Apart from urban planning, Starov was a leading representative of the early
neoclassical architecture in Russia. His major projects chronicle the transition of
national architecture from the late
Rinaldiesque baroque of the 1760s to the magnificent Neoclassical palaces of the 1780s: • 1769 – Demidov
dacha near
Peterhof, commissioned by Starov's brother-in-law,
Alexander Demidov, and destroyed by the Nazis. • 1773 –
chateau and church in
Bogoroditsk, commissioned by
Count Bobrinsky. • 1773 – chateau and church in Nikolskoye near
Moscow, commissioned by
Prince Gagarin. • 1774 – chateau, gothic gate and park in
Taytsy near
Gatchina, commissioned by
Alexander Demidov. • 1775 – chateau and park pavilions in Suvoritsy near St. Petersburg, commissioned by
Pyotr Demidov. • 1778 –
Holy Trinity Cathedral of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra in St. Petersburg, commissioned by the
Holy Synod. • 1783 –
Gate Church and iron-cast grille of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, commissioned by the Holy Synod. • 1783 –
Tauride Palace in St. Petersburg, commissioned by
Prince Potemkin. • 1783 – chateau in Ostrovki on the
Neva River, commissioned by Prince Potemkin, currently in ruins from neglect. • 1784 –
Pella Palace on the Neva River, commissioned by
Catherine II of Russia and demolished by her son
Paul. • 1784 – Lithuanian prison castle at the intersection of the
Moyka and the
Kryukov Canal in St. Petersburg, demolished after the 1917 fire. • 1786 – Potemkin Palace in
Yekaterinoslav, commissioned by Prince Potemkin. • 1789 –
Prince Vladimir Church, Saint Petersburg, completed • 1790 – Potemkin mansion in Bogoyavlensk-on-the-Bug, commissioned by Prince Potemkin. • 1790 – magistrate and cathedral in
Nikolaev, commissioned by Prince Potemkin. • 1794 – chateau and pavilions in Voznesenskoye on the Neva River, commissioned by
Count Sheremetyev. • 1795 – Potemkin mausoleum, commissioned by Potemkin's niece Countess Branicka but never executed. • 1796 – Theotokos Cathedral in
Kazan, commissioned by the
Kazan Governorate and destroyed by the Communists. The
Kherson Cathedral in present-day
Ukraine and the
Gomel Palace in present-day
Belarus are also frequently attributed to Starov. ==References==