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moscow+planetarium Latitude and Longitude:

55°45′41″N 37°35′01″E / 55.7614°N 37.5836°E / 55.7614; 37.5836
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moscow Planetarium

The Moscow Planetarium is a planetarium in Moscow. It is the oldest planetarium in Russia. It was built in 1927–1929, by Constructivist architects Mikhail Barsh, Mikhail Sinyavsky, and engineer Georgy Zunblat. [1] [2]

Closure and reopening

In June 2011, the planetarium was reopened after being closed for 17 years. The building was significantly renovated and expanded, making it, according to the planetarium, the largest planetarium in Europe. [2]

The renovation altered the original design of the planetarium, with the main building raised six meters to fit two additional stories beneath the dome. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Delirious Moscow".
  2. ^ a b c "Moscow Planetarium". architectuul.com.

External links

55°45′41″N 37°35′01″E / 55.7614°N 37.5836°E / 55.7614; 37.5836



moscow+planetarium Latitude and Longitude:

55°45′41″N 37°35′01″E / 55.7614°N 37.5836°E / 55.7614; 37.5836
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moscow Planetarium

The Moscow Planetarium is a planetarium in Moscow. It is the oldest planetarium in Russia. It was built in 1927–1929, by Constructivist architects Mikhail Barsh, Mikhail Sinyavsky, and engineer Georgy Zunblat. [1] [2]

Closure and reopening

In June 2011, the planetarium was reopened after being closed for 17 years. The building was significantly renovated and expanded, making it, according to the planetarium, the largest planetarium in Europe. [2]

The renovation altered the original design of the planetarium, with the main building raised six meters to fit two additional stories beneath the dome. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Delirious Moscow".
  2. ^ a b c "Moscow Planetarium". architectuul.com.

External links

55°45′41″N 37°35′01″E / 55.7614°N 37.5836°E / 55.7614; 37.5836



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