Buildings are listed under their current names, in the same order as they appeared in the April 1949 Stalin Prize decree. Different sources report different number of levels and height, depending on inclusion of
mechanical floors and uninhabited crown levels.
Moscow State University Boris Iofan made a mistake placing his draft skyscraper right on the edge of Vorob'yovskie Gory. The site was a potential landslide hazard. He made a worse mistake by insisting on his decision and was promptly replaced by
Lev Rudnev, a 53-year-old rising star of Stalin's establishment. Rudnev had already built high-profile edifices like the 1932–1937
M. V. Frunze Military Academy and the 1947 ''Marshals' Apartments'' (Sadovaya-Kudrinskaya, 28), which earned the highest credits of the Party. He set the building 800 meters away from the cliff. The building was constructed in part by several thousand
Gulag inmates. When the construction was nearing completion, some inmates were housed on the 24th and 25th levels to reduce transportation costs and the number of guards required. The main tower, which consumed over 40,000 metric tons of steel, was inaugurated on September 1, 1953. At 787.4 feet or 240 meters tall, it was the
tallest building in Europe from its completion until 1990. It is still the tallest educational building in the world.
Hotel Ukraina Ukraina by
Arkady Mordvinov and
Vyacheslav Oltarzhevsky (leading Soviet expert on steel-framed highrise construction) is the second tallest of the "sisters" (198 meters, 34 levels). It was the
tallest hotel in the world from the time of its construction until the
Peachtree Plaza Hotel opened in
Atlanta,
Georgia, in 1975. Construction on the low river bank meant that the builders had to dig well below the water level. This was solved by an ingenious water retention system, using a perimeter of
needle pumps driven deep into ground. The hotel reopened its doors again after a 3-year-renovation on April 28, 2010, now a part of
Radisson Collection Hotels Group, Moscow, with 505 bedrooms and 38 apartments. The hotel was acquired by billionaire property investor
God Nisanov for £59 million during an auction in 2005. He co-owns it with
Zarakh Iliev.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs This 172-meter, 27-story building was built between 1948 and 1953 and overseen by
V. G. Gelfreih and
A. B. Minkus. Currently, it houses the offices for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for the
Russian Federation. The Ministry is covered by a light external stone wall with projecting
pilasters and
pylons. Its interior is splendidly decorated with stones and metals. According to the 1982 biography of
Minkus, draft plans were first drawn up in 1946 and ranged from 9 to 40 stories. In 1947 two designs were proposed: one used layered setbacks while the other called for a more streamlined construction which culminated into a blunt rectangular top. The second proposal was accepted but as the Ministry's completion neared, a metal
spire, dyed to match the building's exterior (and presumably ordered by Joseph Stalin), was hastily added to tower's roof, assimilating its silhouette with those of the other Sisters.
Leningradskaya Hotel Originally known simply as the Leningradskaya Hotel, this relatively small (136 meters, 26 floors, of which 19 are usable) building by
Leonid Polyakov on
Komsomolskaya Square is decorated with pseudo-Russian ornaments mimicking
Alexey Shchusev's
Kazansky Rail Terminal. Inside, it was inefficiently planned. Khrushchev, in his 1955 decree "On liquidation of excesses ..." asserted that at least 1,000 rooms could be built for the cost of Leningradskaya's 354, that only 22% of the total space was rentable, and that the costs per bed were 50% higher than in
Moskva Hotel. Following this critique, Polyakov was stripped of his 1948 Stalin Prize but retained the other one, for a Moscow Metro station. After a multimillion-dollar renovation ending in 2008, the hotel re-opened as the Hilton Moscow Leningradskaya.
Kotelnicheskaya Embankment Building Another of Chechulin's works, 176 meters high, with 22 usable levels, the Kotelnicheskaya Embankment Building was strategically placed at the confluence of the
Moskva River and
Yauza River. The building incorporates an earlier 9-story apartment block facing Moskva River, by the same architects (completed in 1940). It was intended as an elite housing building. However, very soon after construction, units were converted to multi-family
kommunalka (communal apartments). Its design was neo-gothic, though it also drew inspiration from
Hotel Metropol.
Kudrinskaya Square Building Designed by
Mikhail Posokhin (Sr.) and
Ashot Mndoyants. 160 meters tall, 22 floors (18 usable in the wings and 22 in the central part). The building is located on the end of
Krasnaya Presnya street, facing the
Sadovoye Koltso and was primarily built as high-end apartments for Soviet cultural leaders rather than politicians.
Red Gate Administrative Building Designed by
Alexey Dushkin of the Moscow Metro fame, this mixed-use block of 11-storey buildings is crowned with a slim tower (total height 133 meters, 24 levels). In this case, cryotechnology was indeed used for the escalator tunnels connecting the building with the
Krasniye Vorota subway station. The building's frame was erected deliberately tilted to one side; when the frozen soil thawed, it settled down – although not enough for a perfect horizontal level. Then the builders warmed the soil by pumping hot water; this worked too well, and the structure slightly overreacted, tilting to the opposite side but well within tolerance.
Zaryadye Administrative Building (never built) In 1934, the Commissariat for Heavy Industries initiated a design contest for its new building on Red Square (on the site of
State Universal Store, GUM). A last showcase for
constructivists, this contest didn't materialize and GUM still stands. In 1947, the nearby medieval
Zaryadye district was razed to make way for the new 32-story, 275-meter tower (the numbers are quoted as in the 1951 finalized draft). It is sometimes associated with the Ministry of Heavy Machinery, the same institution that ran a contest in 1934. However, in all public documents of this time its name is simply the
administrative building, without any specific affiliation. Likewise, association with
Lavrentiy Beria is mostly anecdotal. The tower, designed by Chechulin, was supposed to be the second largest after the university. Eventually, the plans were cancelled at the foundation stage; these foundations were used later for the construction of the
Rossiya Hotel (also by Chechulin, 1967, demolished 2006–2007).
Palace of the Soviets (never built) ==Other cities==