Saint-Petersburg
> Summer Garden
Summer Garden of Saint-Petersburg
The Summer Garden is the oldest garden in St. Petersburg. The summer residence
of Peter the Great was founded in 1704 on the site of the former Swedish mansion.
The layout of the garden formed in the 1710s. The three main paths were laid
out from the Neva into the heart of the garden, while the rest intersected them
to form a rectangular network
The Italian marble sculptures from the original collection of Peter the Great
were placed in the closest to the Neva part of the garden known as the First.
restoration.
It was there where most of the entertainment facilities were located and the
surviving till now Summer Palace of Peter I constructed in 1710-1712 by the
architect Domenico Trezzini.
The southern part of the garden included some administrative buildings, a
kitchen-garden, greenhouses and groups of fruit trees.
In the central part of the First restoration there were four bosquets (areas
defined by clipped walls of shrubs). A flower parterre was laid out along the
Swan Canal. The Carp Pond in the southern part of the garden has been preserved
to the present days.
Numerous fountains were installed in the restoration by the order of Peter
I who had a great liking for watery amusements. The fountains were built on
the sites of the Central Alley, in the bosquets and the Green Studies, in the
centre ofthe Carp Pond.
In the southern part of the restoration, there was a Labyrinth of numerous
paths and areas surrounded with cut grass. The fountain was decorated with figures
on the subjects of Aesop's fables. The Labyrinth and Aesop's fountain were ruined
during the flood in 1777. >
In the 18th century alongside the Summer Palace there were some other constructions
in the garden: galleries along the Neva, the Grotto along the Fontanka, greenhouses
inside the garden, auxiliary and administrative premises adjoining the Summer
Palace. The palace for Catherine I was built on the bank of the Neva in the
1720s. In 1732, during the reign of Anna Ioannovna (1730 - 1740), the Summer
Palace for the new empress was built by the architect Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli
(both of the buildings have not been preserved).
Unfortunately, a disastrous flood in Y1T1 wrecked the garden. Most of the
structures and fountains of the restoration were destroyed by the hurricane
wind.
The second half of the 18th century was marked not only by losses but by some
significant acquisitions as well. The grand design ofthe Neva embankment got
finally completed, and the territory of the garden was separated from the road
with an elegant fencing created by Georg Friedrich Veldten and Pyotr Egorov
(the railing has been preserved).
In 1824, the Neva again burst its banks flooding the garden. Its restoration
took around three years. The old layout was preserved but later, in 1826, the
architect Carlo Rossi reconstructed the «old Grotto» turning it into the garden
pavilion - the Coffee House (it has been preserved). | .*
It was also the period when a number of new structures appeared in the garden
to the design of Ludwig Charlemagne - Baudet the Tea House wooden pavilion (it
has been preserved) and the iron railing in the southern part of the garden
(it has been preserved). The fen-shaped structures flanking the Neva railing
were added by Ludwig Charlemagne - Baudet in 1830.
During the 19th century the restoration was the favourite strolling-place
for various walks of society.
In 1855, the monuftent to Ivan Krylov (it has been preserved) was mounted
on one of the sites of the garden (former French bosquet).
In 1934, the restoration with its collection of marble sculpture, the Summer
Palace of Peter the Great and the Summer House of Peter the Great received the
status of a museum. Studying of the monument and its collections began. For
the first time ever its restoration project was developed on the basis of historical
documents by the landscape architect Tatyana Dubyago, but World War II interrupted
the ensemble's development
In spite of the war damage the collection of sculpture has been preserved
and not a single tree was cut down in the restoration even during the siege.
The Summer Palace was repaired and welcomed its first visitors in 1947.
In the late 1990s, the development of the draft project of restoration of
the restoration began.
In 2004, the Russian Museum was awarded the administration of the entire complex
of the restoration, the Summer Palace and the Summer House of Peter of Great
Since 2006 the programme of the restoration project has been resumed in the
restoration.
The project was considered during sittings of the Academic Council, the Academic
Expert Council for Cultural Heritage Preservation, Government of St. Petersburg.
The advice of the Board of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
was taken into consideration. Following the project, the original layout suggested
by Peter the Great was left intact, four bosquets were recreated as well as
Small Orangery, Red Garden, the fountains of the Central alley and high trellises
forming a background for marble sculptures.
In June 2009, the Building Company «Profil» in collaboration with the St Petersburg
Institute «Lenproektrestavratsia» upervising the project launched its realization.
From May 2012, the garden is open to visitors.
äî ìîäåðíà — ïî-ïðåæíåìó âîñòðåáîâàíà ëþäüìè
âñåõ âîçðàñòîâ è ïðîôåññèé.
In remembrance
During the years of the siege of ingrad, the pond edges, lawns, and s of the
restoration were owfood.
From 1942 till 1944, students and teachers from Leningrad schools crew cabbage,
potatoes carrots, and beeu here. The vegetables saved residents of the besieged
from starvation and helped many to survive
This alley in the restoration has been named the School Alley in commemoration
of those days.
|