St. Basil's Cathedral

Location

Moscow
Russia
55° 45' 9.0144" N, 37° 37' 23.3796" E
RU
General info: 

If one building was to be chosen to represent Moscow, it would most probably be St. Basil’s Cathedral. This pride of Russian architecture stands on the exact spot where the geometric center of the city is. As their national symbol it stayed in its place for more than four centuries, even surviving the reconstruction of Moscow during the Stalin era.

Its colorful façade and peculiar design of the bell towers are not the only things that attract visitors to come to this church. Since 1929, St. Basil’s Church has served as a museum telling magnificent stories from the Russian past. Probably the most interesting legend about this place is from the times when it was built. The story says that during the reign of Ivan the Terrible, the best Russian architect designed this cathedral. Czar Ivan was so impressed with it that he blinded the architect so he couldn’t build anything as beautiful as the St. Basil’s Cathedral.

You might be interested in

When the City Hall station was made, in 1902 it was designed to be the showpiece of the new New York subway.

Hashima Island is an abandoned island city in Japan, near the coast of the city Nagasaki (Also known as Battleship Island). The island was populated from 1887 to 1974 as a coal mining facility.

A hundred years ago, the officials of Detroit decided to build a monumental train station which will be the premier landmark of their city.

There is not much information available about this abandoned community. For a fact it can be said that it is/was somewhere close to Keelung, Taiwan. The rest of the information there is, is scattered and not 100% waterproof.

Just 3km from downtown Helsinki there is an eerie collection of luxury villas left to decay.

This real-life Atlantis is a labyrinth of adorned temples, memorial arches and dragon carvings.