Soviet architecture

E630900

Soviet architecture is a style of building design that developed in the Soviet Union, characterized by monumental scale, utilitarian functionality, and often stark, ideologically driven aesthetics ranging from early avant-garde constructivism to later socialist realism and mass-produced housing.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (3)

Statements (99)

Predicate Object
instanceOf architectural style
cultural phenomenon
aimedToExpress collective identity
industrial progress
power of the socialist state
victory of socialism
countryOfOrigin Soviet Union
developedIn Soviet Union NERFINISHED
endTime 1991
governedBy centralized state planning
five-year plans
state design institutes
hasCharacteristic emphasis on collective life
emphasis on industrial materials
emphasis on social infrastructure
functional zoning
ideologically driven aesthetics
integration of art and architecture
large housing estates
large-scale urban planning
mass production of housing
monumental government buildings
monumental public spaces
monumental scale
propagandistic function
repetition of building types
standardization
stark appearance
state planning control
use of prefabricated elements
use of socialist symbols
utilitarian functionality
hasPart Constructivist architecture NERFINISHED
House of Soviets buildings NERFINISHED
Khrushchyovka housing NERFINISHED
Palace of Culture type buildings
Socialist realist architecture
Soviet metro station design
Soviet modernism NERFINISHED
Soviet sanatoriums
Soviet sports palaces
Soviet war memorials
Stalinist architecture NERFINISHED
microrayon planning
panel housing (plattenbau-type)
ideology Marxism–Leninism
socialism
influenced Brutalist architecture NERFINISHED
architecture of Eastern Bloc countries
late 20th-century urban planning in former USSR
postwar mass housing worldwide
influencedBy Bauhaus NERFINISHED
Constructivism NERFINISHED
Russian avant-garde NERFINISHED
functionalism
industrial architecture
modernism
neoclassicism
legacy dominant built environment in many post-Soviet cities
influence on contemporary preservation debates
infrastructure of former Soviet republics
large stock of prefabricated housing
notableExample All-Union Exhibition of Economic Achievements (VDNKh) in Moscow NERFINISHED
Dnieper Hydroelectric Station structures NERFINISHED
Moscow Metro stations
Narkomfin Building in Moscow NERFINISHED
Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw NERFINISHED
Palace of the Soviets (unbuilt project) NERFINISHED
Seven Sisters skyscrapers in Moscow NERFINISHED
region Baltic republics NERFINISHED
Belarus NERFINISHED
Caucasus republics
Central Asian republics NERFINISHED
Russia NERFINISHED
Transcaucasia NERFINISHED
Ukraine NERFINISHED
startTime 1917
timePeriod 20th century
typicalBuildingType Brezhnevka apartment block NERFINISHED
House of Soviets NERFINISHED
Khrushchyovka apartment block NERFINISHED
Lenin monument ensemble NERFINISHED
Palace of Culture NERFINISHED
typicalUrbanForm broad avenues
green belts around housing estates
large public squares
microrayon
usedFor administrative buildings
cultural institutions
educational buildings
healthcare facilities
industrial complexes
mass housing
transport infrastructure
usedMaterial brick
plaster finishes
prefabricated concrete panels
reinforced concrete
steel

Referenced by (5)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Ashot Mndoyants architecturalStyle Soviet architecture
Oktyabrskaya hasStyle Soviet architecture
Neu-Hohenschönhausen locality hasCharacteristic Soviet architecture
subject surface form: Neu-Hohenschönhausen
this entity surface form: Plattenbau architecture
Novogireyevo architecturalStyle Soviet architecture
this entity surface form: Soviet modernism
Savyolovskaya hasArchitecturalStyle Soviet architecture
this entity surface form: Soviet modernism