Bondarenko adored the Moscow variety of
Neoclassicism, and was engaged in studies of this style since 1904. In particular, he discovered and published the original drawings of
Domenico Giliardi and
Afanasy Grigoriev (1913), and wrote the first biography of
Matvey Kazakov (1912). After the
Russian Revolution of 1917 Bondarenko, despite his affiliation with the church, found a place in the Soviet system – first as the museum manager in
Ufa (1919–1921), where he set up the first theater and the first museum (present-day
Mikhail Nesterov Museum; Nesterov and Bondarenko were close friends). In 1921, Bondarenko returned to Moscow, and worked in various soviet institutions until his death in 1947. In the 1930s, he returned to architecture, working with historical buildings, notably his 1938 expansion of
Bakhrushin Museum of Theatre and 1933 expansion of
Moscow Conservatory. He held title of chief architect of
Vagankovo Cemetery, chief architect of
Mosenergo, and was engaged in numerous consultancies regarding old buildings, including the 1938-1940 surveys of
Saint Basil's Cathedral. His last assignment has been the restoration of
Matvey Kazakov's Travel Palace in
Tver, damaged during
World War II. ==References==