The Struysky House in St. Petersburg was recognized as a heritage site.


There are more regional architectural monuments in St. Petersburg. The Struysky House on the 7th line of Vasilyevsky Island was recognized as an object of cultural heritage of regional significance.
According to the 78 TV channel with reference to Smolny, the former building of the orphanage of the St. Andrew's Cathedral Parish Society was added to the unified state register as a WINDOW by order of the KGIOP.
The front two-storey stone building was built at the end of the XVIII century. In the 1830s, it was built on the third floor, and in the 1860s, the southwest building was built according to the design of architect Grigory Karpov. In the 1890s, the side buildings were designed by architect Alexei Soskov.
In the second half of the 19th century, the building was owned by a representative of the famous Struysky noble family. The heir was the poet Dmitry Struysky, who wrote under the pseudonym Trilunny.
Since 1891, in accordance with the will of the last owner of the house from the Struysky family, Alexandra Yuryevna, the site has been in the possession of the Andreevsky Charitable Society on Vasilyevsky Island. It houses a shelter for the terminally ill. In 1914, an infirmary was placed in the premises of one of the stone wings. In the 1920s, there was a dormitory in the building. It is now an apartment building.
Earlier it was reported that a monument to Mikhail Speransky, the founder of Russian law, was unveiled in St. Petersburg. The monument is installed in front of the building of the Russian National Library. The repository's funds contain the largest archive of the statesman's works.
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