Valery Vladimirovich Stashevsky (1882-1945, 1950?) - Russian civil engineer and architect, one of the most productive Russian architects in Yugoslavia .
| Valery Vladimirovich Stashevsky | |
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| Basic information | |
| A country | |
| Date of Birth | |
| Date of death | or |
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| Work and Achievements | |
| Study | Institute of Civil Engineers (1911) |
| Worked in the cities | Saint Petersburg , Belgrade |
| The most important buildings | Church of the Holy Trinity (Belgrade) , Iverskaya Chapel at the New Cemetery in Belgrade |
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 Works
- 3 See also
- 4 References
- 5 Literature
Biography
Born in 1882. He graduated from the Nikolaev Military Engineering Academy (1908) and the Institute of Civil Engineers of Emperor Nicholas I (1911). He built the main buildings of the Officer Automobile School on Semenovsky Platz and the Officer Aeronautical School on Volkov Field in St. Petersburg.
In the early 1920s he emigrated to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes . He joined the Ministry of Construction. In 1921, three residential buildings were built according to his designs.
In 1924, on the donations of Russians and Serbs, the church of St. Trinity in Belgrade , in which General Baron Wrangel was buried.
In 1925 he began to work independently, in 1927 he registered his own company. During these years, he built the building of the monastery school in the Rakovitsa monastery in the ancient Serbian tradition.
Until 1944, he designed 135 houses for Belgrade. The Belgrade Historical Archive houses over a thousand of his projects.
After World War II, he moved to Morocco .
Works
- House of Russian military invalids on Vozhdovets (1929)
- Iversky Chapel at the New Cemetery in Belgrade, (1930; recreates the image of the Moscow chapel of the same name, destroyed in 1929)
- School in Chukaritsa (1931)
- Club of lovers of rowing sports “Beograd” on the Ada of Ciganlia (1935, together with his son George)
- Club of officials of the People's Bank on Topchider (1938)
See also
- Baumgarten, Vasily Fedorovich
- Verkhovskaya, Roman Nikolaevich
- Krasnov, Nikolai Petrovich (architect)
Links
- Stashevsky Valery Vladimirovich // Art and architecture of the Russian Diaspora.
Literature
- Kosik V.I. Russian colors on the Balkan palette. M., 2010.S. 336, 342-345, 363.