The Presidium was on the site of the former
Chudov Monastery which
Metropolitan Alexius of
Moscow founded in 1365,
Ascension Convent, and Lesser Nicholas Palace. These were among the historic edifices in the Kremlin that
Joseph Stalin ordered demolished as part of the
state atheism campaign, pursuant to which religious structures throughout
Russia were razed.
Ivan Rerberg, a prominent architect of
Moscow who had designed the
Kiyevsky Rail Terminal, was assigned to design a new administrative building for the Soviet government, and its construction began almost immediately. The new edifice was completed in 1934, two years after Rerberg's death. Initially it was not named, and it hosted the Red Commanders School, which was a military academy for
Red Army leaders. The School was relocated in 1935, and from 1938 the building housed the offices of the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, whose head was the
de jure head of state of the
Soviet Union. From 1958-61, part of the building was converted into the 1,200-seat Kremlin Theatre (Кремлёвский театр). However, it proved to be an awkward venue, and its functions were transferred to the newly built
State Kremlin Palace. ==Demolition==