Dacha Gauswald, the first Art Nouveau house in Russia

Bolshaya Alley, 14, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

The Hauswald Dacha is one of the first buildings in the Art Nouveau style on Kamenniy Island, designed by the then-popular young architects Vladimir Chagin and Vasily Shene. It gained recognition across the Soviet Union and even abroad after the release of the film *The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson*, as this building "played" the role of Irene Adler's house. Additionally, it appeared in the films *Don Cesar de Bazan*, *The Bat*, *Without Family*, and *Maritza*.

The house received its name — Hauswald Dacha — from the surname of its first owners. A bakery master built it for his wife, Evgenia Karlovna Hauswald, following the design of architects Vladimir Chagin and Vasily Shene. The bakery master and happy husband Hauswald was no ordinary man, having engaged fashionable architects to build his own dacha on Kamenniy Island. At that time, Kamenniy was both a former property of the imperial family and a super-elite cottage settlement. Among its residents were merchant Eliseev and industrialist Putilov, lawyer Planson and professor Bekhterev, and Harbin’s founder engineer Sviyagin.


Just two years after the construction of this mansion, in 1900, Vladimir Ivanovich Chagin — a graduate of the Imperial Academy of Arts, a technical inspector for the Ministry of the Imperial Court, an architect with several major projects behind him, and later the owner of two income houses in Moscow — began serving in the cabinet of His Imperial Majesty. This did not prevent him from staying in the USSR after the revolution and working on major projects: including the reconstruction of residential buildings and the restoration of the interiors of the Sanduny Baths in Moscow. In 1948, the architect was buried at the Vvedenskoye Cemetery in Lefortovo. Most of his works in the style of St. Petersburg Art Nouveau, of which the Muscovite Chagin was one of the founders, were realized together with architect Vasily Ivanovich Shene. Little is known about Shene. His own mansion and a small park on Krestovsky Island were confiscated in 1916 due to debts. The date of his death is unknown; various sources indicate "after 1935." But Shene’s works are still alive: four dachas on Kamenniy Island (including his own, unfinished one), the income house of N. V. Chaikovsky on Nevsky Prospect, 67, the Kelkh mansion on Chaikovsky Street, 28, and several other income houses in the historic center of the Northern capital.

The architects approached the project with imagination: they emphasized the expressiveness of geometric shapes — cones, cylinders, and cubes — combining all elements together. Stone slabs, gray brick of the tower, yellow plaster walls and windows coexist with wooden carved elements of the pediments, which give the entire structure complexity and elegance. The building is almost devoid of sharp corners, smoothed, asymmetrical, allowing it to be revealed from all sides. But let’s return to the dacha. The Hauswald mansion — a very rare example of St. Petersburg Art Nouveau in wooden architecture — embodied many characteristic features of the style: emphasized asymmetry of the building’s silhouette, a complex, broken line of the roof and portals. A one-story part with a semicircular portal adjoins the wooden two-story part of the building. From the south, the complex is complemented by two wooden terraces decorated with four stone columns, and from the north — a semicircular stone turret with semicircular windows. The basement floor is made of rubble slabs (rubble or broken stone is made from limestones and sandstones). By the way, this slab is a kind of "business card" of mansions on Kamenniy Island; it was used in the decoration of almost every second building in one way or another.

The owners’ living rooms were located on the first floor, the second was allocated for guests and an office. The dacha was divided into two parts: service — southwest and residential — northeast. The kitchen, buffet, and servants’ rooms had a separate entrance. It is believed that the layout, some decorative elements, and the functional division of the building were borrowed by the project creators from the architecture of classic English cottages. Some architectural historians, however, consider the prototype style of the Hauswald dacha not "English," but "Bavarian." Which, in principle, changes nothing; stylish and imposing from the outside, the cottage remained cozy and thoughtfully designed inside.

Evgenia Karlovna Hauswald’s dacha became the first building in Petersburg where the structural principles of the new style were embodied. It is located in a well-visible place at the intersection of Bolshaya and 2nd Berezovaya Alleys, near the Big Canal. At the request of the owners of Kamenniy Island, the Dukes of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Princess of Saxe-Altenburg, free plots of Kamennoostrovsky Park were granted the highest permission to be leased long-term (for 90 years). In the same 1897, a plan for dividing the territory into plots was approved. To preserve the park landscape, new houses were prescribed to be built "in the middle of the garden," without enclosing them with solid fences, which unfortunately is completely violated today.

In 1898, a dacha and two service buildings were constructed deep within its polygonal plot. This was a milestone in the development of St. Petersburg Art Nouveau. Shene himself noted: "the style of the dacha is new, with a predominance of motifs of American wooden buildings." The influence of late 19th-century American architecture is traced both in the overall structure of the building and in such characteristic features as a cylindrical tower with a conical top, an arched portal, a terrace and veranda, and imitation of shingles in the wooden siding. At the same time, the half-timbered motif, pointed gables, and turrets liken the dacha to a miniature castle. But in its romantic appearance, there are only allusions, not direct imitation of the historic style. The free compact plan of the dacha was distinguished by a flexible interconnection of rooms. The spatial center was a two-story dining hall connected to the billiard room. The dining room was decorated with half-timbered elements and ornamental painting with plant motifs. The interiors and external appearance of the dacha have come down to us with changes and losses.

In the 1900s, its owner became Demidov, Prince of San-Donato; in 1910 — lawyer Mandel; in 1916 — the wife of actual state councilor Schwartz.

In 1910, civil engineer Lipavsky added a second floor to part of the house, and six years later extensions were made, disrupting the integrity of the original composition.

The plot is fenced with a low openwork wrought-iron grille outlined with plant scrolls. The service buildings of 1898, located in the southern corner of the yard, were expanded and rebuilt in 1910 and 1916. They echo the dacha building with their half-timbered pattern and gable silhouette. Sometimes this object is called the Hauswald-Schwartz dacha, adding the adjacent Schwartz building. (Its author is not documented but is quite likely Shene again. This is supported by the proximity of location, time (1900–1901), and, most importantly, the style of the construction.) The mansions shone and pleased the eye until the 1917 revolution.

In the first years after the October Revolution, Kamenniy Island, renamed the Island of the Workers, became depopulated. The former dacha residents disappeared, and the actual workers had not yet appeared — war, devastation. However, the once elite district gained new "owners" — homeless children. Perhaps this is why the Soviet authorities decided to nationalize the mansions at once and transfer them to the care of a children’s colony. So to speak, no need to go far. Thus, the Hauswald dacha became the home of the 3rd Lunacharsky Children’s Colony.

One of the wards, Beynar, writes: "The height of the window in the dining room was two stories, the inner frame of which was decorated with colored glass pieces depicting flowers with green leaves in a thin lead edging. Of course, these beautiful glasses did not rest in the hands of children. They were pried out of the lead edging. The lead was used for fishing weights, and the beautiful round, thick glass pieces of different colors found use in some game or were exchanged for something..." The dismantling of everything that attracted curious children’s minds continued until 1923, when the Hauswald dacha received new owners and became a sanatorium-prophylactic of the Leningrad Metal Plant.

A quiet nomenclature life flowed. The Island of the Workers earned the nickname "island of high fences," turning, in fact, into a complex of nomenclature dachas, and became quite distant both from social upheavals and the needs of workers.

In Soviet times, thanks to domestic cinema, the mansion became truly famous. In how many films this stone gentleman took part! Igor Maslennikov filmed his "Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson" here (episode "A Scandal in Bohemia"), Yan Frid — "Don Cesar de Bazan" and "The Bat".


Actors such as Vasily Livanov, Vitaly and Yuri Solomins, Nikolai Karachentsov, Mikhail Boyarsky, Anna Samokhina, Igor Dmitriev, Yuri Bogatyryov, Larisa Udovichenko, and many others performed within the house walls. Among the people, the building is known simply as Irene Adler’s house. According to the plot, she was Sherlock Holmes’s beloved woman.


In the 1990s, the house was sold to the company "Impulse," affiliated with businessman Oleg Deripaska’s structures, and stood abandoned and cold for almost twenty years. It was remembered only in 2008: at a meeting of the Council for the Preservation of Cultural Heritage under the Government of Petersburg, the issue of the Hauswald dacha was considered.

And so the newspaper "Saint Petersburg Vedomosti" on August 20, 2019, reported:

"The restoration of the bakery masters’ Hauswald dacha has been completed in Saint Petersburg. The late 19th-century building is located on Kamennoostrovsky Island. It was built combining stone and wooden (pine and larch) structures. For many years, the mansion deteriorated and became unusable due to improper maintenance. It was even threatened with demolition. Nevertheless, in 2017 specialists began the restoration process. They managed to preserve more than 70% of the historic log structure and more than 80% of the rafter system. The commissioning of the Hauswald dacha is scheduled for December. Possibly, tourists will be able to visit the mansion."

The thorough and expensive restoration of the monument, designed by the now late Petersburg architect Rafael Dayanov, was successfully completed at the end of 2019; the work was fully funded by the owner of the company "Vozrozhdenie." The owners of "Vozrozhdenie," at the time of the company’s 2020 report publication, were Valentina Petrovna Deripaska and Margarita Balina. Valentina Petrovna is the full namesake of the mother of Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska.

Currently, the entrance to the mansion is closed, the fence that appeared after the restoration was removed, and although it is not possible to enter the house now, it can be viewed from the outside and beautiful photographs can be taken.

Sources:

https://dzen.ru/media/stone_spb/sanktpeterburg-istoriia-osobniaka-gausvald-pervyi-v-rossii-5e1f019516ef9000ae91028a

https://www.citywalls.ru/house1603.html

https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/2324586

https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Дача_Гаусвальд

https://www.fontanka.ru/2021/11/21/70266545/

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More stories from Petersburg: Estates of the City and Surroundings (Leningrad Region)

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The Estate of G. R. Derzhavin - Roman Catholic Spiritual Collegium

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Lost Estates: The Gostilitsy Estate

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The toponym "Gostilitsy" seems to mean "for guests," which was in the spirit of this residence, where mostly hospitable hosts lived, and the flow of guests and festivities never ceased. Among the estate's owners were prominent figures, statesmen, and well-known names of the most noble aristocratic families: Minikh, Razumovsky, Potemkin, Wrangel.

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Agafon Fabergé Estate (Fabergé Dacha)

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The Fabergé Dacha is a country estate of the Fabergé family in Levashovo, which earned the nickname "Little Hermitage" among contemporaries due to the richest collection of art objects placed by the dacha's owner, Agafon Fabergé, within the walls of its main house. It was built in 1901–1902 based on a design by Karl Schmidt and expanded in 1908–1910 under the direction of architect Ivan Galnbek.

Follenweider Mansion

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At the beginning of the 20th century, Eduard Follenweider, a tailor and supplier to the Imperial Court, turned to Roman Meltzer — an architect who was building a house for himself nearby in this settlement — with a request to design a house for him. The building is the first and most striking example of Northern Art Nouveau. This style was actively developing at the time in St. Petersburg under the influence of Scandinavian architecture. In Follenweider’s house project, the architect used a complex combination of shapes and volumes, as well as finishing materials unusual for the region. Among the locals, due to the particularly prominent large tiled roof in the overall composition, the house quickly earned the nickname "Sugar Head."

The Mansion of Countess Kleinmichel

nab. Krestovka River, 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197110

The mansion of Countess Kleinmichel, a remarkable architectural monument, is located in the northwestern part of Kamenny Island, on the bank of the Krestovka River, a tributary of the Malaya Nevka, which separates Kamenny and Krestovsky Islands.

Melzer Estate ("Baba Yaga's House," "Fairy Tale House") and the Dispute Associated with It

Polevaya Alley, 8, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

At the beginning of the 20th century, the master of St. Petersburg Art Nouveau, Roman Fyodorovich Meltzer, decided to build his own house on Kamenny Island. From 1901, the architect's project underwent multiple changes, and in 1904 it was finalized. The Meltzer mansion, which can be seen from the Krestovka embankment, is one of the key monuments of northern Art Nouveau in St. Petersburg. When constructing the mansion, Meltzer used motifs of ancient Russian architecture and Russian national architecture. Undoubtedly, elements of Finnish national romanticism played a significant role in the appearance of the house. The walls made of roughly hewn stone, massive logs, and the high-rising pyramidal roof give the house a picturesque quality. The most attention is drawn to the gable roof, which becomes the defining part of the silhouette and soars upward.

Mansion of V. I. Shöne

Teatralnaya Alley, 3, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

Schöne worked on the design of his own house from 1900 to 1903. Initially, his mansion was supposed to represent a complex compositional group united by the symbolic theme of the "temple of labor." The idea was inspired by the work of architect J.-M. Olbrich for the Darmstadt Artists' Colony (1901). However, Schöne's original concept was not realized, possibly due to its high cost. One of the buildings in the complex planned by Schöne was a small wing, which the architect redesigned into a mansion. The city council issued a permit for the construction of this house on May 30, 1903.

E. I. Lumberg's Dacha (wooden) - Einar Kunttu's Dacha

Primorskoe Highway, 570L, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197720

A truly fabulous example of Art Nouveau, a dacha on the edge of the forest with a facade facing a sandy beach. This neglected architectural masterpiece stands near St. Petersburg, in Zelenogorsk on Primorsky Highway, 570. This is the Lumberg dacha.

"House with a Mezzanine" - A. Gintzel's Dacha

Primorskoe Highway, 566, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199004

In Zelenogorsk, there is a small cozy one-story mansion with a mezzanine, built at the beginning of the 20th century in the Art Nouveau style. The house is distinguished by a mezzanine with rounded walls and first-floor windows adorned with original casings featuring the flowing lines of pure Art Nouveau. The house belonged to Arthur Gintzel, who owned extensive plots here.

M. K. Kugusheva Mansion - B. M. Kustodiev Children's Art School

Side Alley, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

The dacha is located in the central part of Kamenniy Island. After the "highest" approval of the plan for dividing it into plots for lease in 1897, this area began to be intensively developed. In 1898, the widow of Staff Rotmistr Princess Kugusheva leased a plot between the Middle and Side alleys and the embankment of the Malaya Nevka River for 90 years. In the summer of the same year, construction began according to architect Preis's project of a two-story "large dacha," a temporary house, a stable, a janitor's house, and an icehouse, continuing until 1899.

The house of Academician V. M. Bekhterev

Embankment of the Malaya Nevka River, 25, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

On Kamenny Island, on the embankment of the Malaya Nevka, there is a house that belonged to and was lived in by academician Vladimir Mikhailovich Bekhterev. This two-story historic building is not surrounded by a high wall, so it can be clearly seen. Currently, the house contains several apartments, and its history began more than 100 years ago.

The estate of Academician V. M. Bekhterev "Quiet Shore"

Primorskoe Highway, 690, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197729

"Quiet Shore" is the name of the estate of Academician Bekhterev (owned by the scientist from 1857 to 1927), a renowned practicing scientist in the field of psychiatry. The complex of the academician's estate is located in Smolyachkovo (Ino village), Kurortny District of Saint Petersburg, at the address: Primorskoye Highway, 690. The estate, covering an area of 31.8 desyatinas, is situated on the picturesque shore of the Gulf of Finland. It was the scientist's favorite place for rest, where he spent the entire summer, swimming in the gulf. He took care of the improvement of his dacha. But he did not forget about work either: here he wrote his scientific papers and traveled to the city three times a week to see patients.

Sellgren Estate on Lodochny Island

MM7J+CP Sokolinskoye, Leningrad Oblast, Russia

The Russian island of Lodochny was owned by the commercial advisor E.V. Sellgren. In 1913, according to the project of architect Uno Ullberg, he built a beautiful villa made of red brick. The Sellgren estate was used for the filming of the Sherlock Holmes movie directed by Maslennikov, "The 20th Century Begins"; it served as the lair of the German spy von Bork.

House of P. I. Goze (Sherman the Scarecrow's House)

Side Alley, 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

On Kamenny Island, there are few historical houses left that have remained untouched since the 1990s. The house of Petr Goze, later rebuilt into the summer residence of Mrs. Orlova, is one of the vivid examples of the Art Nouveau era, when buildings were still constructed from wood.

Annex of the Goze House

Bolshaya Alley, 12, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

Wooden tongs, roof overhangs on wooden brackets projecting over the stone volume, windows of various shapes — a distinctive interpretation of the architectural traditions of Western Europe.

Dacha of E. L. Leonova (Apraksin House)

13 Akademika Pavlova St., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197022

In 1901, the old dacha located on this plot was transferred to the actress of the Imperial Theatres, Elizaveta Leonova, for whom the architect Anatoly Kovsharov built a lavish two-story mansion with a tower in 1902. The building has a compact plan, symmetrical facade composition, with an architectural design stylized in the forms of early classicism (the so-called "Louis XVI style") and Renaissance.

The dacha of Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich

Moskovskoye Highway, 23, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196601

The summer residence of Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich — an Art Nouveau estate of Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich, built in 1896–1897 by the London firm "Maple" under the direction of architects Sherborne and Scott. The estate "played" the role of Ronald Adair's house in the film *The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson* in the episode "The Tiger Hunt," and its interior was used as a hotel in Meiringen in the episode "Deadly Fight."

The Summer House of Prince Oldenburg (Dolgorukov's Summer House)

nab. Malaya Nevka River, 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

The Oldenburg Dacha (also known as the Dolgorukov Dacha; Saint Petersburg, Malaya Nevka Embankment, 11) is one of the most important structures on Kamenny Island, a monument of wooden architecture from the era of Russian classicism, built in 1831–1833 by the architect S. L. Shustov.

Dacha of P. S. Petrova

Embankment of the Malaya Nevka River, 12, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

The wooden summer house of P. S. Petrova, the wife of a hereditary honorary citizen, was built in the 1880s by the Oranienbaum court architect G. A. Preis. Originally, the summer house was surrounded by a fence. During the Soviet era, communal apartments were located here. In 1995, the building was reconstructed as a holiday resort. The summer house was restored in 2004 (a brick frame with wooden cladding was built) and adapted into a hotel.

Vurgaft's Dacha (Blue Dacha)

Krestovka River Embankment, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

The mansion of M. A. Vurgaft is also known as the "Blue Dacha." The architect was Moisey Markovich Sinyaver, and it was built in 1913-1914. In the summer of 1916, the interiors of the mansion were painted by the artist-decorator P. Maksimovich. On the pylons of the central oval hall, he depicted dancing female figures — Evening, Morning, Day, Night.

The mansion of V.N. Yakovenko, "Professor's House"

Petrogradskaya Embankment, building 34, lit. B, room 1-N, office 514, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

A two-story building designed in the style of French Gothic and Renaissance. The professor's house is connected by a passage to the building of the Saint Petersburg Marine Fisheries College.

Dacha of V. I. and P. I. Kozhevnikov (Ruadze House)

Embankment of the Malaya Nevka River, 33a, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197376

The plot is located in the southern part of Kamenniy Island. At the end of the 18th century, Paul I granted an extensive territory to the wife of Lieutenant Gibler, from which the Kozhevnikovs' dacha later emerged.

The estate "Aholla – Hall," now the "Lesogorskaya" hotel

3V97+R8 Svetogorsk, Leningrad Oblast, Russia

The estate "Aholla – Hall," now the "Lesogorskaya" hotel, is located in the Vyborgsky District of the Leningrad Region, in a pine forest on the shore of a pristine lake. An astonishingly beautiful former estate of Karl Oskar Eugen Wolf, Aholan kartano (Ahola Estate), was built by the outstanding architect Uno Werner Ullberg, the chief architect of Vyborg, between 1921 and 1923.

Lost Estates: The Saarela Estate

The Saarela estate, which was formerly located 8 km from Vyborg on the road to Imatra, belonged to Count Fabian Gotthard (Faddey Fyodorovich) von Steingel. He served under the command of A.V. Suvorov, participated in the war against Napoleon, and was the governor-general of Finland.

Kiiskilä Estate, settlement

The Kiiskilä Estate is located in the Vyborg district of the Leningrad region, on the shore of the Gulf of Finland.

Lost Estates: Mutalakhti Estate

What remains of the estate are solid foundations, cellars, wells, and a staircase leading to the lake. The relatively intact structure is the former stable on the lakeshore. Currently, the area is a developing cottage settlement.

Lost Estates: Maksimov's Dacha in Oranienbaum

Krasnoflotskoye Highway, 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198412

Maximov's dacha in the town of Lomonosov (Oranienbaum) on Krasnoflotskoye Highway, 16, is a federal architectural monument. A researcher of the architectural heritage of the Peterhof Road and Oranienbaum, Gorbatenko, wrote in his monograph: “The facades and even (a rare case) the interiors of the main building have largely preserved their historical architecture.” This house is a kind of “last of the Mohicans” of the extensive dacha heritage from the turn of the 19th-20th centuries along the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland.

Dachas of M.N. Benois, A.A. Grube, and L.I. Kron near Peterhof

Primorskaya St., 8 building 4, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198504

On the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland, in a picturesque spot between Peterhof and Oranienbaum, there was a thriving summer cottage settlement at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. The owners of the local plots were famous St. Petersburg families, among them the Kronys, Meisners, Grubes, San-Gallis, and Benois. Today, only four neglected cottages remain of the once magnificent settlement.

The building of the V.I. Truveller estate.

Saint Petersburg Ave., 42, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198510

In 1900, this building housed a telephone exchange. It is a two-story mansion with a three-story observation tower and a pointed arch connecting it to a small wing. This building was constructed in 1834-36 and was given as a dowry for the daughter Vera.

Gromov's Dacha in Lopukhin Garden

Akademika Pavlova St, 13, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197022

However, the modern history of the garden begins in 1848, when it was acquired by the merchant, timber industrialist, and well-known philanthropist Vasily Fedulovich Gromov. By the early 1850s, a two-story wooden dacha was built for him based on a design by architect Georgy Ivanovich Winterhalter. Gornostayev constructed several greenhouses. The redesign of the park and garden was undertaken by Odintsov, who was later appointed chief gardener of Saint Petersburg. Fountains, gazebos, grottos, and hanging bridges over ponds and channels were installed here. The "Caucasian" bridge was especially interesting. Of the three bridges, two have survived to this day. A stone terrace with stairs was laid out by the pond.

Saltykova's Dacha

TD "Burda Moden, Akademika Krylova St., 4, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197183

The history of this place begins in 1743. It was then that Baron Sergey Stroganov became the owner of the plot near the Chyornaya Rechka metro station. The construction of the building was undertaken by Petr Sadovnikov, a former serf of the Golitsyn family and an architect, while the decoration of the facades and interiors was supervised by Harald Bosse. The construction was completed in 1843. The building's facade faced Stroganovskaya Street (now Akademika Krylova Street). The mansion was surrounded by a landscaped park, part of which has been preserved as Stroganov Garden. The main entrance is marked by gates consisting of two pseudo-Tudor towers with battlements and loopholes. These have also survived to this day. One of the most famous Sherlock Holmes episodes, "The Bloody Inscription," was filmed here.

Dacha of Adelia Fyodorovna Tasheit

Lakhtinsky Ave., 115, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197229

A wooden building in the Art Nouveau style was constructed in 1914 based on the design of architect Sergey Osipovich Ovsyannikov for the widow of the hereditary honorary citizen, customs forwarder Karl-Friedrich-Lorenz (Karl Fyodorovich) Tasheita.

Income House and Merchant Ivanov’s Mansion or the “House with a Peacock”

Bolshaya Porokhovskaya St., 18, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 195176

House No. 18 on Bolshaya Porokhovskaya Street seems to try to hide itself, standing slightly set back, concealing its narrow main facade behind tall, sprawling trees. But the elegant balcony railings and the intricate metal crest (with the initials "PI" and the year of construction – "1901") above the tented roof cap invariably draw the eye.

Utkina Dacha (Okkervil Manor)

Utkin Ave., 2A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 195027

A former estate, a federal architectural monument in Saint Petersburg, located on a cape at the confluence of the Okkervil River into the Okhta River. It was built for Mark Poltoratsky, director of the Court Singing Chapel, and his wife Agafokleya. Later, the estate was owned by Princess Zinaida Shakhovskaya (in her second marriage — Utkina). As of 2017, Utkina Dacha is a branch of the Museum of Urban Sculpture; the building is not in use. Restoration work is planned, with the estate intended to be used for museum and scientific-educational activities.

The Bezzarov Dacha or Zhernovka

Irinovsky Ave., 9, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 195279

Former noble estate. Throughout its history, it has changed owners and names multiple times. The estate was built at the end of the 18th century, presumably by architect Giacomo Quarenghi, and was reconstructed in the 1880s. After the revolution, it fell into decline.

Bezborodko Dacha (Kushelev-Bezborodko Estate, "Kushelev Dacha")

Sverdlovskaya Embankment, 40, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 195027

An old manor and park ensemble in Saint Petersburg on the right bank of the Neva River on Sverdlovskaya Embankment (Polyustrovskaya Embankment). The manor is famous for the lion sculptures placed in front of the facade of the main building.

Chernov's Dacha or Sosnovka

Oktyabrskaya Embankment, 72, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 193079

Chernov's Dacha, or Sosnovka, is a monument of the architectural eclecticism period in the Nevsky District of Saint Petersburg, located on the right bank of the Neva River, above the Volodarsky Bridge, opposite the former River Station.

Lost Estates: Ulyanka Estate

Stachek Ave, 206, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198262

Ulyánka is a former estate on the Peterhof Road near Saint Petersburg, which belonged to the Sheremetev count family from 1806 to 1917.

Cherkasov Estate in Redkino

526L+RW Redkino, Leningrad Oblast, Russia

The Redkino Estate in the village of the same name is a large and once prosperous manor, which became the ancestral home for several aristocratic and bourgeois families.

Vasilyevsky Palace (also called Vasilyev's House, Vasilyev's Dacha, Mansion of the Vasilyev Brothers)

97PP+34 Vyritsa, Leningrad Oblast, Russia

The palace in the village of Vyritsa, on the left bank of the Oredezh River (Leningrad Region), is a paraphrase of palaces in the Baroque style (Peterhof, Winter, and Tsarskoye Selo).