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Stalinist architecture

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Lomonosov Moscow State University
public research university in Moscow, Russia
Palace of Culture and Science
high-rise building and house of culture in Warsaw, Poland
Palace of the Parliament
multi-purpose building in Romania
Exhibition of achievements of national economy
trade show in Moscow, Russia
Stalinist architecture
architectural style
Palace of the Soviets
unfinished Soviet architecture project
Komsomolskaya
Moscow Metro station on the Koltsevaya Line
Seven Sisters
architectural structure
Novoslobodskaya
Novoslobodskaya () is a Moscow Metro station in the Tverskoy District of the Central Administrative Okrug, Moscow. It is on the Koltsevaya Line, between Belorusskaya and Prospekt Mira stations.
Radisson Collection Hotel Moscow
hotel and skyscraper in Moscow
Latvian Academy of Sciences
academy of sciences in Riga
Mayakovskaya
Moscow Metro station
Elektrozavodskaya
Moscow Metro station (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line)
Kiyevskaya
Moscow Metro station on the Koltsevaya Line
Karl-Marx-Allee
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M.V. Frunze Military Academy
former military academy of the Russian Armed Forces and during Sowjet Union
Prospekt Mira
Moscow Metro station on the Koltsevaya Line
Baku Academy of Music
university
Slavín
Slavín is a memorial monument and military cemetery in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia. It is the burial ground of thousands of Soviet Army soldiers who fell during World War II while taking over the city in April 1945 from the occupying German Wehrmacht units and the remaining Slovak troops who supported the clero-fascist Tiso government. It is situated on a hill amidst a rich villa quarter of the capital and embassy residences close to the centre of Bratislava.
Hilton Moscow Leningradskaya
hotel in Moscow, Russia
main building of Moscow State University
university building in Moscow
Moskva Pool
open-air swimming pool in Moscow, 1958-1994
Kotelnicheskaya Embankment Building
one of seven Stalinist skyscrapers in Moscow
House of the Free Press
building in Bucharest, Romania
Hotel Moskva
hotel in Russia
Kudrinskaya Square Building
revenue house, architectural landmark in Moscow, Russia
House of Soviets
architectural structure in Saint Petersburg
Largo
architectural ensemble of three Socialist Classicism edifices in central Sofia
Parades Square
square in Warsaw
Pekin (hotel)
architectural structure
Hotel International Prague
hotel building in Prague, Czech Republic
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia main building
building of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia main building, Russia
Red Gate Building
skyscraper in Krasnoselsky District, Russia
Shanghai Exhibition Centre
Convention and exhibition centre in central Shanghai, and city landmark
Rustaveli Cinema
cinema in Tbilisi, Georgia
Vladimir Gelfreich
Russian architect (1885-1967)
Central Academic Theatre of the Russian Army
theatre in Moscow, Russia
North River Terminal
building in Moscow, Russia
April 25 House of Culture
theatre in Pyongyang, North Korea
Beijing Exhibition Center
convention center
Vake Park
public park in Tbilisi, Georgia
House of Soviets
architectural structure in Rostov-on-Don
Prince Henry Palace
palace of Prince Henry of Prussia, now the main building of the Humboldt University in Berlin
Stalinka
thumb|Stalin's Empire style in [[Nikopol, Ukraine]] Stalinka, Stalinist apartment buildings or Stalin-era buildings, are a common colloquial term for apartment buildings constructed in the USSR from 1933 to 1961, primarily during the rule of Joseph Stalin. They were predominantly built in the neoclassical style (Stalinist Classical). Stalinkas are solidly constructed multi-apartment buildings with full utilities, featuring non-combustible materials and typically at least two stories high. The term Stalinka does not include other types of residential buildings from Stalin's era, such as barrack
Constitution Square
Major square in Warsaw
100-flat building
residential in Novosibirsk, Russia
Sovietsky Hotel
hotel in Moscow
Hochhaus an der Weberwiese
residential in Berlin-Friedrichshain, Germany
IMEL Building
historic building in Tbilisi, Georgia