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Russian czars’ home to reopen in summer

2019-10-26
SAINT PETERSBURG: Russia’s Alexander Palace, the last home of Emperor Nicholas II before he and his family were executed by the Bolsheviks, will reopen to the public next summer after million-dollar renovations, officials said on Friday.

The palace, considered one of the best works of the Italian architect Giacomo Quarenghi, was built in the late 18th century for the future Emperor Alexander I and became the permanent residence of the last Russian czar in 1905.

The palace, located on the outskirts of the former imperial capital Saint Petersburg, has been under renovation since 2012 and was completely closed to the public three years later.

The first eight rooms will reopen after the makeover next June or July, a spokeswoman for the Tsarskoe Selo State Museum, which oversees the vast neo-Classical edifice, said.

The renovations have so far cost some 2 billion rubles (28 million euros; $31 million), she added. The works were mainly done on the floors, tapestries and ceilings.

The first premises to open to visitors include the emperor and empress’s rooms including the Mauve Boudoir, Alexandra Feodorovna’s favourite room, and the czar’s bathing chamber designed in the Moorish style.

“The Alexander Palace is a special place,” Olga Taratynova, director of the Tsarskoe Selo Museum, told reporters during a presentation on Thursday.

“It was built for the imperial family’s private life which was pretty closely guarded.”—AFP