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(Página creada con ''''Nikolai Dzhemsovich Kolli''' (Николай Джемсович Колли) (1894 - 1966) fue un arquitecto constructivista y urbanista ruso.')
 
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'''Nikolai Dzhemsovich Kolli''' (Николай Джемсович  Колли) (1894 - 1966) fue un arquitecto constructivista y urbanista ruso.
'''Nikolai Dzhemsovich Kolli''' (Николай Джемсович  Колли) (Moscú, 18 de agosto de 1894 - Moscú, 3 de diciembre de 1966) fue un arquitecto constructivista y urbanista ruso.
En 1918 se construyó la "Cuña Roja", un monumento temporal en la plaza Voskresenskaya en Moscú.
 
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He obtained his architectural diploma in 1922 at Vkhutemas in Moscow where he was a pupil of Ivan Zholtovsky. At the same time as teaching, which he continued until 1941, Kolli worked for a number of years on the prefabrication of housing components. He presented his projects in 1927 at the first Moscow Exhibition of Contemporary Architecture, and between 1927 and 1932 he worked with Victor Vesnin on the construction of the power station on the Dnepr River. From 1928 to 1936 he was the main collaborator with Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret on both the planning and the execution of the Tsentrosoyuz (Central Union of Consumer Cooperatives) Building (now the State Committee for Statistics), on Kirov Street (now Myasnitskaya Street) in Moscow. Kolli went to Paris to work on the project and stayed there for several months, establishing close relations with Jeanneret. Kolli's main contribution involved reconciling Le Corbusier's aspirations for advanced technology with the fairly rudimentary resources of the Moscow construction industry. He was also one of the Russian correspondents at CIAM. Between 1933 and 1941 Kolli led the Architecture Workshop Number 6 of the Moscow Soviet and built the Kirovskaya (now Myasnitskaya) metro station, as well as other remarkable stations of the Moscow metro, the stadium at Izmaylovo and the Izvestiya printing complex. Starting during World War II Kolli played a significant role in the reconstruction of Minsk, Riga and Tver' and at the same time was in charge of the Research Institute for Public and Industrial Buildings. When modern architecture was again encouraged in the USSR in the early 1960s, Kolli was the main supporter of Le Corbusier's rehabilitation.

Revisión del 20:51 14 oct 2011

Nikolai Dzhemsovich Kolli (Николай Джемсович Колли) (Moscú, 18 de agosto de 1894 - Moscú, 3 de diciembre de 1966) fue un arquitecto constructivista y urbanista ruso. En 1918 se construyó la "Cuña Roja", un monumento temporal en la plaza Voskresenskaya en Moscú.

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He obtained his architectural diploma in 1922 at Vkhutemas in Moscow where he was a pupil of Ivan Zholtovsky. At the same time as teaching, which he continued until 1941, Kolli worked for a number of years on the prefabrication of housing components. He presented his projects in 1927 at the first Moscow Exhibition of Contemporary Architecture, and between 1927 and 1932 he worked with Victor Vesnin on the construction of the power station on the Dnepr River. From 1928 to 1936 he was the main collaborator with Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret on both the planning and the execution of the Tsentrosoyuz (Central Union of Consumer Cooperatives) Building (now the State Committee for Statistics), on Kirov Street (now Myasnitskaya Street) in Moscow. Kolli went to Paris to work on the project and stayed there for several months, establishing close relations with Jeanneret. Kolli's main contribution involved reconciling Le Corbusier's aspirations for advanced technology with the fairly rudimentary resources of the Moscow construction industry. He was also one of the Russian correspondents at CIAM. Between 1933 and 1941 Kolli led the Architecture Workshop Number 6 of the Moscow Soviet and built the Kirovskaya (now Myasnitskaya) metro station, as well as other remarkable stations of the Moscow metro, the stadium at Izmaylovo and the Izvestiya printing complex. Starting during World War II Kolli played a significant role in the reconstruction of Minsk, Riga and Tver' and at the same time was in charge of the Research Institute for Public and Industrial Buildings. When modern architecture was again encouraged in the USSR in the early 1960s, Kolli was the main supporter of Le Corbusier's rehabilitation.

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