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St Petersburg: truly a city for all seasons

St Petersburg still exudes the opulence of Imperial Russia.

December 3, 2009 11:12
Summer Palace of Catherine the Great: one of three former homes to Russian royalty

By

Daralyn Danns,

Daralyn Danns

5 min read

With its pretty canals, ornate churches and palaces, St Petersburg still exudes the opulence of Imperial Russia. Wander round the streets studded with beautiful buildings and you half expect to bump into Catherine the Great or see Rasputin lurking around a corner. Yet, while St Petersburg is cleverly embracing its past, it is also confidently moving into the future.

Founded by Peter The Great in 1703, St Petersburg (named after the apostle who was the Tsar’s patron saint) is a relatively young city which started out as a fortress. By 1712, what was once a swamp had been turned into the capital of Russia. The Tsar’s original palace was a small cabin which is now a museum. Peter The Great was inspired by the West and the city quickly began to be filled with baroque and neoclassical palaces designed by Italian architects.

Buildings, except for churches, were not allowed to stand higher than the Winter Palace and the city has more or less kept to this tradition which has helped it to maintain its character.

St Petersburg, a city that inspired writers such as Dostoevsky, managed to avoid much of Stalinism’s architectural style, but the old KGB building is a stark reminder of its communist past.