Alexander Borissowitsch Borezki

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Alexander Borissowitsch Borezki ( Russian Александр Борисович Борецкий ; * 1911 ; † 1982 ) was a Soviet architect .

Life

During his studies Borezki worked with Vyacheslav Konstantinowitsch Oltarschewski on the planning of the system for the All Union agricultural exhibition . After graduation, he began his professional work in 1938 when Leonid Mikhailovich Polyakov in the site office of the Palace of the Soviets , where he the interior design of the foyer and banquet hall projected . Later he developed the competition project for the Izvestia combine at Kiev train station (1940) in the construction office of the Mossoviet together with Polyakov and Yevgeny Nikolayevich Stamo .

Hotel Leningradskaya, Moscow

During the German-Soviet War , Borezki served in the Red Army . After demobilization in 1946, he returned to Moscow and worked in Polyakov's construction office. He created a series of projects for residential buildings in the Donbas , Siberia and the Far East , which were then accepted for implementation. 1949–1954 he built the Hotel Leningradskaja in Moscow with Polyakov . For this they received the Stalin Prize in 1949 , which Khrushchev disallowed them because he considered this architecture too inadequate and expensive. For the House of Crafts at the All- Union Agriculture Exhibition, he built the pavilion of the fine baker's administration in 1954 together with Yevgeny Abramowitsch Rosenblum and the artist Grigori Iwanowitsch Opryschko . For the second competition for the construction of the Palace of the Soviets 1957-1958 he developed together with Arkadi Jakowlewitsch Langman a project for the construction of the Palace of the Soviets on the Lenin Mountains . 1966–1977 he created the second six-story building section of the Hotel Moskva together with Igor Evgenyevich Roschin and others .

Individual evidence

  1. Tramwai Iskusstw: Борецкий Александр Борисович (accessed on August 28, 2019).
  2. a b c Электронный архив людей: Александр Борисович Борецкий (accessed August 28, 2019).
  3. Academic Wiki-encyclopedia in Russian On Jewish and Israeli topics: Борецкий, Александр Борисович (accessed August 28, 2019).
  4. Bernard Beck: Moscou et l'architecture soviétique stalinienne . In: La Revue russe . 2004, p. 25–40 ( [1] [accessed August 28, 2019]).
  5. И. Л. Бусева-Давыдова, Marija Vladimirovna Naschtschokina , М. И. Астафьева-Длугач: Москва: Архитектурный путеводитель . Стройиздат, Moscow 1997, ISBN 5-274-01624-3 , p. 54-55 .