Stepan Krichinsky Explained

Stepan Samoilovich Krichinsky
Native Name:Степа́н Само́йлович Кричи́нский
Birth Date:20 January 1874
Birth Place:Kaskevichi estate, Oshmyansky Uyezd, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire
Death Place:Petrograd, Russian SFSR
Citizenship:Russian Empire
Style:Eclectics

Stepan Samoilovich Krichinsky (January 20, 1874 — August 9, 1923) was a Russian architect of the eclectic and modern era.

Biography

Krichinsky was born and raised in the family of Major General Selim (Samoil) Krichinsky, a representative of Polish-Lithuanian Tatars.[1] Krichinsky received secondary education at a real school in Vilnius. In 1897, he graduated from the . Since 1900, he worked as the chief architect in the Russian Border Guard Department.[2]

Krichinsky got acquainted with the architecture of Italy, Germany, France, Sweden and Finland. He studied monuments of Russian architecture in the north and central Russian provinces. He investigated the issues of resort construction on the Kuban and the Black Sea coast in 1916–1917. Krichinsky built 24 buildings in various cities. He took part in the construction of some large buildings in Saint Petersburg.[3]

From 1918 to 1920 he was a professor of architecture at the Kuban Polytechnic Institute, and from 1921 at the Institute of Civil Engineers in Petrograd. Since 1922 he was the head of the Architectural and Construction Department in Petrograd.

He was married to the daughter of Gleb Uspensky — Maria Glebovna. Her brother, Alexander Uspensky, was also a prominent architect. Stepan and Maria Krichinsky had three children: two sons, Gleb (born 1904) and Boris (born 1905), and a daughter Irina. In 1925—1926 Boris Krichinsky compiled a list of his father's works.[4]

Stepan Krichinsky died in 1923 and was buried in Volkovo Cemetery in Saint Petersburg.[5]

List of works

Literature

References

  1. Тагирджанова А. Н. В костёле мог бы звучать азан… // История Петербурга, 2008, № 2, с. 53—60.
  2. Web site: Архитектор Кричинский — Журнальный зал .
  3. http://encspb.ru/object/2804007704
  4. Web site: Архитектор Кричинский — Журнальный зал .
  5. Степан Самойлович Кричинский. Некролог//Зодчий, 1924, N 1, С.4-5
  6. Кригер, Лариса Валерьевна. Усадьбы Воронежской области. 2011. — 366 с.