Saviour Church on Sennaya Square (Saint Petersburg)
Russia /
Sankt Petersburg /
Saint Petersburg
World
/ Russia
/ Sankt Petersburg
/ Saint Petersburg
, 0 km from center (Санкт-Петербург)
World / Russia / Leningrad
destroyed, invisible, 18th century construction, 19th century construction, object of cultural heritage of regional importance (Russia), 1900s construction
The Assumption Church on Sennaya Square in St. Petersburg was a Late Baroque penticupolar church underwritten by Orthodox merchants trading at the nearby Sennaya Square market.
The church originated as a wooden building transferred across the Neva from the northern part of the city.[1] It was rebuilt in stone in the 1750s to a Rastrelliesque design attributed to Andrey Kvasov and was slightly modified on several occasions, most importantly by Luigi Rusca in 1817. The church boasted a high belfry of three storeys, a gilded icon screen, and many valuable items. Its parish was one of the richest in the city.
The large building with the distinctive dark-green jug-like domes, popularly known as the Savour Church, used to dominate the surrounding district. It gave its name to Spassky Island (the central parcel of the downtown wedged between the Fontanka, Moika, Griboyedov and Kryukov canals) and Spasskaya metro station.
The building survived the Stalin period intact and was even elevated by the Living Church to a cathedral status (in 1923) but was blown up at the height of Khrushchev's anti-religious campaign in 1961.[2] A metro vestibule that was to replace it stands slightly to the north. The site of the church has been marked by a very small and plain-looking chapel since 2003.
www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=993593&page=2
The church originated as a wooden building transferred across the Neva from the northern part of the city.[1] It was rebuilt in stone in the 1750s to a Rastrelliesque design attributed to Andrey Kvasov and was slightly modified on several occasions, most importantly by Luigi Rusca in 1817. The church boasted a high belfry of three storeys, a gilded icon screen, and many valuable items. Its parish was one of the richest in the city.
The large building with the distinctive dark-green jug-like domes, popularly known as the Savour Church, used to dominate the surrounding district. It gave its name to Spassky Island (the central parcel of the downtown wedged between the Fontanka, Moika, Griboyedov and Kryukov canals) and Spasskaya metro station.
The building survived the Stalin period intact and was even elevated by the Living Church to a cathedral status (in 1923) but was blown up at the height of Khrushchev's anti-religious campaign in 1961.[2] A metro vestibule that was to replace it stands slightly to the north. The site of the church has been marked by a very small and plain-looking chapel since 2003.
www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=993593&page=2
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saviour_Church_on_Sennaya_Square
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 59°55'38"N 30°19'13"E
- Palace of culture "DK im. Pervoy Pyatiletki" (now is destroyed) 1.5 km
- Former forest 11 km
- Lavriki milk farm 18 km
- Tīrais swamp 484 km
- Former "Kompresors" factory 490 km
- Ruins 494 km
- Ruines of former sanatorium 517 km
- вторая тер 518 km
- abandoned silo launch area 676 km
- Dismantled UR-100K (SS-11 SEGO) ICBM Silo (17A) 683 km
- Spassky Island 0.3 km
- Municipal Okrug 78 0.6 km
- Kazanskiy Island 0.7 km
- Bezymyanny island 0.8 km
- Semyonovsky Municipal Okrug 1.2 km
- Admiralteysky Municipal Okrug 1.3 km
- Admiralteysky District 1.6 km
- Tsentralny District 2.1 km
- Municipal Okrug 7 2.2 km
- Vasileostrovsky District 4.4 km