Anatoly Polyansky
Anatoly Trofimovich Polyansky (Russian: Анатолий Трофимович Полянский; 29 January 1928, Avdiivka – 7 June 1993, Moscow) was a Soviet and Russian architect.
Work
Polyansky gained prominence from his design of the USSR's pavilion at the International World Fair in Brussels in 1958.[1] He also designed Artek in Crimea, the Museum of the Great Patriotic War, Moscow, the Yalta Hotel Complex and the USSR embassy buildings in Greece, Sweden and Egypt.
Awards and honors
- USSR State Prize (1967)
- Order of the October Revolution (1976)
- Lenin Komsomol Prize (1978)
- People's Architect of the USSR (1980)
- State Prize of the Russian Federation (1996, posthumous)
- Order of the Red Banner of Labour
References
- ^ Gianni Talamini (2024). "Urbanising the Virgin Lands: At the frontier of Soviet socialist planning". In Mariotti, Jasna; Leetmaa, Kadri (eds.). Urban Planning During Socialism: Views from the Periphery. Routledge. p. 24. doi:10.4324/9781003327592.
External links
Media related to Anatoly Trofimovich Polyansky at Wikimedia Commons
- (in French) l’Architecture d’aujourd’hui № 147. Paris, 1968.
- New world review, Vol. 33, page 49 // N.W.R. Publications, 1965