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The Grand Choral Synagogue of St. Petersburg is the second largest in Europe. [citation needed] It was opened in 1893, with the building permit obtained in 1869 from the Tsar Alexander II. The Small Synagogue was opened in 1886. On 5 Tamuz 5761 (June 26, 2001), the greater hall ("Bolshoi Zal" in Russian) was reopened after reconstruction.
S. Saint Petersburg City Duma; Saint Petersburg Commodity and Stock Exchange; St. Petersburg Department of Steklov Mathematical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
The Admiralty tower The Alexander Palace The Alexandrinsky Theatre Church of the Savior on Blood Grand Choral Synagogue The Alexander Column and the Winter Palace in Palace Square The Imperial Academy of Arts The Kazan Cathedral at night Kikin Hall The Kunstkamera The Old Saint Petersburg Stock Exchange The Smolny Convent The Peter and Paul Fortress Narva Triumphal Gate Saint Isaac's Cathedral ...
S. H. Kress and Co. Building (St. Petersburg, Florida) St. Anthony's Hospital (St. Petersburg, Florida) St. Petersburg station (Amtrak) St. Petersburg Woman's Club; St. Pete–Clearwater International Airport; Seaboard Coast Line Railroad station (St. Petersburg, Florida) Snell Arcade; St. Petersburg Lawn Bowling Club; St. Petersburg Pier
The city of St. Petersburg built its first pier, the Municipal Recreation Pier, ten feet north of the Electric Pier in 1913 after a $40,000 bond was authorized by voters. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] [ 17 ] [ 18 ] The Municipal Recreation Pier was an effort by the city to boost its tourism, enhance the cities parks, and was used solely for recreational ...
The building was constructed to accommodate the headquarters for the construction company known as RosStroyInvest - a company based in Saint Petersburg. It was also reported that Gazprom helped to construct the building. [4] RosStroyInvest acquired the building plot in 2009, and obtained a building permit several years later in 2013.
The documents authorising the construction were signed only in March 2018. However, the building permit was about to expire on May 31, 2018. [34] [24] The developer broke the deadline and failed to put the bridge into service in time - by May, 29. [35] The first test traffic was allowed early in the morning on May 13, 2018, to football fans ...
The predecessor of the tower, the Okhta Center, was originally planned to be more centrally located in the city center of St. Petersburg. As the historical center has been a World Heritage Site since 1990, the World Heritage Committee opposed the construction of the 400-metre tower as it would affect the cityscape of historic Saint Petersburg. [11]