Several months after the owner's death,
Catherine II purchased his palace and ordered the architect Fyodor Volkov to transform it into her summer
townhouse. Volkov was responsible for many improvements in the grounds, including the construction of the
theatre in the east wing and the
church in the west wing. In the garden, he designed the Admiralty Pavilion, the gardener house,
orangery, glass-houses, bridges, and ironwork fences. The sculpture named the
Venus Tauride (now in the
Hermitage Museum) was kept in the palace from the end of the eighteenth century until the mid-nineteenth, and derives its name from it. The exterior appearance of the palace was rather plain and contrasted sharply with the riotous luxuriance of its interiors. The domed hall, one of the largest in Russia, was connected by a columned gallery with a
winter garden. The decoration of every major room – including the Chinese Hall and the Tapestry Parlour – was destroyed after 1799, when
Emperor Paul, who detested all the things his mother liked, gave over the palace to his favourite cavalry regiment to be used as
stables and
barracks. In the 19th century, the palace was refurbished by
Carlo Rossi and
Vasily Stasov as a residence for minor royalty. It was then used to host
balls and exhibitions until 1906, when it was transformed into the seat of the first Russian
parliament, the Imperial
State Duma. ==Use during the Russian revolution==