Author:Gregori WarchavchikOriginal: All rights reservedRestoration: All rights reserved
Dikanka. Gazebo in the flower garden
Mazepa's oak from afar
The estate of Prince Kochubey. Chestnut Alley
Prince Kochubey's estate. Mazepa oak
Nicholas Church in the estate of Prince Viktor Sergeevich Kochubey
St. Nicholas Church with a bell tower
Dikanka. General view of the estate
Prince Kochubey's estate. Deer farm
Brewery. Dikanka.
The basement of the Kochubeyiv beer and mead factory
Facade of the Kochubey Palace in Dykanka
Triumphal Arch
Prince Kochubey's estate. Triumphal arch
Dikanka. Hop harvest
Dykanka. Mazepa's Oak
Dikanka. 19th century. In the Kochubey estate they play the so-called lawn tennis (grass tennis).
Gregori Warchavchik and his project
Landscape design by Hryhoriy Varchavchik
Sobrados Populares, Mooca, São Paulo (SP), Brasil - 1929
Edificio Cícero Prado, São Paulo (SP) Brasil - 1954
Edifício Mina Klabin, São Paulo (SP), Brasil - 1939
Edifício Mina Klabin, São Paulo (SP), Brasil - 1939
Edifício Mina Klabin, São Paulo (SP), Brasil - 1939
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Courtyard of a modernist building in Brazil
Brazil's First Modernism
Classical Architecture: Modernist House on Rua Bahia
Warchavchik Casa Moveis Interior da Casa da Rua Itápolis
Dionysius Opushkevych Ukrainian Club
Marcelo Fedus Ukrainian Club
Mércia Guimarães, Workers' Club і Cine Oriente
20. Alla Gorska Z Druzyami Shistdesyatnikami U Kremeneczi 1963 R
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Block 37 Proposal, Chicago, Illinois, Perspective View from Daley PlazaBlock 37, the parcel of land in the heart of Chicago’s Loop bordered by State, Randolph, Dearborn, and Washington Streets has stood idle for years in spite of numerous ideas for the construction of new buildings. The redevelopment of the block was originally conceived by Mayor Richard J. Daley in the 1970s to transform the site of old, inferior, low-rise buildings into new and larger buildings with more intensive uses in keeping with the downtown area. The site has been the object of several unsuccessful attempts at development over the years. Architect Helmut Jahn, working for the joint venture development company FJV, prepared several schemes for the site between 1983 and 1987. All of these plans envisioned a giant atrium that would permit continuous movement of pedestrians throughout the block. The developers’ failure to secure a anchor tenant for the development—along with delays by the City and the worsening economic situation—cast doom on the project.