Rimma Petrovna Aldonina

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Rimma Petrovna Aldonina (1972)

Rimma Petrovna Aldonina ( Russian Римма Петровна Алдонина ; born March 7, 1928 in Moscow ) is a Soviet - Russian architect , town planner , writer and poet .

Life

Aldonina's father Pyotr Faddejewitsch Aldonin (1894-1944) was an accountant . At the beginning of the German-Soviet War he was drafted into the Red Army as a reserve officer and died in the hospital in Odessa in 1944 . Her mother Marija Ivanovna Aldonina (1902-1994) was a nurse . Aldonina graduated from the Moscow Architecture Institute (MArchI) in 1951.

After completing her studies, Aldonina worked in the Mosprojekt 1 and in the Mosprom project of the Moscow architectural planning headquarters , where she was the only woman in the history of the Mosproject to become the head of the architecture workshop.

Aldonina had become a member of the Union of Architects of the USSR in 1956 . In 1976 she became an elected member of the management and in 1986 a member of the Presidium of the Moscow Department of the Union of Architects.

Many of Aldonina's projects were not implemented because the construction of standard apartments had priority. She succeeded in building the Elbrus cinema in Moscow's Tsaritsyno district , which was named the best building in 1969.

Together with P. Zinoviev and Oktjabrina Gansowna Lebedewa, Aldonina renovated 1966–1976 the constructivist Sil - Palace of Culture in Moscow, built by the brothers Leonid , Wiktor and Alexander Wesnin from 1930–1937 , which was badly damaged by bombs during the war and then restored according to socialist classicism was. Without a corresponding commission , they also restored and restored the original condition as far as possible, so that the constructivist character became clear.

Over the next 10 years, Aldonina, together with K. Sapassow and P. Sinowjew, developed the important Moscow urban development project for the development of the Nagatino embankment on the Moscow River with apartment blocks of different heights with 10 to 23 floors in Moscow's southern administrative district . Aldonina developed high-rise residential buildings with 9, 12 or 14 storeys, which were widely used in Moscow. On Moscow's Bolschije Kamenschtschiki Ulitsa, she built a 13-storey residential complex with noise protection . Her other projects, the development of the coastal road of belonging Khimki - dam and the development of the Tushino -Beckens on the edge of the nature reserve Tushino in Moscow Northwestern administrative district .

Aldonina had in 1953 along with other Marchi graduates in Mosprojekt the independent satirical music ensemble Kochinor and tear rail founded, where he was active as a director, soloist and permanent member of the writing staff until 2003. The ensemble consisted of two choirs, the male choir Kochinor and the women's choir T-square , and soon came under the patronage of the Central House of Architects .

Aldonina wrote poetry and prose for children. Her first poem for children was published in the Kolobok magazine in 1986 . For many years publications followed in the magazines Kostjor , Mischa and Tramwaj . About 20 songs were written based on their poems. In 1997 she was accepted into the Union of Writers of Moscow. Your Puppet Theater -Stück Sdrawstwujte! (together with M. Bartenew) has been performed in various cities in Russia for years .

Aldonina was married to Grigory Grigoryevich Lyssenko and is divorced. Her daughter Olga Grigoryevna Sasonowa (* 1955) became an architect.

Honors, prizes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f LiveLib: Римма Алдонина (accessed April 10, 2020).
  2. a b Trum-Pum-Pum: Римма Алдонина (accessed April 10, 2020).
  3. a b Алдонина Римма Петровна (accessed April 10, 2020).
  4. Алдонина Р. П .: Как это было . In: Вести Союза Архитекторов России . No. 2 , 2007 ( Kak eto bylo-Nagatino.pdf [accessed April 20, 2020]).
  5. Kochinor i-square (accessed on 10 April 2020).
  6. Пишу стихи от имени мальчишки (accessed April 10, 2020).
  7. Театральная Беларусь - Афиша (accessed April 10, 2020).