Sobyanin announced the completion of the restoration of Peter the Great's house.


The restoration of Peter the Great's House, which is a monument of wooden architecture, has been completed in Moscow. This was announced by Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, noting that this is the only memorial museum in the capital dedicated to the reformer tsar.
"In 1702, it was built by Russian carpenters and Dutch shipwrights at the mouth of the Northern Dvina," the mayor recalled in his Telegram channel. In 1877, the building was moved to Arkhangelsk, and in 1934 to Kolomenskoye in Moscow, where a new permanent exhibition "Peter the Great: the Birth of a Maritime Power" is now operating.
According to Sobyanin, the renovation of the house began in 2024. Specialists restored the historical appearance of the building, work was carried out both inside and outside the building.
In particular, the exterior walls of the wooden log cabin and decorative elements were put in order, the emergency chimney and roof were repaired. "The floor was replaced in the interiors, everything was treated with special compounds," Sobyanin wrote, adding that engineering systems were also repaired and new ones necessary to ensure the safety of visitors were installed.
In May, Sobyanin announced that more than 500 permits had been issued in Moscow since the beginning of the year to preserve cultural heritage sites. According to him, the facades of the N.A. Durasov Palace, which is the decoration of the Lublino estate, are currently being put in order. "This is an outstanding work of Russian manor architecture of the turn of the XVIII–XIX centuries," the mayor emphasized.
He noted that many of the works there have already been completed. In particular, the antique-themed bas-reliefs were restored, the stucco decoration was cleaned and small cracks were eliminated. "Everything should be finished this year," the mayor said.
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