For The Love of Travel

My favorite places, photos and stories

June 5, 2019
by Lids
Comments Off on 1/6/19 Koryuskha restaurant and Grand Peterhof Palace

1/6/19 Koryuskha restaurant and Grand Peterhof Palace

Delicious lunch @ Koryushka restaurant, contemporary chic with European and Russian cuisine served on a beach front terrace, with views over the Neva river. Very special!

One of the few days in June that the Grand Peterhof Palace is open, is this evening between 18:00 and 20:00. So, purchased a ticket. A long wait in a queue behind different nationalities’ tour groups…..

The Palace complex is a series of palaces and gardens  commissioned by Peter the Great as a direct response to the Palace of Versailles by Louis 14th of France.  Majestic and elegant, it stretches for 300 metres. Architect Rastrelli was involved in this design as the centrepiece  of the “Russian Versailles”, (as well as the Winter Palace in the Hermitage). 

Ballroom
White Dining Room
Blue sitting room
64 fountains comprise “The Grand Cascade”, Samson fountain in the middle, modelled on one constructed for Louis X!V at Chateau de Marly. 
Perhaps the greatest technological achievement of Peterhof is that all of the fountains operate without the use of pumps. Water is supplied from natural springs and collects in reservoirs in the Upper Gardens. The elevation difference creates the pressure that drives most of the fountains of the Lower Gardens, including the Grand Cascade. The Samson Fountain is supplied by a special aqueduct, over 4 km in length, drawing water and pressure from a high-elevation source.

June 3, 2019
by Lids
Comments Off on 31/5/19 Saviour of Spilled Blood and St Issac Cathedrals, Mansarda Restaurant

31/5/19 Saviour of Spilled Blood and St Issac Cathedrals, Mansarda Restaurant

I’m seeing two of the Museum of Four Cathedrals today.

Church of the Saviour on Spilled Blood – funded by the Imperial Family, the church was constructed over 24 years, between 1883 and 1907, during the reign of Alexander III. The church was built as a memorial to the slain Tsar Alexander II of Russia, who was mortally wounded on the site in 1881. It was closed by the Bolsheviks in the 1930s, but reopened in 1997 after 30 years of restoration work.

Interior mosaics – walls, arches, ceiling, altar
Mosaic of Christ Pantocrator, under the central dome

Architecturally, the Cathedral differs from Saint Petersburg’s other structures. The city’s architecture is predominantly Baroque and Neoclassical, but the Saviour on Spilled Blood harks back to medieval Russian architecture in the spirit of romantic nationalism. It intentionally resembles the 17th-century Yaroslavl churches and the celebrated St Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow. The church contains over 7500 square metres of mosaics – according to its restorers, more than any other church in the world.

Can’t believe how many beautiful stones are inlaid in that central door – amber, agate, ruby, emerald, turquoise

St Issac’s Cathedral, dedicated to Saint Issac of Dalmatia, a patron saint of Peter the Great. The Cathdrals bronze doors, covered in reliefs by Ivan Vitali, are patterned after the celebrated doors of the Battistero di San Giovanni in Florence, designed by Lorenzo Gihberti! Granites and marbles from all parts of Russia decorate the interiors.

Bronze doors
The Sanctuary, seen through the Holy Doors

Booked in for a meal @ Mansarda Restaurant – with views over St Issac Cathedral.

And if that wasn’t special enough, the restaurant was preparing for a concert that night by singer Elena Temnikova (one of 3 members of the group Serebro, which represented Russia at the Eurovision Song Contest in 2007). She came to do a sound check accompanied by 4 burly security dudes, and as I was about to take her pic, got a firm “nyet” from one of her security team, so once more, complied. A bit naughty, because we guests had to listen to interminable  “odin”, “dva”, “odin”, “dva”…. (one, two, one, two etc). You’d reckon the least one could do is take a pic….but ”nyet!”

Elena, Eurovision star!

June 3, 2019
by Lids
Comments Off on 30/5/19 Neva River Cruise, St Petersburg

30/5/19 Neva River Cruise, St Petersburg

St Petersburg is built on 33 islands, separated by picturesque canals and rivers, and linked by dozens of drawbridges and bridges – 350 across the city.

After arriving on the train from Velikiy Novgorod, dropped stuff at hotel and went to join drawbridge cruise on the Neva River –  saw magnificent illuminated monuments and buildings on the river’s embankments like the Hermitage Museum complex, the Kunstkamera museum and Peter and Paul fortress. The opening of the Palace Bridge on Vasilievskiy Island and Trinity Bridge were spectacular!!

St Issac’s Cathedral
Central Exhibition Hall – collection of Soviet art, plus contemporary art shows and workshops
Commissioned by Catherine the Great, a staue of Peter the Great sitting heroically on his horse, his outstretched arm pointing towards the River Neva. The sculptor, Falconet, wished to capture a scene of his horse rearing at the edge of a dramatic cliff. (The ‘Thunderstone” pedestal weighs 1500 tons, took 400 men over 2 years to chisel into shape and move into location). His horse can be seen trampling a snake, variously interpreted to represent treachery, evil, or the enemies of Peter and his reforms.
The Kunstkamera museum, anthropological and ethnographical curoiosities.
Palace Bridge
Trinity Bridge
Final view on disembarkation, beautiful!