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White House (Moscow)

The White House (Russian: Белый дом, tr. Bely dom, IPA: [ˈbʲɛlɨj ˈdom]; officially The House of the Government of the Russian Federation, Russian: Дом Правительства Российской Федерации, tr. Dom pravitelstva Rossiyskoi Federatsii), also known as the Russian White House and previously known as the House of Soviets of Russia, is a government building in Moscow. It stands on the Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment. The building serves as the primary office of the government of Russia and is the official workplace of the Russian Prime Minister.

The House of the Government of the Russian Federation
Дом Правительства Российской Федерации
The building in 2016
Former namesHouse of Soviets of the RSFSR
House of Soviets of the Russian Federation
General information
TypeParliament
Architectural styleSoviet modernism
Town or cityMoscow
CountryRussia
Construction started1965; 58 years ago (1965)
Completed1981; 42 years ago (1981)
Height119 m
Design and construction
Architect(s)Dmitry Chechulin, Pavel Shteller

It was built from 1965 to 1981 according to the design of architect Dmitry Chechulin to house the People's Control Committee and the Supreme Soviet of Russia.[1] During the August 1991 coup d'état attempt, the building became a center of resistance to the State Committee on the State of Emergency. The structure was badly damaged during the 1993 constitutional crisis and was subsequently reconstructed.

History Edit

Construction and use in the Soviet Union Edit

 
View of Moscow (1972) showing the construction site of the complex.

In 1965, construction of the House of Soviets began to accommodate the administrative bodies of the RSFSR at this site.[1] The plan for the reconstruction of the territory was prepared by a group of architects known as Mosproekt-1, led by Dmitry Chechulin, Pavel Shteller, Vladimir Lukyanov, and others, alongside a team of engineers.[2][3] The overall design follows Chechulin's 1934 draft of the Aeroflot building. Initially, Chechulin proposed constructing the building on Taganka Square, which rises above a significant part of the city, as the site on the Krasnopresnenskaya embankment was inconvenient due to nearby buildings; however, because of the good view alongside the high bank of the Moskva River, the current location was chosen instead.[4]

The House of Soviets was the first multi-storey building in which a uniformly shaped prefabricated reinforced concrete frame with monolithic stiffness cores was used. Outside, the structure was lined with individual claydite concrete panels, which were previously finished with marble.[5] The total area of the complex was 732,000 square meters, with a total area of office space around 132,000 square meters. The building was designed with a complex three-level system of underground floors, where parking, bunkers, ventilation chambers and refrigeration equipment were located.[6][7] The structure was equipped with a separate sewerage and an autonomous power supply system. There is a theory that the building is connected by underground passages to subway tunnels, but official sources do not confirm or refute this information.[citation needed] According to the memoirs of one of the builders, Felix Mikhailovich Ashurov, when installing the flagpole, Dmitry Chechulin ordered it to be shortened by three meters for a more harmonious combination of proportions; however, due to possible delays, workers were ordered to install the already prepared bar in secret from the architect over a weekend.[8]

Construction was completed in 1981, with a total cost exceeding 94 million rubles.[9] After the completion of the project, team leader Dmitry Chechulin, architect Vitaly Mazurin, and designer Yuri Dykhovichny were awarded the Lenin Prize. From 1981 to 1993, the Supreme Soviet of Russia, which had until then held its sessions in the Grand Kremlin Palace, used the White House. The Supreme Soviet of Russia remained in the building until the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, as well as during the first years of the Russian Federation. In 1991 the Soviet Union issued a 50-kopeck stamp depicting the White House and honoring resistance to the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt.

Role in 1991 coup d'état attempt Edit

 
Rally at the walls of the House of Soviets during 1991 coup attempt

In August 1991, the House of Soviets became the center of a confrontation against the State Committee on the State of Emergency. The opposition was headed by Russian President Boris Yeltsin, in support of whom large-scale rallies were held around the building.[1] During this period, Yeltsin repeatedly spoke to the audience, with his most famous speech being delivered on August 19 from the tank of the Taman Division. At that time, the building was surrounded by a living chain of Muscovites who supported the president. An improvised barricade was built around the building, using materials such as garbage cans, fences of nearby parks, benches, and sawn trees. Protestors also painted graffiti of political topics on the walls of the building.[10][11] By August 20, approximately two hundred thousand people had gathered around the structure including public and political figures Ruslan Khasbulatov, Ivan Silayev, Alexander Rutskoy, Eduard Shevardnadze, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Mstislav Rostropovich, Andrey Makarevich, and others.[12]

 
Makeshift barricade near the walls of the House of Soviets during 1991 coup attempt

The building was not stormed, presumably due to the possible number of civilian and military casualties.[12] Later, the events that took place near the walls of the House of Soviets and elsewhere in the Soviet Union were defined as the August Coup. It was during this period that the name "White House" was assigned to the building, which was widely used by the state media. In 1992, the building was depicted on the back side of commemorative coins in honor of the "victory of democratic forces" and the anniversary of Russia's state sovereignty.

Forceful dispersal of the Supreme Soviet of Russia Edit

 
The White House in 1993, soon after it was shelled by tanks

In the midsts of the constitutional crisis of 1993, Boris Yeltsin issued Decree No. 1400 to dissolve the Congress of People's Deputies and the Supreme Soviet of Russia. The House of Soviets was disconnected from television and radio. According to the conclusion of the Constitutional Court, the president's actions were illegal and contradicted the then Russian Constitution of 1978. An emergency session of the Supreme Soviet was convened, during which, among other things, it was decided to protect the building from possible siege. The events caused a spontaneous rally near the walls of the building. Protective detachments from security, civilians, Cossack volunteer formations and retired military personnel were organized at the House of Soviets. Data on weapons stored in the building vary. From September 23 to October 4, 1993, the Tenth Session of the Congress of People's Deputies of the Russian Federation was held in the building, as the conference hall of the Grand Kremlin Palace was closed for repair. The Congress and the Supreme Soviet stated the termination of the powers of President Boris Yeltsin and their transfer to Vice President Alexander Rutskoy. [13][14]

During this period, rallies were held in different parts of Moscow, which caused armed skirmishes, and the territory around the building was recognized as a particularly dangerous zone. At a meeting of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, it was decided to storm the House of Soviets, after which President Boris Yeltsin signed a decree on attracting troops from the Ministry of Defense to Moscow. During the seizure of the building, six tanks from the Taman Division that were placed on the Novoarbatsky Bridge fired 12 shells at the upper floors of the building.[citation needed] Arkady Baskaev, who was appointed commandant of the House of Soviets after the assault, said that the fire in the building of the Supreme Soviet arose as a result of shelling from tanks.[15] Subsequently, Alexander Rutskoy described the incident as follows:[16]

"The first shell hit the meeting room, the second in Khasbulatov's office, the third in mine. And they were beaten with high-explosive shells, not insacks, as they claim today. The building will not burn from the dummy. I was sitting in my office when the projectile broke the window and exploded in the right corner [of the room]. Fortunately, my table was on my left. A stunned man came out of there. I don't know what saved me."

Because of the shelling, a fire began on the 12th and 13th floors of the White House. The fire covered the entire upper part and destroyed 30% of the total area of the building, later the damage was estimated at 170 billion rubles. The situation in the White House after the assault was described by a correspondent of the Kommersant newspaper:[17]

"By order of the White House Commandant Major General Arkady Baskaev, there is enhanced security from assault rifles and special forces of the Ministry of Internal Affairs on each floor. Such caution is by no means unnecessary, since armed supporters of parliament are still in the basements of the Armed Forces building. [...] In the first minutes after the assault, as soon as the shots subsided and special forces soldiers went to inspect the upper floors of the White House, streams of marauders rushed into the halls. [...] The inside [of] the parliament building is completely looted. Everything you can have [has] been carried away: TVs, phones, table lamps and even plumbing."

Ruslan Khasbulatov, referring to eyewitness letters in Nezavisimaya Gazeta, states that there were about 1,500 victims in total, whose bodies were taken out of the building in secret passages.[18]

End of the 20th century and the present Edit

 
Facade of the building after reconstruction (2008)

Following the events of the 1993 constitutional crisis, control of the building was transferred via a decree by Boris Yeltsin to the Government of the Russian Federation (the executive branch), under whose control the reconstruction of the building took place.[9] The reformed parliament, known thereafter by its Imperial-era title of the State Duma, was elected in December 1993 and moved to another building on Moscow's Okhotny Ryad (street).

American architect Charles Jencks suggested that restorers mark the burnt floors on the facade with black granite cladding; however, this idea was abandoned in favor of recreating the original appearance of the complex. According to some data, repairs on the upper floors of the building were carried out by Turkish workers.[19][20] During the restoration work, the clock on the tower of the main facade of the building was restored and reused; however, by the second half of 1994, the clock was dismantled and a golden image of a double-headed eagle – the coat of arms of Russia – had been installed in its place. During this, the building was fenced off from the embankment with a massive fence that prevented rallies at the walls of the building.[21] Nevertheless, protesters continue to gather next to the White House on the Humpback Bridge. In 1996, on the territory of the nearby Presnensky Park, a chapel was opened in memory of those who died in the House of Soviets.[1][22]

Restoration work was carried out for almost a year, and in 1994 the repaired complex was occupied by the Government of the Russian Federation.[23] An inscription at the base of the tower reads "House of the Government of the Russian Federation," the official name of the building. There is an office for the President of Russia located on the third floor of the building. Traditionally, at the end of each year, the President holds meetings with the Council of Ministers in the White House, but ordinary meetings are rarely held in the building.[24][25] In 2008, there was a large-scale reconstruction of the fifth floor of the building. At the same time, some media outlets reported on the construction of a swimming pool and gym within the building, but official sources did not confirm this information.[26] A year later, a private restaurant was opened on the twelfth floor of the complex. In 2012, plans were made to move the offices of officials to a new federal center in Kommunarka, but this idea was postponed indefinitely.[27][28] The following year, a helipad was installed near the building.

In September 2020, the press service of the Government of the Russian Federation reported that the condition of White House was recognized as an emergency, citing issues with the roof and leaks in the basement among other issues. The Russian government has planned to allocate more than 5 billion rubles for reconstruction purposes.[29]

Architecture Edit

The White House (2014).
 
Panorama of Krasnopresnenskaya embankment, with the White House in the center (2008)

During the construction of the White House, Dmitry Chechulin used elements of his unrealized 1934 design for the headquarters of state airline Aeroflot. The original idea for the Aeroflot building was developed in honor of the rescue, by Soviet pilots, of the passengers of the sunken steamship SS Chelyuskin. The construction was supposed to have simplified forms; the stylobate of the building was similar in size to the ship, it was supplemented with numerous sculptural compositions. The main entrance of the planned building emphasized the portico, which resembled a triumphal arch. It was assumed that the Aeroflot building would form a new look for the Belorussky railway station square; but the structure did not correspond to the site in size and configuration, so it was never built.[30][23][31]

In 1965, Dmitry Chechulin used his plans for the unrealized project of the Aeroflot building to develop the plans for the future House of Soviets. However, the monumental complex of the White House differed from the original idea of the architect.[9] The simplified composition of the building had a symmetrical pyramidal structure composed of three parts. The powerful base with divergent ramps and a front staircase is supported by a wide seven-storey building with side wings. Above them stands a twenty-storey tower with rounded edges. The strict rhythm of the windows is disturbed on the upper technical floor, where the openings are much narrower. The outer walls of the structure are lined with granite and white marble. The building is crowned by a small tower with a gilded Russian coat of arms and a flagpole on which the national flag is fixed. The height of the structure with the flagpole is 119 meters; without it, 102 meters. The building was the last lifetime project of Dmitry Chechulin and is a unique object of Moscow's development, forming a panorama of the embankment.[1][32]

The premises of the complex are decorated with multicolored stone marble inserts.[1] The main assembly hall is located in the central part of the seven-storey base and faces the Moscow River. In total, the building has 27 meeting and reception rooms.[32][33]

External links Edit

  • Video: Government commission inside the former House of Soviets after assault and fire (October 1993)
  • Image: Project of the Aeroflot building by Dmitry Chechulin, 1934

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Vostryshev, Mikhail; Вострышев, Михаил. (2011). Vsi︠a︡ Moskva ot A do I︠A︡ : ėnt︠s︡iklopedii︠a︡. S. Shokarev, С. Шокарев. Moskva. ISBN 978-5-4320-0001-9. OCLC 729552404.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ "Главный архитектор КГБ раскрыл тайну президентской госдачи". www.mk.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  3. ^ "Архитектурно-проектная мастерская №20". archive.ph. 2013-08-08. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  4. ^ Zhuravlev, A. М. (1985). Dmitry Chechulin (in Russian). Москва: Stoyizdat.
  5. ^ Kozak, Yu (1986). Строительство высокого зданий (in Russian). Москва: Stroyizdat.
  6. ^ "Главный архитектор КГБ раскрыл тайну президентской госдачи". www.mk.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  7. ^ "Хроника путча. Часть IV". 2006-08-20. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  8. ^ . 2018-09-28. Archived from the original on 2018-09-28. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  9. ^ a b c "Проблемы реконструкции Белого дома". www.kommersant.ru (in Russian). 1993-10-09. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  10. ^ "Международный фонд социально-экономических и политологических исследований (Горбачев-Фонд) - Августовский путч. Летопись событий". Горбачев Фонд. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  11. ^ "Ходорковский: "Кандидатуру Путина я не приветствовал, и Путин это знает"". Радио Свобода (in Russian). 11 September 2009. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  12. ^ a b Новости, Р. И. А. (2016-08-19). "Августовский путч 1991 года". РИА Новости (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  13. ^ "Воронин Ю.М Стреноженная Россия". 1993.sovnarkom.ru. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  14. ^ "Заключение Комиссии Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации по дополнительному изучению и анализу событий, происходивших в городе Москве 21 сентября - 5 октября 1993 года - Тайна беззакония - РУССКОЕ ВОСКРЕСЕНИЕ". www.voskres.ru. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  15. ^ . 2017-11-15. Archived from the original on 2017-11-15. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  16. ^ "Октябрьское Восстание 1993 года". 1993.sovnarkom.ru. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  17. ^ "Ситуация вокруг Белого дома". www.kommersant.ru (in Russian). 1993-10-08. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  18. ^ Khasbulatov, R. I. (2011). Prestupnyĭ rezhim : "liberalʹnai︠a︡ tiranii︠a︡" Elʹt︠s︡ina. ISBN 978-5-9955-0304-0. OCLC 778785503. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ ""Я работаю в гостинице "Украина""". The Village (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  20. ^ Ivanov, Ivan (1995). Anafema : khronika gosudarstvennogo perevorota : zapiski razvedchika. Sankt-Peterburg: Palei︠a︡. ISBN 5-86020-319-5. OCLC 35150959.
  21. ^ "От Советов — к Правительству: история Белого дома в Москве". РБК Недвижимость (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  22. ^ Shevchenko, Valeriĭ; Шевченко, Валерий (2013). Zhertvy chërnogo okti︠a︡bri︠a︡ 1993. Moskva. ISBN 978-5-4438-0548-1. OCLC 893907798.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  23. ^ a b . Московская правда. 2016-01-21. Archived from the original on 2018-09-28. Retrieved 2018-08-10.
  24. ^ "Путин приехал в Дом правительства". vesti.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  25. ^ "Путин посетит Дом правительства". ИА REGNUM (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  26. ^ Шишкунова, Елена (2008-03-13). "Белый дом подстраивается под Путина". Известия (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  27. ^ "Бизнес-центр «Белый дом»". Forbes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  28. ^ Новости, Р. И. А. (2013-10-04). "Ъ: переезд чиновников в новую Москву отложен на неопределенный срок". РИА Новости (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  29. ^ "На реконструкцию Белого дома направят свыше ₽5 млрд". РБК (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  30. ^ Галина Тараканова (2014). Красная стройплощадка. Аргументы и Факты. ISBN 9785457730786. from the original on 2022-01-03. Retrieved 2018-08-10.
  31. ^ "Проект здания Центрального дома "Аэрофлота"". Культура.РФ. 2018. from the original on 2018-09-28. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  32. ^ a b ""Белый Дом" - Энциклопедия Москвы - Что значит, описание, фото, толкование, определение". Магия слов (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  33. ^ "Дом Правительства России («Белый дом») метро Краснопресненская, Краснопресненская наб., 2 - описание, точный адрес в г. Москва, часы работы и отзывы о Дом Правительства России («Белый дом») | Time Out" (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-09-04.

55°45′18″N 37°34′23″E / 55.754935°N 37.573146°E / 55.754935; 37.573146

white, house, moscow, other, uses, white, house, disambiguation, white, house, russian, Белый, дом, bely, ˈbʲɛlɨj, ˈdom, officially, house, government, russian, federation, russian, Дом, Правительства, Российской, Федерации, pravitelstva, rossiyskoi, federatsi. For other uses see White House disambiguation The White House Russian Belyj dom tr Bely dom IPA ˈbʲɛlɨj ˈdom officially The House of the Government of the Russian Federation Russian Dom Pravitelstva Rossijskoj Federacii tr Dom pravitelstva Rossiyskoi Federatsii also known as the Russian White House and previously known as the House of Soviets of Russia is a government building in Moscow It stands on the Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment The building serves as the primary office of the government of Russia and is the official workplace of the Russian Prime Minister The House of the Government of the Russian FederationDom Pravitelstva Rossijskoj FederaciiThe building in 2016Former namesHouse of Soviets of the RSFSR House of Soviets of the Russian FederationGeneral informationTypeParliamentArchitectural styleSoviet modernismTown or cityMoscowCountryRussiaConstruction started1965 58 years ago 1965 Completed1981 42 years ago 1981 Height119 mDesign and constructionArchitect s Dmitry Chechulin Pavel ShtellerIt was built from 1965 to 1981 according to the design of architect Dmitry Chechulin to house the People s Control Committee and the Supreme Soviet of Russia 1 During the August 1991 coup d etat attempt the building became a center of resistance to the State Committee on the State of Emergency The structure was badly damaged during the 1993 constitutional crisis and was subsequently reconstructed Contents 1 History 1 1 Construction and use in the Soviet Union 1 2 Role in 1991 coup d etat attempt 1 3 Forceful dispersal of the Supreme Soviet of Russia 1 4 End of the 20th century and the present 2 Architecture 3 External links 4 ReferencesHistory EditConstruction and use in the Soviet Union Edit View of Moscow 1972 showing the construction site of the complex In 1965 construction of the House of Soviets began to accommodate the administrative bodies of the RSFSR at this site 1 The plan for the reconstruction of the territory was prepared by a group of architects known as Mosproekt 1 led by Dmitry Chechulin Pavel Shteller Vladimir Lukyanov and others alongside a team of engineers 2 3 The overall design follows Chechulin s 1934 draft of the Aeroflot building Initially Chechulin proposed constructing the building on Taganka Square which rises above a significant part of the city as the site on the Krasnopresnenskaya embankment was inconvenient due to nearby buildings however because of the good view alongside the high bank of the Moskva River the current location was chosen instead 4 The House of Soviets was the first multi storey building in which a uniformly shaped prefabricated reinforced concrete frame with monolithic stiffness cores was used Outside the structure was lined with individual claydite concrete panels which were previously finished with marble 5 The total area of the complex was 732 000 square meters with a total area of office space around 132 000 square meters The building was designed with a complex three level system of underground floors where parking bunkers ventilation chambers and refrigeration equipment were located 6 7 The structure was equipped with a separate sewerage and an autonomous power supply system There is a theory that the building is connected by underground passages to subway tunnels but official sources do not confirm or refute this information citation needed According to the memoirs of one of the builders Felix Mikhailovich Ashurov when installing the flagpole Dmitry Chechulin ordered it to be shortened by three meters for a more harmonious combination of proportions however due to possible delays workers were ordered to install the already prepared bar in secret from the architect over a weekend 8 Construction was completed in 1981 with a total cost exceeding 94 million rubles 9 After the completion of the project team leader Dmitry Chechulin architect Vitaly Mazurin and designer Yuri Dykhovichny were awarded the Lenin Prize From 1981 to 1993 the Supreme Soviet of Russia which had until then held its sessions in the Grand Kremlin Palace used the White House The Supreme Soviet of Russia remained in the building until the end of the Soviet Union in 1991 as well as during the first years of the Russian Federation In 1991 the Soviet Union issued a 50 kopeck stamp depicting the White House and honoring resistance to the 1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt Role in 1991 coup d etat attempt Edit Main article 1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt Rally at the walls of the House of Soviets during 1991 coup attemptIn August 1991 the House of Soviets became the center of a confrontation against the State Committee on the State of Emergency The opposition was headed by Russian President Boris Yeltsin in support of whom large scale rallies were held around the building 1 During this period Yeltsin repeatedly spoke to the audience with his most famous speech being delivered on August 19 from the tank of the Taman Division At that time the building was surrounded by a living chain of Muscovites who supported the president An improvised barricade was built around the building using materials such as garbage cans fences of nearby parks benches and sawn trees Protestors also painted graffiti of political topics on the walls of the building 10 11 By August 20 approximately two hundred thousand people had gathered around the structure including public and political figures Ruslan Khasbulatov Ivan Silayev Alexander Rutskoy Eduard Shevardnadze Mikhail Khodorkovsky Mstislav Rostropovich Andrey Makarevich and others 12 Makeshift barricade near the walls of the House of Soviets during 1991 coup attemptThe building was not stormed presumably due to the possible number of civilian and military casualties 12 Later the events that took place near the walls of the House of Soviets and elsewhere in the Soviet Union were defined as the August Coup It was during this period that the name White House was assigned to the building which was widely used by the state media In 1992 the building was depicted on the back side of commemorative coins in honor of the victory of democratic forces and the anniversary of Russia s state sovereignty Forceful dispersal of the Supreme Soviet of Russia Edit Main article 1993 Russian constitutional crisis The White House in 1993 soon after it was shelled by tanksIn the midsts of the constitutional crisis of 1993 Boris Yeltsin issued Decree No 1400 to dissolve the Congress of People s Deputies and the Supreme Soviet of Russia The House of Soviets was disconnected from television and radio According to the conclusion of the Constitutional Court the president s actions were illegal and contradicted the then Russian Constitution of 1978 An emergency session of the Supreme Soviet was convened during which among other things it was decided to protect the building from possible siege The events caused a spontaneous rally near the walls of the building Protective detachments from security civilians Cossack volunteer formations and retired military personnel were organized at the House of Soviets Data on weapons stored in the building vary From September 23 to October 4 1993 the Tenth Session of the Congress of People s Deputies of the Russian Federation was held in the building as the conference hall of the Grand Kremlin Palace was closed for repair The Congress and the Supreme Soviet stated the termination of the powers of President Boris Yeltsin and their transfer to Vice President Alexander Rutskoy 13 14 During this period rallies were held in different parts of Moscow which caused armed skirmishes and the territory around the building was recognized as a particularly dangerous zone At a meeting of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation it was decided to storm the House of Soviets after which President Boris Yeltsin signed a decree on attracting troops from the Ministry of Defense to Moscow During the seizure of the building six tanks from the Taman Division that were placed on the Novoarbatsky Bridge fired 12 shells at the upper floors of the building citation needed Arkady Baskaev who was appointed commandant of the House of Soviets after the assault said that the fire in the building of the Supreme Soviet arose as a result of shelling from tanks 15 Subsequently Alexander Rutskoy described the incident as follows 16 The first shell hit the meeting room the second in Khasbulatov s office the third in mine And they were beaten with high explosive shells not insacks as they claim today The building will not burn from the dummy I was sitting in my office when the projectile broke the window and exploded in the right corner of the room Fortunately my table was on my left A stunned man came out of there I don t know what saved me Because of the shelling a fire began on the 12th and 13th floors of the White House The fire covered the entire upper part and destroyed 30 of the total area of the building later the damage was estimated at 170 billion rubles The situation in the White House after the assault was described by a correspondent of the Kommersant newspaper 17 By order of the White House Commandant Major General Arkady Baskaev there is enhanced security from assault rifles and special forces of the Ministry of Internal Affairs on each floor Such caution is by no means unnecessary since armed supporters of parliament are still in the basements of the Armed Forces building In the first minutes after the assault as soon as the shots subsided and special forces soldiers went to inspect the upper floors of the White House streams of marauders rushed into the halls The inside of the parliament building is completely looted Everything you can have has been carried away TVs phones table lamps and even plumbing Ruslan Khasbulatov referring to eyewitness letters in Nezavisimaya Gazeta states that there were about 1 500 victims in total whose bodies were taken out of the building in secret passages 18 End of the 20th century and the present Edit Facade of the building after reconstruction 2008 Following the events of the 1993 constitutional crisis control of the building was transferred via a decree by Boris Yeltsin to the Government of the Russian Federation the executive branch under whose control the reconstruction of the building took place 9 The reformed parliament known thereafter by its Imperial era title of the State Duma was elected in December 1993 and moved to another building on Moscow s Okhotny Ryad street American architect Charles Jencks suggested that restorers mark the burnt floors on the facade with black granite cladding however this idea was abandoned in favor of recreating the original appearance of the complex According to some data repairs on the upper floors of the building were carried out by Turkish workers 19 20 During the restoration work the clock on the tower of the main facade of the building was restored and reused however by the second half of 1994 the clock was dismantled and a golden image of a double headed eagle the coat of arms of Russia had been installed in its place During this the building was fenced off from the embankment with a massive fence that prevented rallies at the walls of the building 21 Nevertheless protesters continue to gather next to the White House on the Humpback Bridge In 1996 on the territory of the nearby Presnensky Park a chapel was opened in memory of those who died in the House of Soviets 1 22 Restoration work was carried out for almost a year and in 1994 the repaired complex was occupied by the Government of the Russian Federation 23 An inscription at the base of the tower reads House of the Government of the Russian Federation the official name of the building There is an office for the President of Russia located on the third floor of the building Traditionally at the end of each year the President holds meetings with the Council of Ministers in the White House but ordinary meetings are rarely held in the building 24 25 In 2008 there was a large scale reconstruction of the fifth floor of the building At the same time some media outlets reported on the construction of a swimming pool and gym within the building but official sources did not confirm this information 26 A year later a private restaurant was opened on the twelfth floor of the complex In 2012 plans were made to move the offices of officials to a new federal center in Kommunarka but this idea was postponed indefinitely 27 28 The following year a helipad was installed near the building In September 2020 the press service of the Government of the Russian Federation reported that the condition of White House was recognized as an emergency citing issues with the roof and leaks in the basement among other issues The Russian government has planned to allocate more than 5 billion rubles for reconstruction purposes 29 Architecture Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source The White House 2014 Panorama of Krasnopresnenskaya embankment with the White House in the center 2008 During the construction of the White House Dmitry Chechulin used elements of his unrealized 1934 design for the headquarters of state airline Aeroflot The original idea for the Aeroflot building was developed in honor of the rescue by Soviet pilots of the passengers of the sunken steamship SS Chelyuskin The construction was supposed to have simplified forms the stylobate of the building was similar in size to the ship it was supplemented with numerous sculptural compositions The main entrance of the planned building emphasized the portico which resembled a triumphal arch It was assumed that the Aeroflot building would form a new look for the Belorussky railway station square but the structure did not correspond to the site in size and configuration so it was never built 30 23 31 In 1965 Dmitry Chechulin used his plans for the unrealized project of the Aeroflot building to develop the plans for the future House of Soviets However the monumental complex of the White House differed from the original idea of the architect 9 The simplified composition of the building had a symmetrical pyramidal structure composed of three parts The powerful base with divergent ramps and a front staircase is supported by a wide seven storey building with side wings Above them stands a twenty storey tower with rounded edges The strict rhythm of the windows is disturbed on the upper technical floor where the openings are much narrower The outer walls of the structure are lined with granite and white marble The building is crowned by a small tower with a gilded Russian coat of arms and a flagpole on which the national flag is fixed The height of the structure with the flagpole is 119 meters without it 102 meters The building was the last lifetime project of Dmitry Chechulin and is a unique object of Moscow s development forming a panorama of the embankment 1 32 The premises of the complex are decorated with multicolored stone marble inserts 1 The main assembly hall is located in the central part of the seven storey base and faces the Moscow River In total the building has 27 meeting and reception rooms 32 33 External links EditVideo Government commission inside the former House of Soviets after assault and fire October 1993 Image Project of the Aeroflot building by Dmitry Chechulin 1934References Edit a b c d e f Vostryshev Mikhail Vostryshev Mihail 2011 Vsi a Moskva ot A do I A ent s iklopedii a S Shokarev S Shokarev Moskva ISBN 978 5 4320 0001 9 OCLC 729552404 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Glavnyj arhitektor KGB raskryl tajnu prezidentskoj gosdachi www mk ru in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 02 Arhitekturno proektnaya masterskaya 20 archive ph 2013 08 08 Retrieved 2022 09 02 Zhuravlev A M 1985 Dmitry Chechulin in Russian Moskva Stoyizdat Kozak Yu 1986 Stroitelstvo vysokogo zdanij in Russian Moskva Stroyizdat Glavnyj arhitektor KGB raskryl tajnu prezidentskoj gosdachi www mk ru in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 02 Hronika putcha Chast IV 2006 08 20 Retrieved 2022 09 02 ShAR ShKOLA ARHITEKTURNOGO RAZVITIYa Belyj Dom na Krasnopresnenskoj naberezhnoj Moskvy Ashurov Feliks Mihajlovich iz vospominanij 2018 09 28 Archived from the original on 2018 09 28 Retrieved 2022 09 02 a b c Problemy rekonstrukcii Belogo doma www kommersant ru in Russian 1993 10 09 Retrieved 2022 09 02 Mezhdunarodnyj fond socialno ekonomicheskih i politologicheskih issledovanij Gorbachev Fond Avgustovskij putch Letopis sobytij Gorbachev Fond Retrieved 2022 09 04 Hodorkovskij Kandidaturu Putina ya ne privetstvoval i Putin eto znaet Radio Svoboda in Russian 11 September 2009 Retrieved 2022 09 04 a b Novosti R I A 2016 08 19 Avgustovskij putch 1991 goda RIA Novosti in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Voronin Yu M Strenozhennaya Rossiya 1993 sovnarkom ru Retrieved 2022 09 04 Zaklyuchenie Komissii Gosudarstvennoj Dumy Federalnogo Sobraniya Rossijskoj Federacii po dopolnitelnomu izucheniyu i analizu sobytij proishodivshih v gorode Moskve 21 sentyabrya 5 oktyabrya 1993 goda Tajna bezzakoniya RUSSKOE VOSKRESENIE www voskres ru Retrieved 2022 09 04 gazeta Duel politika ekonomika Rossiya poedinok istoriya cenzura demokratiya borba obshestvo ideya 2017 11 15 Archived from the original on 2017 11 15 Retrieved 2022 09 04 Oktyabrskoe Vosstanie 1993 goda 1993 sovnarkom ru Retrieved 2022 09 04 Situaciya vokrug Belogo doma www kommersant ru in Russian 1993 10 08 Retrieved 2022 09 04 Khasbulatov R I 2011 Prestupnyĭ rezhim liberalʹnai a tiranii a Elʹt s ina ISBN 978 5 9955 0304 0 OCLC 778785503 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ya rabotayu v gostinice Ukraina The Village in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Ivanov Ivan 1995 Anafema khronika gosudarstvennogo perevorota zapiski razvedchika Sankt Peterburg Palei a ISBN 5 86020 319 5 OCLC 35150959 Ot Sovetov k Pravitelstvu istoriya Belogo doma v Moskve RBK Nedvizhimost in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Shevchenko Valeriĭ Shevchenko Valerij 2013 Zhertvy chernogo okti a bri a 1993 Moskva ISBN 978 5 4438 0548 1 OCLC 893907798 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Belyj dom na Krasnoj Presne Moskovskaya pravda 2016 01 21 Archived from the original on 2018 09 28 Retrieved 2018 08 10 Putin priehal v Dom pravitelstva vesti ru in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Putin posetit Dom pravitelstva IA REGNUM in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Shishkunova Elena 2008 03 13 Belyj dom podstraivaetsya pod Putina Izvestiya in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Biznes centr Belyj dom Forbes ru in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Novosti R I A 2013 10 04 pereezd chinovnikov v novuyu Moskvu otlozhen na neopredelennyj srok RIA Novosti in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Na rekonstrukciyu Belogo doma napravyat svyshe 5 mlrd RBK in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Galina Tarakanova 2014 Krasnaya strojploshadka Argumenty i Fakty ISBN 9785457730786 Archived from the original on 2022 01 03 Retrieved 2018 08 10 Proekt zdaniya Centralnogo doma Aeroflota Kultura RF 2018 Archived from the original on 2018 09 28 Retrieved 2018 08 08 a b Belyj Dom Enciklopediya Moskvy Chto znachit opisanie foto tolkovanie opredelenie Magiya slov in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Dom Pravitelstva Rossii Belyj dom metro Krasnopresnenskaya Krasnopresnenskaya nab 2 opisanie tochnyj adres v g Moskva chasy raboty i otzyvy o Dom Pravitelstva Rossii Belyj dom Time Out in Russian Retrieved 2022 09 04 Architecture portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to White house Moscow 55 45 18 N 37 34 23 E 55 754935 N 37 573146 E 55 754935 37 573146 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title White House Moscow amp oldid 1161382136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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