11 Facts About Stalinist architecture

1.

Stalinist architecture, mostly known in the former Eastern Bloc as Stalinist style or Socialist Classicism, is the architecture of the Soviet Union under the leadership of Joseph Stalin, between 1933 and 1955.

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2.

Stalinist architecture is associated with the Socialist realism school of art and architecture.

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3.

Post-war Stalinist architecture, sometimes perceived as a uniform style, was fragmented into at least four vectors of development:.

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4.

Stalinist architecture canon was officially condemned when two more sections, to Luzhniki and VDNKh, were being built.

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5.

The first major Stalinist architecture building in Germany was the Soviet embassy in Unter den Linden.

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6.

Central buildings built in the Stalinist architecture manner included the House of the Free Press in Romania and the complex of the Largo, Sofia, in Bulgaria.

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7.

In Hungary a Stalinist architecture style was adopted for the new town of Sztalinvaros and many other housing, government and infrastructural projects during the 1950s.

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8.

Stalinist architecture styles were used for the design of Soviet embassies outside of the Eastern Bloc, notably the embassy in Helsinki, Finland.

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9.

Stalinist architecture joined architects Mikhail Posokhin and Ashot Mndoyants, and in 1948 this team built their first concrete frame-and-panel building near present-day Polezhaevskaya metro station.

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10.

Stalinist architecture continued for five more years – work on old buildings was not a top priority anymore.

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11.

The last Stalinist architecture building, the Hotel Ukrayina in Kiev, was completed in 1961.

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