Alexander Park (Saint Petersburg) Explained

59.964°N 30.29°W

Alexander Park or Alexandrovsky Park is a park on Petrogradsky Island of Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is one of the first public parks in St. Petersburg.

Structures

The park has a semicircular/crescent shape. The Leningrad Zoo is the largest occupant of the park. The other end of the park is the Northwestern Branch of the Russian State University of Justice. A separates the park from the Kronverk (now the Artillery Museum), which otherwise would be at the center of the area. To the south of the park and the Kronverk is the Kronverksky Strait, beyond which is the Peter and Paul Fortress.

The northern half of the park are occupied by (from west to east):

Artworks

It has the only outdoor miniature park in Russia: (Russian: Мини-город "mini-town").

The Architects (Russian: Зодчие), a bronze sculptural group by Alexander Taratynov was installed on June 15, 2011. Commissioned by Gazprom, it depicts the great architects of the Russian Empire. For a statue of a French architect Thomas de Thomon, the image of British chemist and mineralogist Thomas Thomson was mistakenly used. Taratynov blamed Wikipedia for the error but also himself for not checking with a historian to verify the image he used was accurate.[1] [2]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wikipedia gaffe sees statue to Glasgow professor erected in RUSSIA . . Jack Aitchison . 20 August 2018 . 19 August 2018.
  2. Web site: Как Алексей Миллер подарил Петербургу вместо русского зодчего шотландского химика из Википедии . Fontanka . Ilya Kazakov . August 16, 2018 . August 19, 2018 . As Alexey Miller presented to St. Petersburg instead of Russian architect Scottish chemist from Wikipedia . Russian . https://archive.today/20180820033152/https://www.fontanka.ru/2018/08/16/043/?feed&ref=tjournal.ru . August 20, 2018 . "The architect acknowledged the error and dumped the blame on Wikipedia, from which he downloaded the photo." . live . mdy-all .