| 
                    
                    
                 | 
                
                    
      
                          
                                                                                Entries
                      
                                                /
                      
                                                                                                  "Brick Style"
                                               
                      
                                                                              
           
    
    
    
        
    
                                   
    
            
                            
                
                   
                                                                                              "Brick Style"
                                                  
                                                                  
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                                                            Categories /
          Architecture/Architectural Styles
       
   
                                                                                                                                        
                           
                       
                                                                
                                                                       "BRICK STYLE". The term used in Russian art-historical literature for a so-called rational trend in architecture from the second half of the 19th - beginning of the 20th centuries. Those who built in the the "Brick Style" tended to reject stucco decoration that imitated historical styles and shapes, and opted instead to either leave the brick walls exposed or cover them with ceramic tile facades. For decoration, they mainly used brick brought from abroad, usually from Germany, to create layering effects or connections between different brick colours; ceramic and natural stone details were introduced. Buildings with non-plastered facades had already appeared in St. Petersburg during the second half of the 18th - early 19th centuries (in industrial and shop buildings, barracks, sometimes park pavillions). As an independent trend, the "Brick Style" was formed in the middle of the 19th century, particularly in works by architect P.I. Tamansky (building of the Arsenal on Kronverk), G.A. Bosse (the German Reformed Church), and especially by R.B. Bernhard (Main Gas Factory, 74 Obvodny Canal Embankment, 1858-1862; Evangelic Womens' Hospital, 2-4 Ligovsky Avenue, 1870-1871, together with O.G. Gippius). Furthermore, the style developed in the creative work of architects V.A. Schreter and I.S. Kitner, including the A.I. Nissen apartment house and factory (1872-73, 183 Fontanka River Embankment) and the V.F. Strauss residence (1873-1874, 9 Second Line of Vasilievsky Island. Both architects considerably influenced their contemporaries. Important examples of the "Brick Style" are the V.A. Schreter private residence (112 and 114 Moika River Embankment, 1890-91 and 1897-99), the P.Y. Bekel residence (23 Second Line of Vasilievsky Island, 1881-83, architect F. K. Punshel), the G.G. Eliseev residence (64 Fontanka River Embankment, 1889-1890, architect G.V. Baranovsky), and the Kresti (Crosses) prison complex. The "Brick Style" was widely prevalent in industrial architecture. Some methods gleaned from the "Brick Style" were used by masters of the Russian style at the late 19th century (architects A.A. Parland, V. A. Kosyakov, see article on the Kosyakovs, N.N. Nikonov). Another notable adherent of the "Brick Style" was architect K. K. Schmidt; his buildings - which included the V.V. Tis mansion (3 Syezzhinskaya Street, 1897-98), the Alexandrinsky Women's Refuge (49-51 Bolshoy Avenue, Vasilievsky Island, 1897-99), his own private residence (13 Khersonskaya Street) and the G.A. Schultze residence (now 22 Kuibysheva Street, both designed in 1901-1902) - he made stylistic transitions mediaeval architecture motifs and the modernist style. At the beginning of the 20th century, brick (mainly of a light grey colour) became one of the most popular materials for facades; it was often used by architects R.F. Melzer, A.I. von Gogen, and A.S. Khrenov. During that period, the "Brick Style" was transformed in a sort of rational Art Nouveau. References: Пунин А. Л. Архитектурные памятники Петербурга: Вторая половина XIX в. Л., 1981; Кириков Б. М., Штиглиц М. С. Петербург немецких архитекторов: От барокко до авангарда. СПб., 2002. B. М. Kirikov.
                                                                      
                          
                      
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Persons 
                     
                                    Baranovsky Gavriil Vasilievich
                        
                                    Bekel P.Ya.
                        
                                    Bernhard Rudolf Bogdanovich
                        
                                    Bosse G.A. (see Bosse Yu.A.)
                        
                                    Eliseev Grigory Grigorievich
                        
                                    Gippius Otto Gustavovich
                        
                                    Gogen Alexander Ivanovich von
                        
                                    Khrenov Alexander Sergeevich
                        
                                    Kitner Ieronim Sevastianovich
                        
                                    Kosyakov Vladimir Antonovich
                        
                                    Meltzer Roman (Robert-Friedrich) Fedorovich
                        
                                    Nikonov Nikolay Nikitich
                        
                                    Nissen Andrey Ivanovich
                        
                                    Parland Alfred Alexandrovich
                        
                                    Punshel Fedor Karlovich
                        
                                    Schmidt Karl Karlovich
                        
                                    Schreter Viktor Alexandrovich
                        
                                    Schultze G.A.
                        
                                    Strauss V.F.
                        
                                    Tamansky Peter Ivanovich
                        
                                    Tis V.V.
                        
                         
                          
                      
                                                                
                    Addresses 
                                            
                                                  
          2nd Line of Vasilievsky Island/Saint Petersburg, city, house 9
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          2nd Line of Vasilievsky Island/Saint Petersburg, city, house 23
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Bolshoy Ave of Vasilievsky Island/Saint Petersburg, city, house 51
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Bolshoy Ave of Vasilievsky Island/Saint Petersburg, city, house 49
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Fontanka River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 183
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Fontanka River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 64
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Khersonskaya St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 13
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Kuibysheva St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 22
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Ligovsky Ave/Saint Petersburg, city, house 4
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Ligovsky Ave/Saint Petersburg, city, house 2
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Moika River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 112
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Moika River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 114
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Obvodny Canal Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 74
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Syezzhinskaya St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 3
       
   
                                                     
                                            
                          
                     
                                                                                    
                    The subject Index 
                                            
                                                   
                                                  
          St. Peter’s German Reformed Church
       
   
                              
                                                   
                                                  
          Kresty Prison.
       
   
                              
                                            
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
                
  
                     
    
    
    
        
        
                                      
                
                
        
    
    
    
                        
    
                      
      
        
    
    
        
    
        
    
            
    
    
                    
        
                                                               
                                                                                                
                            
      hidden
      
          
             | 
                                                        Architectural Styles (entry) 
                                                                           
                         
                        ARCHITECTURAL STYLES, recognizable systems of architectural compositional techniques, forms and decor, whose differences are caused by social and cultural environment, aesthetic preferences and the type of architectural culture of a particular epoch
                                             
                               | 
             
                 
              | 
          
         
              | 
                                                   | 
          
       
      
  
                         | 
                      
                                                                                              
                                                                        
                            
      hidden
      
          
             | 
                                                        Bernhard R.B. (1819-1887), architect 
                                                                           
                         
                        BERNHARD Rudolf Bogdanovich (1819-1887), architect, representative of Eclecticism, civil engineer, teacher. In 1839-43, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts under the guidance of K. A. Ton
                                             
                               | 
             
                 
              | 
          
         
              | 
                                                   | 
          
       
      
  
                         | 
                      
                                                                                              
                                                                        
                            
      hidden
      
          
             | 
                                                        Kitner I.S., (1839-1929), architect 
                                                                           
                         
                        KITNER Ieronim Sevastyanovich (1839, St. Petersburg - 1929), architect, member of the Academy of Architecture (1867), honorary member of Academy of Fine Arts (1911)
                                             
                               | 
             
                 
              | 
          
         
              | 
                                                   | 
          
       
      
  
                         | 
                      
                                                                                              
                                                                        
                            
      hidden
      
          
             | 
                                                        Schreter V. A. , (1839-1901), architect 
                                                                           
                         
                        SCHRETER Viktor Alexandrovich (1839-1901), architect, lecturer, representative of the transitional rationalistic style from Eclecticism to Art Nouveau. In 1856-58, studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in the class of L.L
                                             
                               | 
             
                 
              | 
          
         
              | 
                                                   | 
          
       
      
  
                         | 
                      
                                                   
    
    
    
                        
    
                      
      
        
    
 
                 |