General Staff Building (Moscow)

Coordinates: 55°27′02″N 37°21′41″E / 55.4505°N 37.3613°E / 55.4505; 37.3613
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General Staff Building
Здание Генерального штаба
Headquarters of the Russian General Staff in Autumn 2009
Map
General information
StatusCompleted
LocationMoscow, Russia
AddressZnamenka 14/1, Moscow, Russia[1]
Current tenantsRussian General Staff
Construction started1979
Completed1987
OwnerRussian Defence Ministry
Technical details
Floor count8

The General Staff Building (Russian: Здание Генерального штаба, Zdanie General'nogo shtaba) is the headquarters of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, situated on Arbatskaya Square in Central Administrative Okrug of Moscow, Russia.

The building was designed by Mikhail Posokhin who was the main architect of Moscow (1960–1982), and built in 1979–1987.[2]

History[edit]

To clear the place for the building, the buildings on Znamenka, Vozdvizhenka, and Arbatskaya Square were demolished. In particular, the house where Nikolai Rubinstein and Pyotr Tchaikovsky lived in their youth was destroyed, as well as the hotel where Sergei Rachmaninoff lived.

In the courtyard of the building is the ground lobby of the Moscow Metro station Arbatskaya of the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line. During the construction of the building, new exits from the lobby through the building were arranged towards Vozdvizhenka, and the old ones, to Arbatskaya Square, were closed.

Architecture[edit]

The General Staff building occupies an entire quarter. One of its facades faces Arbatskaya Square.[2] The building has eight floors. The walls are decorated with marble, Ural stone – serpentine and granite. The facades have horizontal and vertical divisions. The architectural style as a whole is characteristic of Soviet administrative buildings of the 1960s–1970s, but also includes certain features of 1980s postmodernism in the decorative design of the portals and the design of the crowning part of the structure.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ RF MOS website www.mil.ru accessed 20 December 2019.
  2. ^ a b c И. Л. Бусева-Давыдова, М. В. Нащокина, М. И. Астафьева-Длугач (1997). Москва: Архитектурный путеводитель. Moscow: Стройиздат. p. 82. ISBN 5-274-01624-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links[edit]

55°27′02″N 37°21′41″E / 55.4505°N 37.3613°E / 55.4505; 37.3613