ABSTRACT

Norway and Russia have been closely related through the ages, both geographically and historically, and have experienced similar problems relating to climate, building maintenance and national wooden architecture. As a result, the parallel study of architectural conservation and restoration theories and practices in both neighbouring Northern states makes for a stimulating collective monograph.

Architectural Conservation and Restoration in Norway and Russia delves into the main challenges of historic and contemporary architectural preservation practices in the two countries. The book consists of three main parts: the discovery and preservation of historical architecture in the late nineteenth to early twentieth century; contemporary approaches to former restorations and the conservation and maintenance of historical architecture; and, finally, current questions concerning preservation of twentieth-century architectural heritage which, due to different building technologies and artistic qualities, demand revised methods and historical evaluation.

This is a valuable resource for academics, researchers and students in different areas of architecture (medieval, nineteenth-century, wooden and contemporary architecture) as well as in the fields of art, architectural history, cultural heritage and Scandinavian and Russian studies.

chapter |6 pages

The Northern neighbours and their heritage

A Russian-Norwegian cultural millennium

part I|58 pages

Nation building, assessment of historic monuments and cultural heritage management

part II|72 pages

Contemporary preservation of historic monuments

chapter 6|17 pages

The Faceted Palace in Novgorod the Great

The main problems of restoration

chapter 7|16 pages

The General Staff building in Saint Petersburg

From an empire-style administrative building to contemporary art venues for the Hermitage Museum

chapter 8|9 pages

The relevance of authenticity

Eidsvoll Constitution hall restoration 1814–2014

chapter 9|13 pages

Russian-Norwegian cooperation on cultural heritage

A personal experience

part III|65 pages

Contemporary preservation of recent heritage

chapter 10|17 pages

Neglected heritage

Khrushchev mass housing in Leningrad

chapter 11|14 pages

Individual wooden dwelling houses of the first half and middle of the twentieth century

Problems of the study, conservation and restoration

chapter 12|17 pages

Hated heritage

Architecture of the Norwegian welfare state

chapter 13|15 pages

Experimental preservation of an arctic settlement Piramida on Spitzbergen

A Russian view of the 120 hours 2015 architectural competition