Origins The Lubyanka was originally built in 1898 as a
revenue house by the
All-Russia Insurance Company (Rossiya Insurance Company), on the spot where
Catherine the Great had once headquartered her secret police. The building was designed by the architect Alexander V. Ivanov. It is noted for its parquet floors and pale green walls. Belying its massiveness, the edifice avoids an impression of heroic scale: isolated
Palladian and
Baroque details, such as the minute
pediments over the corner bays and the central
loggia, are lost in an endlessly repeating palace facade where three bands of cornices emphasize the horizontal lines. A clock is centered in the uppermost band of the facade. A fountain used to stand in front of the building, at the center of Lubyanka Square. Following the
Bolshevik Revolution, in 1918 the structure was taken over by the government, for use as the headquarters of the secret police, then called the
Cheka. The prison is on the top floor, but since there are no windows on that floor, most prisoners, and therefore popular conception, thought they were being detained in its basement.
KGB During the
Great Purge, the offices became increasingly cramped due to staff numbers. In 1940,
Aleksey Shchusev was commissioned to enlarge the building. By 1947, his new design had doubled Lubyanka's size According to the KGB, prisoners' interrogations stopped at Lubyanka in 1953 after the death of
Stalin. In 1957, Russia's largest toy shop,
Detsky Mir, opened on the opposite side of Lubyanka Square, where a medieval cannon foundry was previously located. or 15-ton)
statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky ("Iron Felix"), founder of the
Cheka. The building's asymmetric façade survived intact until 1983, when the original structure was reconstructed to match the new build, at the urging of
Communist Party General Secretary and former
KGB Director
Yuri Andropov in accordance with Shchusev's plans. Although the Soviet secret police changed its name many times, its headquarters remained in this building. Secret police chiefs from
Lavrenty Beria to Andropov used the same office on the third floor, which looked down on the statue of Cheka founder
Felix Dzerzhinsky. A prison on the ground floor of the building figures prominently in Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's book
The Gulag Archipelago. Famous inmates held, tortured and interrogated there include
Sidney Reilly,
Greville Wynne,
Raoul Wallenberg,
Ion Antonescu,
Osip Mandelstam,
Genrikh Yagoda,
János Esterházy,
Alexander Dolgun,
Rochus Misch, and
Walter Ciszek. During the 1980s, the prison was turned into a cafeteria for KGB staff. In 1990, the
Solovetsky Stone was erected across from the Lubyanka, to commemorate the victims of political repression. In August 1991, the statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky was dismantled and removed from the center of the Lubyanka Square. Hitler's personal
Golden Party Badge, which was discovered by the Red Army after the
capture of Berlin, was stored in the Lubyanka. The badge was stolen in 2005, when guards thought a cat had set off the alarms, allowing the burglar to escape. In 2015, the Lubyanka's front door was set on fire by
Pyotr Pavlensky, a performance artist. He was released from jail six months later. In 2017, a huge church was consecrated next to the Lubyanka building on the grounds of the
Sretensky Monastery. The church is dedicated to the
New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Orthodox Church, including those who were executed at Lubyanka. In December 2019, a shooting took place around the Lubyanka. == Modernity ==