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Stanislavsky Factory Landscape

As masterplanner and design architect for the Stanislavsky Factory in Moscow, the practice considered the mixed-use redevelopment of the site holistically, as both an architectural, and urban landscape scheme. The landscape ties together 13 buildings of varying age, material, style, and orientation and includes new courtyards, gardens, and car parking areas.

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The series of historic buildings has been converted into a mixed-use business and cultural complex, with a significant new residential component, contained within a historical neighbourhood originally developed in the 19th century by one of Russia’s leading industrialists and cultural patrons, the Stanislavsky family.
 
Considerable research went into specifying frost-hardy plant species capable of surviving the extreme climactic variations of Moscow. As focal points there are two enclosed courtyards with timber decks.
 
Car parking consumes a large area of the scheme and has been considered as part of the overall landscape, rather than as a separate component. Rows of trees, bands of paving, and lines of planting are used as proportional devices to link the car park and the gardens together into one landscape expression.
  • Type

    Landscapes

  • Sector

    -

  • Location

    Moscow, Russia

  • Description

    -

  • Client

    Sergey Gordeev

  • Size

    60,000 sqm

  • Cost

    US$80 million

  • Team

    John McAslan + Partners, Masterplanner, Design Architect and Landscape Architect

  • Status

    2004 – 2010