Everything about Alexey Dushkin totally explained
Alexey Nikolayevich Dushkin (
24 December 1904 –
8 October 1977) was a
Soviet architect, best known for his 1930s designs of
Kropotkinskaya and
Mayakovskaya stations of
Moscow Metro. He worked primarily for subway and railroads and is also noted for his Red Gates administrative building, one of
Seven Sisters.
Early years (1904-1934)
Alexey Dushkin studied chemistry in
Kharkiv for three years since 1921, then transferred to architectural college and graduated in 1930. Dushkin worked in city planning, setting up zoning plans for
Donbass towns; he co-designed a college building in
Kharkiv in 1932. Dushkin associated himself with
VOPRA, a left-wing artistic association led by
Arkady Modrvinov and
Karo Alabyan. In 1932, Dushkin applied for the
Palace of Soviets contest.
His draft
didn't win the main prize, but earned an invitation to Moscow to join the Palace design team, and later
Ivan Fomin's
Workshop No.3.
Dushkin's Metro (1934-1943)
This section is based on "Moscow Metro. 70 years" (World Architecture Magazine no.14, 2005, see References)
Kropotkinskaya (1935)
His greatest chance came with the first stage of
Moscow Metro. Dushkin and Yakov Lichtenberg, two junior architects, were awarded the honorable task of designing the Palace of Soviets metro station (now
Kropotkinskaya).
The choice of young, unknown architects for the most important station is a mystery. Authors of
Moscow Metro. 70 years speculate that Dushkin was spotted by
Lazar Kaganovich, project manager for the Metro, during the Palace of Soviets contest, or even earlier, in Kharkiv (when Kaganovich headed Ukrainian branch of the Communist Party).
Basic triple-span, columnar layout was fixed by the Metro master planners. Dushkin worked within this framework and very tight construction schedule (half a year from earth pit to completion). Later, in 1973, he summarized the experience: "Optical illusion is worthless. Under ground, light is the most vital structural element that livens up materials and underscores shapes... My creed is Kropotkinskaya. We referred to the
Egyptian subterranean legacy, where column tops were lit by oil lamps. This choice is the best answer for the underground reality" . This work earned him a
Stalin Prize in 1941 and Grand Prix awards at expositions in Paris (1937) and Brussels (1958).
Trivia: The columns of Kropotkinskaya look like a row of palm trees. In 1935, when the station was opened, it's hall was lined up with live palm trees in wooden vats.
Ploshchad Revolyutsii (1938)
This deep alignment station required heavy pylons to support the vaults. In 1930s, architects were obsessed with relieving passenger's anxiety of being underground, so one of the objectives was to make these pylons look slimmer. Dushkin proposed an interesting solution - decorate the pylons with wider arhes, filling the gap between the fake and real arch with sculpture. This, he presumed, will narrow the perceived width of pylons.
His original draft called for
bas relief sculpture of life-size standing figures on the corners and a lace-like Gothic ornaments on the main vault. This, however, didn't materialize. Instead,
Matvey Manizer, the sculptor with a political backing, preferred classical, larger-than-life bronze sculpture, crouched between fake arches and the plynth. As a result the station became heavyweignt and dark.
Trivia: Moscow students have a habit of patting the cheeks of Manizer's . This, they say, brings good luck.
Mayakovskaya (1938)
Mayakovskaya, 33 meters under ground, was the first deep alignment station of
columnar type (numerous columnar stations of the first stage, including Kropotkinskaya, were shallow alignment type, built by open pit methode).
Dushkin's design, although a
stalinist classic, is within the lines of
Art deco. Columns are faced with stainless steel and pink
rhodonite, floors and walls are finished in four different shades of granite and marble. 35 (33 visible ) ceiling mosaics by
Alexander Deineka "A day in the Soviet Sky". These mosaics are sometimes criticized as being inadeaqutely small for this station and awkwardly placed in recessed soffits. Dushkin recalled later, "Mayakovskaya could have been more imressive. [We] failed to materialize all design plans".
The station was awarded Grand Prize of the
1939 New York World's Fair. In 1941, it was used as a bomb shelter. November 6, 1941 it housed the
Mossovet meeting were
Stalin delivered his
Brothers and Sisters... patriotic speech.
Avtozavodskaya (1944)
January 1, 1943, in the middle of
Battle of Stalingrad, Moscow Metro opened two new stations, extending the system to
Zavod imeni Stalina, now
Avtozavodskaya. Planners chose Dushkin's simple columnar concept, proven by prewar practice. Columns of Avtozavodskaya are narrower than earlier (and later) examples of this type, giving the station an "airy" feel.
Novoslobodskaya (1952)
This station on the
Ring Line, 40 meters deep, was Moscow's first employing
stained glass, a technology previously associated with
Roman Catholic church and thus deemed unacceptable in Soviet architecture. These glass panes were produced in
Latvia to drafts by
Pavel Korin. Panels, integrated into white marble pylons, relieve the look of an otherwise heavy structure.
According to Dushkin's wife, the architect proposed stained glass and actually travelled to
Riga to inspect Latvian workshops before the war (for example between August, 1940 and June, 1941). These plans materialized a decade later.
According to Alexander Strelkov, junior architect on this project, Dushkin originally settled for
uranium glass, as he once saw in
London, and picked
Vera Mukhina to shape the glass. However,
Gosplan management rejected his request for
uranium, saying "you'd have better chances asking for gold, don't even dream of uranium". Dushkin and Strelkov followed the advice, requested and secured real gold for Pavel Korin's artwork.
Architect of the Railways (1943-1955)
In 1943-1955 Dushkin dedicated himself to mainline railroads and chaired the Architectural Department and Workshop of Ministry of Railways. Dushkin and his workshop designed railway stations to replace the
war losses; unlike Mayakovskaya, these are true examples of heavyweignt
Stalinist architecture.
In 1947, Dushkin received a highest credit,
second class - the right to design one of Stalin's
Seven sisters.
Second class, because the original 8 drafts were pre-arranged into four major and four minor projects; Dushkin qualified for a minor one. He earned
Stalin Prize for a conceptual draft in 1949 (with Boris Mezentsev) and completed the tower in 1951. Construction was complicated by the need for a tunnel connection to
Krasniye Vorota metro station, and required ingenious cryo technology for drilling the tunnels and levelling the foundation slab. It is nor surprising that later the building housed the Ministry of Railways. He returned to Metro once, for
Novoslobodskaya.
In November 1955, Dushkin's railroad terminals became a
lightning rod of
Khruschev's famous decree "On liquidation of excesses in construction...", which spelled the end of Stalinist architecture. Khruschev asserted that costs and volume of these buildings were inflated three times above reasonable estimates. Work of Dushkin's junior architects was ostracized too. Dushkin lost his chair of Chief Railway Architect. He remained a professor at
Moscow Architectural Institute until 1974, but hadn't build anything significant since 1955.
His granddaughter, Natalya Dushkina, is an architect and a vocal preservation advocate.
Buildings
- 1932 Automobile and Road College, Kharkiv
- 1935 Kropotkinskaya station, Moscow Metro
- 1938 Ploshchad Revolyutsii station, Moscow Metro
- 1938 Mayakovskaya station, Moscow Metro
- 1944 Avtozavodskaya station, Moscow Metro
- 1947-1953 Red Gates skyscraper (Ministry of rail transport), Moscow
- 1949 Railway terminal, Simferopol
- 1950 Railway terminal, Dnepropetrovsk
- 1951 Railway terminal, Sochi
- 1952 Novoslobodskaya station, Moscow
- 1953-1957 Detsky Mir department store, Moscow
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