Tuchkov Buyan - the legendary Biron’s palace or hemp warehouses?

Bolshoy Prospekt P.S., 1A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197198

Tuchkov Buyan (from the archaic *buyan* — a river pier; a place for unloading goods from ships), was mistakenly called the "Biron Palace" in the 19th century — a former building of hemp warehouses, constructed between 1763 and 1772 on the eponymous islet in the channel of the Malaya Neva, a monument of early classical St. Petersburg architecture. At the beginning of the 20th century, the channels between Buyan, neighboring unnamed islets, and Petrogradsky Island were filled in, and the name "Tuchkov Buyan" was transferred to a new urban area bounded by the modern Dobrolyubov Avenue to the north, Tuchkova Dam Street and Tuchkov Bridge to the west, Academician Likhachyov Square and Birzhevoy Bridge to the east, and the Malaya Neva to the south. The extensive block, which was planned to include Vatny Island as well, was intended to become a museum and exhibition complex; this project did not materialize due to the outbreak of World War I. In the 21st century, in the western part of Tuchkov Buyan, near the historic hemp warehouses, are located the Yubileyny sports complex and the Sportivnaya metro station.
Tuchkov Buyan (from the archaic word "buyan" — a river pier; a place for unloading goods from ships), in the 19th century was mistakenly called the "Biron Palace" — the former hemp warehouse building, constructed in 1763–1772 on the eponymous islet in the channel of the Malaya Neva, a monument of early classical St. Petersburg architecture. At the beginning of the 20th century, the channels between Buyan, the neighboring unnamed islets, and Petrogradsky Island were filled in, and the name "Tuchkov Buyan" passed to the new urban territory, bounded by the modern Dobrolyubov Avenue to the north, Tuchkova Dam Street and Tuchkov Bridge to the west, Academician Likhachyov Square and the Birzhevoy Bridge to the east, and the Malaya Neva to the south. The extensive block, which was planned to include Vatny Island as well, was intended to become a museum and exhibition complex; this project did not materialize due to the outbreak of World War I.
In the 21st century, in the western part of Tuchkov Buyan, near the historic hemp warehouses, are located the "Yubileyny" sports complex and the "Sportivnaya" metro station.

Tuchkov Bridge and Tuchkova Embankment, a mid-19th century painting. On the right, across the river, the western warehouse building and the hemp Buyan weigh house are visible.
The islet in the channel of the Malaya Neva, later named Tuchkov Buyan, emerged after the flood of 1726. Soon a pier was arranged on the islet, and in 1735 — warehouses for hemp. In the mid-18th century, the area received its name from Avraam Tuchkov — the builder of the first bridge connecting Vasilievsky Island with Petrogradsky Island. On June 29, 1761, the wooden buildings from the time of Anna Ioannovna burned down, and in 1763–1772, military engineer Dyakov built a stone Buyan building on their site based on a design by Dedenev, revised by Rinaldi. In the same years, very close to the Buyan, Dyakov built the Prince Vladimir Cathedral according to Rinaldi's design (https://reveal.world/story/knyaz-vladimirskij-sobor).
The facade of the Buyan facing Vasilievsky Island is strictly symmetrical. In the center is a compact two-story volume of the weigh house (weight office), to the left and right of it are four-story warehouse buildings connected to the weigh house by covered galleries. According to the design, the warehouses were two-storied; only during construction was each planned floor divided into two. From the north, on the side of Petrogradsky Island, the weigh house adjoined a now lost two-story, squat building of the shofa — premises for sorting flax and hemp.
The Buyan building is painted yellow. It is associated with a curious episode in 1904: artists working in the studios of the Academy on Tuchkova Embankment actively protested against painting the weathered Buyan. Kuindzhi, Klodt, and others proposed "to paint it not yellow, but gray, as it disturbs us too much with its yellow color and gives a yellow reflex in our art studios, which is inconvenient for painting…".
Until the revolutions of 1917, the Buyan was under the jurisdiction of port services (initially imperial, in the 20th century municipal) and was used as a warehouse as intended; however, both among the public and among architects and city officials, the mistaken name "Biron Palace" stuck to it. Only in 1908 did Fomin, relying on the opinions of Benois and Kotov, refute the legend in "Old Years." Fomin mistakenly dated the building to the era of Anna Ioannovna; this misconception was disproved in the 1910s.
Until the end of the 19th century, the chain of islets between Tuchkov Buyan and the Birzhevoy Bridge was not regulated; the outlines of the islets on maps of the 18th–19th centuries continuously changed, and the territory of Vatny Island was formed only by 1858. The shoreline of Petrogradsky Island had a natural, irregular shape. The swampy area to the north of it was called Mokrushi. In the 1840s, Alexandrovsky and Petrovsky parks were laid out here, and in the 1860s, Alexandrovsky Avenue (now Dobrolyubov Avenue) was laid along the shore of the channel. In the following decade, active development of Mokrushi began on the northern side of the avenue; in 1880, Alexander II approved a plan to unite the small islets with Petrogradsky Island. On the new urban territory, south of Alexandrovsky Avenue, four regular-shaped blocks were to appear.
The 1880 project was not implemented. On three islets near Tuchkov Buyan, the city placed a nursery for ornamental plants; on Vatny Island in 1896–1897, according to Marfeld's project, "red barns" of the state wine warehouse and vodka factory were built. Kurbatov, who considered the green islets on the Malaya Neva "one of the most pleasant places in Petersburg," wrote that their "view … is spoiled by the wooden Birzhevoy Bridge and the wine factory." In 1902–1905, the city expanded the dam of Tuchkov Bridge, reliably connecting Tuchkov Buyan with Petrogradsky Island; in 1908, Nicholas II approved the second official project for the expansion of Petrogradsky Island. By 1911, the channels between Tuchkov Buyan, the islets adjoining it from the east, and Petrogradsky Island were filled in; only Vatny Island remained isolated — the "fortress" of the state wine monopoly. On maps from the time of World War I, the entire new territory of Petrogradsky Island is occupied by the city nursery; active development began here only in the mid-20th century.

Ivan Fomin, 1913. Competition project for a museum and exhibition center on Tuchkov Buyan. View from Tuchkov Bridge towards the Peter and Paul Fortress. At the bottom right is the hemp Buyan building, on the left Alexandrovsky Avenue with the passage to the Vladimir Cathedral.

At the beginning of the 20th century, a new cultural center of the city was forming on the south of the Petrograd side, oriented towards the masses. Until 1897, the first St. Petersburg zoo operated on the territory of Alexandrovsky Park; in 1899–1900, the first phase of the People's House was built. In Petrovsky Park, which since 1899 was at the disposal of the Temperance Society, a theater, carousels, and a boat station were built. It is no coincidence that the new territories located between Alexandrovsky and Petrovsky parks were considered as public, popular spaces.
During preparations for the bicentennial celebration of Petersburg, proposals were repeatedly made to arrange a city museum in the "Biron Palace." In 1904, Tarasov proposed placing the city archive there. In 1905, Tarkhanov suggested creating a public-sports center; in 1906, Repin requested to allocate the Buyan building for a permanent art exhibition. Then, as the channels were filled and the territory expanded, city authorities and the public engaged in projects to arrange the "new" Tuchkov Buyan — from Tuchkov to Birzhevoy Bridge. The fate of the "old" Buyan, built by Dyakov and Rinaldi, was yet to be decided: the city seriously considered demolishing it to build a new museum and exhibition complex. Debates about demolition or preservation of the Buyan continued at least until 1915.
Active research on the new territories began around 1911–1912 in connection with plans to hold two all-Russian exhibitions in Petersburg. In 1912, the Petersburg Society of Architects, on behalf of city authorities, held the first open competition for exhibition complex projects; according to its conditions, the "Biron Palace" was to be preserved and adapted as a museum. In 1913, a second, closed competition took place between the projects of Dubinsky (winner of the 1912 competition), Munz, and Fomin. This time, architects were given the right to independently decide the fate of the Buyan, up to its complete demolition. Fomin preserved the main facade of the Buyan in his project; Dubinsky and Munz decided to get rid of it entirely. Munz wrote that the building was completely unsuitable for a museum, its reconstruction was unjustified, and its artistic value was exaggerated: "it is merely a barn, which only accidentally, or perhaps with a view to a very distant viewer, was given the appearance of a palace. The building is constructed very solidly, but crudely in details…".

With the outbreak of World War I, holding the all-Russian exhibitions became impossible, but the city continued to search for planning solutions. However, by 1915, the opinion of the architectural community shifted towards preserving historical buildings. Lidval, Belogrud, and others proposed abandoning the public center on Tuchkov Buyan altogether, moving it westward to Petrovsky Island. This approach was implemented, starting with the construction of the stadium in the 1920s.

Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuchkov_Buyan

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More stories from Great Architects: Antonio Rinaldi

Entrance Honor Gates

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So are the slides Russian or American after all? Pavilion "Sliding Hill"

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Grotto "Echo"

Dvortsovaya Sq., 1, Gatchina, Leningrad Region, Russia, 188307

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Kagul (Rumyantsev) Obelisk

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Monument to Alexander Dmitrievich Lansky ("Marble Pedestal in Honor of Virtue and Merit") — a monument in the Catherine Park of Tsarskoye Selo, dedicated to the memory of Catherine II's favorite, A. D. Lansky. It was presumably constructed according to a design by the Italian architect A. Rinaldi in 1773 as an abstract architectural allegory of "virtues and merits," not associated with any specific person or event. It became a monument to Lansky after his death in 1784.

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Monument in the city of Pushkin (Saint Petersburg). It was erected according to a design, presumably by Rinaldi, as part of the complex of buildings of the Reserve Yard and guardhouses, constructed in the 1770s beyond the Catherine Park, on territory later incorporated into the Babolovsky Park. The column was erected after the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca, likely in memory of the conquest of Crimea during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774. After the annexation of Crimea to the Russian Empire in 1783, the monument was complemented by a sculptural composition of bronze trophies designed by G. I. Kozlov, installed at the top of the column. The monument, standing on a granite base, was made from a single monolith of "Siberian" marble, quarried in the Urals near Yekaterinburg. The Crimean Column became one of a series of military memorials that appeared in Tsarskoye Selo in the 1770s, associated with the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774.

Orlovskie (Gatchina) Gates

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P99P+4G Pushkinsky District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

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The Third St. Isaac's Cathedral - Renaldi

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The second St. Isaac's Cathedral stood on an unfortified riverbank, approximately where the monument to Peter I (the Bronze Horseman) is now located. Due to soil subsidence, cracks appeared in its walls and vaults, and in 1763 the building was dismantled. Catherine II revered the memory of Emperor Peter I and considered it her duty to rebuild St. Isaac's Cathedral. Work began in 1768 based on a design by Rinaldi. The church was conceived as an elegant Baroque structure with five domes and a three-tiered bell tower. Construction lasted 34 years. The temple was completed during the reign of Paul I by architect Brenna, who was forced by imperial order to simplify and distort Rinaldi's original design. The disproportionate and squat building did not correspond to the grand appearance of the city center. In 1809 and 1813, competitions were announced for the reconstruction projects of the third St. Isaac's Church, with the essential condition being Alexander I's desire to preserve most of Rinaldi's church. Renowned architects Quarenghi, Voronikhin, Cameron, and many others participated in the competitions, but the highest approval was given to the project of the young French architect O. Montferrand (the fourth St. Isaac's Cathedral).

Prince Vladimir Cathedral

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The Cathedral in the name of Saint Equal-to-the-Apostles Prince Vladimir in Saint Petersburg is a unique work of religious architecture, consistently combining features of three styles. The Prince Vladimir Cathedral is one of the most revered churches in the city on the Neva.

Church of Saint Catherine of Alexandria

Nevsky Ave., 32-34, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

A detective story unfolded around the burial in the church of the last Polish king, Stanisław August Poniatowski, who abdicated the throne after the third partition of Poland in 1795 and spent his final years in Russia.

The Bolshoi Theatre (Stone Theatre) of Saint Petersburg, which cost the lives and health of two great architects

Teatralnaya Square, 3, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

The Bolshoi Theatre (Stone Theatre) was a St. Petersburg theatre that existed from 1784 to 1886; since 1886, it has been the St. Petersburg Conservatory. It was the first permanent theatre in Saint Petersburg, the largest in Russia, and one of the largest theatrical buildings in Europe from the 18th to the first half of the 19th century. It was located on Theatre Square in Saint Petersburg. In 1886, the Stone Theatre building was partially dismantled and rebuilt into the modern building of the St. Petersburg Conservatory.

Cathedral of Saint Great Martyr Catherine in Kingisepp (Yamburg)

6 Nikolaeva St., Kingisepp, Leningrad Region, Russia, 188485

The Cathedral named after the Holy Great Martyr Catherine in Kingisepp (Yamburg), towering on the bank of the Luga River, is one of the few dated monuments of Russian Baroque preserved in the territory of the Leningrad Region. This masterpiece of architecture attracts attention not only with its proportions and nobility of forms but also with the beauty of its facings.

Church in honor of the Resurrection of Christ (Pochep city)

Oktyabrskaya Sq., 1, Pochep, Bryansk Oblast, Russia, 243400

Consecrated in 1765, the Resurrection Cathedral is connected to the ancient history of the city, if not by its appearance, then by its material — it was built from the bricks of the dismantled Menshikov Palace. The cathedral was constructed by Kirill Grigorievich Razumovsky, the last Hetman of Ukraine. Catherine II abolished the hetman title along with Ukraine’s autonomy but granted, as compensation, extensive lands in perpetual ownership, including Pochep and its surroundings. The Resurrection Cathedral was built in memory of these events. According to one legend, the iconostasis of the Pochep cathedral was transferred from the church in the village of Perovo near Moscow, where Princess Elizabeth supposedly secretly married Alexei Razumovsky. As for its appearance, the city can be proud: the cathedral’s design captures two eras of domestic architecture — Russian Baroque and Classicism. The cathedral’s architecture is a farewell song to Baroque and simultaneously a welcoming hymn to the emerging Classicism. It is gratifying to realize that one of the earliest examples of early Russian Classicism is located in Pochep.

Obelisk in Ust-Izhora

Shlisselburgskoye Highway, 52, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196645

During the Russo-Swedish War of 1788–1790, 25 residents of Ust-Izhora (the Palace estate) volunteered, in memory of which, at the request of Empress Catherine II herself, a granite obelisk was erected in 1791.

Obelisk in Rybatskoye

Rybatsky Ave., 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 192012

The village of Rybatskoye, located on the left bank of the Neva River near the mouth of the Slavyanka River, was settled during the reign of Peter I by residents of Moscow region villages, mostly fishermen from the Oka River. During the Russo-Swedish War of 1788–1790, many villagers voluntarily joined the rowing flotilla that fought against the Swedes. In memory of this, a granite obelisk was erected in the village in 1791, which has been preserved to this day. Monumental in form and concise in composition, the monument is installed on a high quadrangular pedestal with a stepped base.

Basilica di Sant'Agostino in Campo Marzio - Basilica of Sant'Agostino - in Campo Marzio, Rome

Piazza di Sant'Agostino, 00186 Rome RM, Italy

The Basilica of Saint Augustine, located on the square of the same name, was one of the first Roman churches of the Renaissance era, and its origins date back to the 14th century, when the Augustinians decided to build a new basilica for their monastery and dedicate it to the patron saint of their order. Built near Via della Scrofa, this building was demolished in 1746 when Luigi Vanvitelli and Antonio Rinaldi expanded the Sant'Agostino monastery. In 1756, the architects also radically altered the church's interior and, by adding a hemispherical dome on a cylindrical drum—the first Renaissance dome in Rome—added side scrolls to the façade and changed the 15th-century bell tower to a square tower. The façade is clad with travertine blocks, taken, according to the tradition of that time, from the Colosseum. The interior, in the shape of a Latin cross, is divided into three naves with five chapels on each of the side naves, a transept, and an apse surrounded by other chapels.

Italian Architects in Saint Petersburg - Busts of Four Italian Architects

Manezhnaya Square, 4, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

The busts of four Italian architects—Antonio Rinaldi, Carlo Rossi, Giacomo Quarenghi, and Bartolomeo Rastrelli—appeared on Manezhnaya Square in Saint Petersburg in 2003 thanks to sculptors V.E. Gorevoy and architect V.V. Popov. This was a gift from the government of the Italian Republic and the municipality of the city of Milan for the 300th anniversary of Saint Petersburg.

Stroganov Dacha (Stroganov's Dacha, Stroganov Garden, Stroganov Park)

Stroganovsky Park, Ushakovskaya Embankment, 15 building 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197342

The area on the Vyborg side of Saint Petersburg, near the place where the Chyornaya River flows into the Bolshaya Nevka, belonged to the baron-counts Stroganov from the mid-18th century to the early 20th century. It is bordered to the south by the Bolshaya Nevka, to the east and north by the Chyornaya River, and to the west by the park of the Saltykova dacha. The owners themselves called this area the "Mandurova estate." In a narrower sense, the Stroganov dacha also referred to the main building of this estate.