibition, now the All-Russia Exhibition Centre, 1939
Tchaikovsky Concert Hall, 1940
the Victory Bridge (with sculptor Nikolai Tomsky), 1943
the Stalinist skyscraper at the Kotelnicheskaya Embankment (one of the Seven Sisters), 1947–1952
the Peking Hotel, 1955
Moskva Pool, 1958
the White House, 1965–1981
the Rossiya Hotel, Moscow, on the site of the unbuilt Zaryadye tower, 1967 (razed 2006)
Sources
Chechulin's Palace of the Soviets entry
list of buildings
External links
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kolam Moskow
- Kiyevskaya (Jalur Filyovskaya)
- Gedung Putih (Moskwa)
- Daftar Pahlawan Uni Soviet (C)
- Istana Soviet
- Dmitry Chechulin
- White House (Moscow)
- Eighth Sister
- Rossiya Hotel
- Seven Sisters (Moscow)
- Kotelnicheskaya Embankment Building
- Moskva Pool
- Sumy Oblast
- Hotel Ukraina, Moscow
- Kremlin Wall Necropolis