Assignation Bank Building (Saint Petersburg) - Financial and Economic Institute

Griboedov Canal Embankment, 30, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The building of the State Assignation Bank is a monument of strict classicism architecture, constructed between 1783 and 1790 by architect Quarenghi, whose bust is installed in front of the bank's facade. The horseshoe-shaped building of the Assignation Bank consists of a central three-story block with a massive six-column Corinthian portico on a rusticated arcade and storage rooms connected to it by open gallery colonnades. The ceremonial courtyard is separated from Sadovaya Street by an iron fence with pavilion-propylaea and granite pillars, and from the Griboedov Canal, the building is enclosed by an iron fence from 1817, created by architect Ruska.
Previously, a wooden Sea Market stood on this site, which burned down in the 1780s. The building was constructed between 1783 and 1790 based on a design by Quarenghi. The project was approved on May 5, 1783. According to some researchers, this building was Quarenghi’s first commission in St. Petersburg (although the Foreign Collegium house was rebuilt by him earlier, in 1782–1783).
According to legend, the building was initially designed by Giuseppe Brigonci, but it collapsed at the early stages of construction under its own weight. Disgraced, Brigonci drowned himself in the Griboedov Canal, and his ghost is said to haunt the bank’s basements. Also according to legend, the estate layout of the building was used as a sign of respect to noble clients and to attract them to entrepreneurship.
The three-story (two floors above high cellars) central block stands deep within the ceremonial courtyard, the edges of which are formed by a horseshoe-shaped building of storerooms (coin vaults—the Assignation Bank exchanged paper money for coins). The storerooms were connected to the main building (which housed the operational halls) by open colonnade galleries. The side pavilions are decorated with loggias, and in the center of the main facade is a risalit with a pediment and a Corinthian order colonnade spanning the two upper floors. Above the pediment stand allegories of Law, Justice, and Wisdom. On the ground floor, there are three ceremonial entrances framed by rusticated arcades (originally, the ceremonial entrance was from Sadovaya Street, and the canal side entrance was for service, but later the Sadovaya entrance was closed to better preserve the gold reserves). The second-floor windows were adorned with window frames topped with sandriks.
According to Quarenghi’s design, the storerooms were not supposed to have glass windows; only grilles were to be installed to prevent copper vapors from poisoning the air. However, 26 windows were glazed due to the climate and to prevent snow and rain from entering the premises.
The cast-iron fence on stone pillars topped with spheres was created in 1791 in Petrozavodsk at Charles Gascoigne’s Alexandrovsky Plant, based on Quarenghi’s sketches. Its early version resembled the Summer Garden grille, but the final version was agreed upon considering the building’s utilitarian role. Initially, the facade facing the canal was not elaborated and was hidden behind a stone wall. A semicircular one-story service building on this side (housing service rooms and a shed for firefighting equipment) was built between 1786 and 1788. Barracks for the military guard and stables were located on the Bank Lane side, and fire sheds were along the canal. The building had a central corridor with storerooms on both sides.
The facade and side wings are decorated with lion masks and a frieze of garlands and bucrania by Fyodor Gordeev.

In 1783, 40,740 rubles and 31 kopecks were spent on the building’s construction; in 1784, 98,090 rubles and 64 kopecks; in 1785, 169,508 rubles and 29 kopecks; in 1786, 80,401 rubles and 49 kopecks; and about 200,000 rubles were spent between 1788 and 1791 (there was a delay in 1787, and no funds were spent). The originally gilded grille created by Quarenghi was valued at 45,270 rubles; a bronze version without gilding was valued at 27,420 rubles; the realized version cost 7,776 rubles.
Coins were brought to the building from the Mint of the Peter and Paul Fortress by water, on barges.
Of the interiors created by Quarenghi, the decoration of the vestibule and main staircase has been preserved. The staircase walls are adorned with paired Corinthian pilasters and sculptural medallions (the Muse of Astronomy and Geography, the Muse of Architecture, Sailing Navigation, Poultry Farming, Trade). Statues stand in six wall niches (due to the loss of attributing details, it is impossible to determine what they personified, although one is recognized as the Muse patroness of registration holding a ledger in her left hand). In the vestibule, free-standing columns and Doric order half-columns vertically divide the wall surfaces. The now-lost paintings of the reception rooms were done by Giuseppe Valesini.
From 1799 to 1805, during the construction of a specialized building, the Bank’s Mint was located in this house. In 1810, the management of the Assignation Bank demanded the Mint return the occupied part of the building. In 1815, according to a design by Alexander Postnikov, the premises used by the Mint were converted into residential apartments. In 1817, the Bank’s storerooms were also converted into housing.
On the canal side, the fence was erected according to a drawing by Rusk in 1817; at the same time, the architect rebuilt the service building on this side and constructed gold vaults in it. The eastern wing became two stories high due to the addition of inter-floor ceilings, and the loggia was built over with a two-story insertion with a staircase. The center of the fence is highlighted by a colonnade of six Doric columns and two half-columns, between which is a wall with a cast-iron grille of vertically placed spikes. The gates are located on the axis, and arched openings divided by pylons are located in the side parts of the fence; the work cost 500,000 rubles.
Until 1817, the bank issued assignation notes, and in 1843, after the introduction of state credit notes, it was closed as unnecessary. In 1849, the State Russian Bank began operating in the building.
In 1839, the 1st and 3rd floors of the main building, along with part of the storerooms on the left side, were transferred to the Commercial Bank; on the right side, it was planned to create a reception for copper coins. To this end, it was intended to add a story to the semicircular wing, but the plan was not realized. At that time, the walls of the ceremonial staircase were pale ochre, the stair flights and parapets were gray, and the ceiling had ornamental patterns. The other rooms were painted yellow, pearl, green, light green, and pale ochre.

In the 1860s, in iron pavilions in the courtyard on the Sadovaya side, worn-out assignation notes and credit tickets were publicly destroyed (burned), attracting spectators; due to flying ash, a fundamentally new furnace was created by 1894, which was later dismantled in 1934. In 1861, the colonnades of the gallery were glazed; at the same time, an apartment was made on the third floor with a black staircase leading to it. In 1864, in the left pavilion, premises for savings banks were created instead of a spare storeroom and an adjacent apartment.
A fire in 1862 destroyed the Ministry of Internal Affairs building and reached Sadovaya, bending the bank’s iron grille and cracking its plinth. After that, the building’s wooden doors were replaced with metal ones, the ceilings were replaced with fire-resistant ones, a stone staircase was built, and four firewalls were installed.
Between 1895 and 1904, another reconstruction took place based on a design by Andrey Bertels; the third floor was added to the semicircular wing. In 1904, according to a design by Matvey Chizhov, the vestibule in the canal-facing wing was remodeled, heating was installed throughout the building, and in 1905, plumbing was installed. On June 12, 1905, a house church in honor of Alexander Nevsky was consecrated on the floor created by Bertels (closed in 1918 with the transfer of property to the Vladimir Church; the room was rebuilt into an assembly hall around 1939). By 1910, it was decided that further reconstructions could not improve the building’s functionality.
On June 3, 1930, the Leningrad Financial and Economic Institute opened in the building.
During the Great Patriotic War, the facade stucco was damaged, the roof was damaged, the sewage system, water supply, and courtyard lamps were destroyed. A 1,000-kilogram aerial bomb fell on the sixth wing, causing a severe fire. In total, 50 large-caliber shells fell on the territory. The laundry building was destroyed by a 250-kilogram bomb, which also damaged the power station. Another fire that destroyed the interior decoration started after a shell hit 22 classrooms (2nd floor of the main building). The basements housed a bomb shelter. From November 27, 1941, an evacuation hospital and paramedic courses operated in the building.
In 1967, on the 150th anniversary of Quarenghi’s death, a monument to Quarenghi was installed in the garden on the Sadovaya Street side. In 1976, a restoration project proposed removing the third floor from the building and opening the connecting galleries on the Sadovaya side, but the project was not implemented.

Sources:
https://www.citywalls.ru/house3615.html
https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Здание_ассигнационного_банка_(Санкт-Петербург)

Follow us on social media

More stories from Great Architects: Giacomo Quarenghi

English Palace - The Executed Masterpiece of Quarenghi

VVJJ+7P Petrodvortsovy District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

The English Palace was located in the center of the English Park, on the northern shore of the English Pond. The monumental three-story building with an eight-column portico was built in 1796 based on a design by Giacomo Quarenghi. This was Quarenghi's first project in Russia. The palace's patron, Catherine II, planned to rest here away from the courtly bustle.

Narva Triumphal Gates

Stachek Square, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190020

A 19th-century architectural monument built in the Empire style based on the design by architect Vasily Petrovich Stasov. The gates were erected between 1827 and 1834 in memory of the Patriotic War of 1812 and the foreign campaigns of the Russian army in 1813–1814. The compositional center of Stachek Square (formerly Narvskaya Square) was constructed to replace the old wooden gates designed by Giacomo Quarenghi, which stood on the border of Saint Petersburg near the city’s Narva outpost closer to the Obvodny Canal.

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.

Kiryanovo Estate ("Dashkova's Dacha," "Horseshoe")

pr. Stachek, 3 92, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198096

Kiryanovo ("Dashkova's Dacha," "Horseshoe") is a country house in the Palladian style, built in 1783–1784 for Princess Vorontsova-Dashkova according to a design by Giacomo Quarenghi at the 4th verst of the Peterhof road.

Konstantinovsky Palace in Pavlovsk Park

MFQC+H9 Pushkinsky District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

The time of the creation of the Konstantin Palace dates back to the late 18th century. The construction of the palace began in the Catherine Park of Tsarskoye Selo in November 1792. The palace was built from November 1792 to June 1793 according to the design of architect Giacomo Quarenghi. It is known that it was a rectangular two-story building, 58 meters long and 23 meters wide. The central part of the main facade, with three Venetian (triple) windows, was crowned with a pediment. Ten Ionic half-columns were installed between the windows. The exterior of the palace was clad with boards, the walls were painted yellow, and the roof was green. The years of the Konstantin Palace's existence in Tsarskoye Selo represent only the first stage of its history. On August 19, 1797, when Paul I ascended the throne, a decree was issued to move the Konstantin Palace with its kitchen to Pavlovsk. The relocation began in February 1798 and lasted more than five months. The construction of the palace was carried out under the supervision of architect Brenna.

The Church of Saint Mary Magdalene - the first stone building in Pavlovsk

Sadovaya St., 17, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196620

The Church of Saint Mary Magdalene is an Orthodox temple in Pavlovsk, the first stone building in the city. The church was founded in May 1781 in the presence of Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich and his family. The construction of the church was funded by Empress Maria Feodorovna. The project was designed by Giacomo Quarenghi. All the stonework on the church was completed on September 12 (23), 1781, but the consecration of the church by Metropolitan Gavriil (Petrov) in the name of Saint Mary Magdalene took place only on September 6 (17), 1784.

The Grand Palace in Pavlovsk

Sadovaya St., 20, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196621

Pavlovsk Palace is a uniquely beautiful structure that once served as the residence of Emperor Paul I. The majestic palace is located near Tsarskoye Selo, on a small elevation, making it clearly visible from any point in the city. Many talented architects contributed to the creation of this architectural gem of world significance, including Charles Cameron, Vincenzo Brenna, Andrey Voronikhin, Giacomo Quarenghi, and Carlo Rossi.

Kitchen-ruin

Catherine Park / Catherine Park, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196603

Located next to the Concert Hall, the Kitchen Ruin, built by Quarenghi in the 1780s, is among the architect's finest works. The entrance to the pavilion—a circular in plan structure complicated by two rectangular projections—is designed as a niche, with a door set deep inside. The curved parts of the facade between the projections are decorated with columns.

Concert hall in Catherine Park

Catherine Park / Ekaterininsky Park, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196603

In the 1780s, architect Quarenghi built a Concert Hall in Catherine Park, which he described as "a music hall with two cabinets and an open temple dedicated to the goddess Ceres." Confirmation that the pavilion was conceived as a temple to Ceres was provided by the panel "Sacrifice to Ceres" in its large hall, depicting a statue of the goddess in the temple portico, in front of which an altar is placed. Initially, the pavilion was called the "Temple of Friendship," but from 1788, at the request of Catherine II, it became known as the "Music" or "Concert" Hall.

Turkish bath

Parkovaya St., 40, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196603

In memory of the signing of the Treaty of Jassy in 1791, Empress Catherine II commissioned architect Giacomo Quarenghi to design a pavilion called the Turkish Bath. This project was never realized. Nicholas I decided to fulfill his grandmother the Empress's intention by decorating the park with a pavilion dedicated to the victories of the Russian army over the Turks, but during another victorious war for Russia against Turkey in 1828–1829 and the subsequent Treaty of Adrianople concluded as a result.

Alexandrovsky Palace - The Palace of Catherine II's Beloved Grandson

Alexandrovsky Park, Dvortsovaya St., 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196601

The history of the creation of the palace here, surrounded by an oasis of man-made nature, is connected with the names of two august figures – Empress Catherine II and her grandson, the future Emperor Alexander I, as well as the architect Giacomo Quarenghi. In the northern part of the picturesque Alexander Park, a magnificent building was erected — the New Tsarskoye Selo (later Alexander) Palace. It was founded in 1792 by order of Catherine II and was built for the wedding of her beloved grandson, Grand Duke Alexander Pavlovich (the future Emperor Alexander I), to Grand Duchess Elizabeth Alexeievna.

City Duma building with a tower

Nevsky Ave., 33, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The City Duma Building with the Tower is a complex of buildings located at the corner of Dumskaya Street and Nevsky Prospect in Saint Petersburg, a federally significant architectural monument. It consists of the City Duma building, with its facade facing Dumskaya Street, and the City Duma tower, situated at the corner. The entire complex is often referred to as the City Duma building. The tower, which is part of the complex, is one of the dominant features of Nevsky Prospect and is sometimes considered separately from the City Duma building. Occasionally, the Duma building and the tower are viewed as an ensemble together with the adjacent Silver Rows building, which has its facade facing Nevsky Prospect. The height of the tower is approximately 47.5 meters.

Alexandrino Estate or Chernyshev’s Dacha

Stachek Ave, 226, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198262

Alexandrino is one of the old estates that has been preserved. It is an ancient Palladian estate of the Chernyshev counts located in the Peterhof Road area, now within the city limits of Saint Petersburg. Surrounding the monument is Alexandrino Park, named after the last pre-revolutionary owner — A. D. Sheremetev. It preserves traces of former grandeur, remembers its time as a communal apartment, and the period when these walls were damaged by German shells.

English Park — the first landscape park in Peterhof

VVMH+5V Petrodvortsovy District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

The English Park is the first landscape park in Peterhof. The park covers an area of 173.4 hectares (the largest park in Peterhof). It was designed for Catherine II by the English garden master James Meaders. Currently, it is in a semi-neglected state and is used as a place for "picnics."

The Church of the Icon of the Mother of God "The Sign" - the first stone building of Tsarskoye Selo

Dvortsovaya St., 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196601

The Church of the Icon of the Mother of God "The Sign" is an Orthodox church in the city of Pushkin (Saint Petersburg), located on Dvortsovaya Street, in the city center, near the Catherine Palace. The church is the oldest structure of the Tsarskoye Selo palace and park ensemble, the first stone building in Tsarskoye Selo. The Znamenskaya Church is affiliated with the Catherine Cathedral of the Saint Petersburg Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Church of the Smolensk Icon of the Mother of God in Pulkovo

Peterburgskoye Highway, 68, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 196140

The Church of the Smolensk Icon of the Mother of God in Pulkovo is a parish Orthodox church in the settlement of Shushary in Saint Petersburg. The church was built in the village of Pulkovo between 1783 and 1785 based on a design by Giacomo Quarenghi, destroyed during the battles for the Pulkovo Heights in 1943, and reconstructed from 2011 to 2016 about 50 meters higher up the slope. The modern building is located on the territory of the Expoforum Congress and Exhibition Complex.

School of the Order of St. Catherine (Catherine Institute) - Russian National Library

Fontanka River Embankment, 36, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191025

The Institute for Noble Maidens, opened in Saint Petersburg on the initiative of Empress Maria Feodorovna in 1798. It occupied a building constructed for its accommodation based on a design by J. Quarenghi.

Horse Guards Manege - Central Exhibition Hall

Isaakievskaya Square, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

A monumental building in the neoclassical style, constructed in Saint Petersburg between 1804 and 1807 based on a design by Giacomo Quarenghi for winter and summer training, as well as ceremonial horse rides of the Life Guards Horse Regiment. It occupies part of the Konnogvardeysky Boulevard, with its facade facing Isaakievskaya Square. During the Soviet era, it was converted into an NKVD garage, and since 1977 it has been used as an exhibition hall.

Building of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (Imperial Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences)

Universitetskaya Embankment, 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

At first, the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences was located in the Shafirov House on City Island, as well as in neighboring buildings: the former house of Count Zotov, which housed the academic office, and the house of Prince Gagarin. Since 1728, it was situated on Vasilievsky Island, in the Kunstkamera building and the nearby palace of Tsarina Praskovya Fyodorovna. From the beginning of the 18th century, the Kunstkamera building became a symbol of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Between 1783 and 1789, architect G. Quarenghi built a new building for the Academy at 5 University Embankment. Today, this building is a monument of strict classicism architecture, part of the ensemble of the Strelka of Vasilievsky Island and the University Embankment. It housed academic warehouses (stores), a bookshop, and apartments for employees.

Hermitage Theatre

Palace Embankment, 34, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

The Hermitage Theatre is a theatrical building in Saint Petersburg, constructed between 1783 and 1789 based on a design by the Italian architect Giacomo Quarenghi. The building is located on the site of Peter I's former Winter Palace, at the corner of Palace Embankment and Winter Canal. It completes the complex of buildings stretching along the Neva River and connected by arches and passages into a single entity with the Winter Palace.

Saltykov House (Groten House) - University of Culture and Arts

Millionnaya St., 3, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The Saltykov House (Groten House) is a spacious mansion in Saint Petersburg, located at the intersection of Palace Embankment and Millionnaya Street. After its completion in 1788, it was gifted by Catherine II to the courtier Nikolai Ivanovich Saltykov. Subsequently, it underwent multiple renovations, with architects Quarenghi, Carlo Rossi, Harald Bosse, and K. I. Lorentzen all contributing to the building's current appearance.

Yusupov Palace - Institute of Railway Engineers Corps - Petersburg State Transport University

Moskovsky Ave., 9b, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

The estate of Prince Yusupov on the Fontanka River in the mid-18th century was one of the wealthiest in the city. On the plot stood a luxurious Baroque palace, whose layout resembled a widely spread letter H. The building, raised on high cellars, combined a central two-story volume with one-story transverse wings, connected by one-story sections. A trellis fence separated the estate from the river.

The estate of Count P.V. Zavadovsky, Church of Saint Catherine

2G7R+V8 Lyalichi, Bryansk Oblast, Russia

Not far from Novozybkov, in the village of Lyalichi in the Surazh district, lie the majestic ruins of the Ekaterinodar estate, built in the 18th century by Count Pyotr Vasilyevich Zavadovsky. This architectural monument, alas, shared the fate of many similar structures — the estate of Catherine II’s favorite passed from hand to hand, slowly falling into ruin, and was already a pitiful sight by the early 20th century. But it is encouraging that the estate is gradually being restored, and the Church of St. Catherine located right there has almost been fully renovated.

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.

Round market - cloudberries for Pushkin

Moika River Embankment, 3, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The Round Market is an architectural structure from the 18th century. It was built according to the design of Giacomo Quarenghi in 1790. The structure is considered one of the oldest in Saint Petersburg. Its urban and architectural value is directly related to the development of the embankment and canal in St. Petersburg. The building has a triangular shape with rounded ends, which gives it its name. The building is located between Krugovoy Avenue, Aptekarsky Lane, and the Moika River.

Anglican Church of Jesus Christ (on English Embankment)

English Embankment, 56, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190121

The building was constructed in the 1730s of the 18th century. The Anglican Church of Jesus Christ was established in 1723 by members of the English community in a house rented for this purpose from the Sheremetevs. In 1753, the building was acquired by the British consul. In 1814-1815, the building was rebuilt according to the design of architect J. Quarenghi in the neoclassical style.

Kamenny Island Palace

Embankment of the Malaya Nevka River, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197045

The Kamenny Island Palace, built for Paul I, never became his home. His son Alexander I, on the contrary, made it his main residence, where he subsequently made a number of the most momentous decisions for the country. It is also here, according to legend, that the emperor dreamed of Peter I in the form of the "Bronze Horseman."

Maltese Chapel

26 Sadovaya St., bldg. A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

The Catholic Church of the Order of the Knights of Malta, built by Giacomo Quarenghi at the end of the 18th century. The chapel is part of the architectural complex of the Vorontsov Palace in Saint Petersburg (attached to the main building of the palace on the garden side).

Vorontsov Palace

26 Sadovaya St., Building A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

A palace in the central part of Saint Petersburg, located on Sadovaya Street opposite Gostiny Dvor. It was built according to the project of architect Francesco Rastrelli between 1749 and 1758 for Chancellor Mikhail Vorontsov. The palace was distinguished by its rich, elegant facade decoration and lavish interior finishes, featuring more than 50 ceremonial halls and rooms. Due to the colossal expenses on construction, just a few years after completion, Vorontsov was forced to sell the palace to the treasury for 217,000 rubles. Under Paul I, the palace was given to the Maltese Order, during which the Maltese Chapel was built based on a design by Giacomo Quarenghi. In 1810, Emperor Alexander I placed the Page Corps in the palace, and the building belonged to it until the revolution. In the 20th century, the palace complex was occupied by various military schools. In 2019, the building was taken over by the Third Cassation Court of General Jurisdiction. In 2021, under the guise of major repairs, the institution initiated a tender for the demolition of three pre-revolutionary wings on the palace grounds.