Semyonovsky Regiment Infirmary (Museum of Military Medicine)
Now occupied by the Museum of Military Medicine, this fine neoclassical building with its distinctive deep-pink facades was originally built as the regimental infirmary for the Semyonovsky Regiment, one of the elite regiments of Imperial Guards founded by Peter the Great.
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Considered one of the leading hospitals in St. Petersburg in the 19th century, the infirmary was originally built in 1800 as a modest two-storey building and has been altered and extended several times. The building owes its present aspect, including all its neoclassical decorative elements, to a reconstruction after the Second World War (1947-1951) by Boris Zhuravlev and Iosef Chayko, who adapted the building for its new life as a museum. Their changes included returning the columns to its facade and adding a row of busts of famous Russian doctors and scientists, including Ivan Pavlov.
Address: | 2, Lazaretny Pereulok |
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Metro: | Pushkinskaya |
Getting there: | The Infirmary is set back from the road behind a small park across Zagarodny Prospekt and slightly to the left from the exit of Pushkinskaya Metro Station. |
What's nearby? | Zagorodny Prospekt, Vitebsk Rail Station (Vitebskiy Vokzal), Gorokhovaya Ulitsa, Fontanka River |