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Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design
14, bldg. 5A, Bersenevskaya Embankment Moscow,
119072, Russia
more@strelka.com
+7 (495) 771 74 37
+7 (495) 771 74 16 (Bar Strelka)
Subscribe to Strelka's electronic newsletter to receive regular updates on the Institute and its program of public events.
Strelka Institute in December 2009. © Sergei Leontiev
The idea of Strelka was conceived simultaneously by five people: Alexander Mamut, Sergei Adonyev, Ilya Oskolkov-Tsentsiper, Dmitry Likin and Oleg Shapiro. Three years ago they devised to create a school which would be the first step towards the transformation of Russian cities.
This required a multifunctional institution. One that would not only be a place of study for architects, but would also become a cradle for ideas, strategies and meanings.
And this is what Strelka turned out to be.
Its lecture halls provide free tuition for student architects, designers, sociologists, economists and other specialists from around the world. Its courtyard hosts open lectures, conferences and film screenings. Its bar is a complex cocktail of musicians, editors, actors, television presenters and other representatives of the creative class.
The end product which is being cooked up in this cauldron is very intricate. It is not only the graduates, their projects and the evolution of their views that occurs during the educational process. It is a landscape. A landscape and its transformation. A landscape in its widest possible sense: physical, mental, emotional. So if a Strelka graduate devises a new modern approach to the construction of standard housing and this results in appealing, comfortable and affordable houses appearing in Russian cities, this will be our product. A student who attends a lecture on urban studies and is inspired to create a beautiful lawn outside his or her apartment is also our product.
Strelka has been conceived in a completely unique way, so as not to confine its product within its walls. In contrast to the majority of educational institutions, which are inward-looking, Strelka is a place entirely open to the outside world. Everything that happens here immediately spills out into the city in the form of projects, people and ideas. And the city reciprocates.

Strelka Institute in July 2010. © Sergei Leontiev

© Sergei Leontiev
Strelka Institute offers a free postgraduate programme taught in English. The education strategy is based on cross-disciplinary research of urban problems. We are convinced that in order to be able to improve urban landscape, one should not only be familiar with structural mechanics and descriptive geometry, but also understand urban psychology, sociological models and economic trends. That’s why the educational programme is aimed at all kinds of young professionals — architects, sociologists, designers, managers, economists, and others, the main prerequisite being the desire to change urban environment for the better.
The year is divided into two terms. For nine months, Students immerse themselves into creative (rather than purely academic) research, maintaining a constant dialogue with the best professionals in various fields of knowledge. This helps them broaden horizons and get acquainted with ideas that they have probably never been familiar with before, but which are necessary for their future work.
The first term consists of intensive lectures, discussions and seminars. The students get acquainted with the research themes of the year. At the end of the first term, all students go on a field trip. In 2011 it was Tokyo, Hong Kong the year before that. On their return to Moscow, students choose one research theme for their second-term personal project. They are also free to choose the format of the project: it can be an installation, or a book, or a video game, etc.
The second term is devoted to individual research projects that students work on under their professors’ supervision. Developing communication skills is another key aspect of the second term. Students learn not only how to gather, organise and analyse data, but also how to present their conclusions to the public. In late June, students’ projects are presented to the professors, media, and the public.
Please download the syllabus here.

This summer, Strelka is launching a new project, Agents of Change. The theme of the project is the transformation of urban life. Its heroes are citizens. The site is Moscow. The purpose of the project is to share change, understand what it is and investigate and celebrate how it happens.
Who are the Agents of Change? They are people who change the world about them through the force of their ideas, knowledge and experience and share them in new, creative and imaginative ways. They are professionals who design and deliver urban development projects and transform the places in which we work, live and play. They may design new buildings, publish a new local newspaper, organise new ways in which waste is managed in cities, develop master-plans, re-imagine public transport systems or create new routes to bicycle around Moscow. But all of the professionals have one thing in common: they seek to transform urban living for the better.
It is people who create the excitement, dynamism and pleasure of spaces and places in cities. Authorities may be responsible for the management of public places but those places only come alive when people feel that the city belongs to them and they play a part in its change. Do it right and cities don’t just look good and work better but their social life transforms. The recipe for success often involves people coming together and associating in different ways, in support of different interests – social, political, environmental or local. From coming together to create a place for people to sit in a park to making more comfortable and healthy office space, from creating cities that are friendly to forming new, complex networks of people and places, the heroes of our summer programme invite you to join them and share their knowledge and experience of urban change.
Agents of Change 2012 will feature well-known international experts, such as Eduardo Souto de Moura (winner of Pritzker Prize 2011), Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron (Pritzker Prize 2001 winners), Scott Nazarian (Frog, USA), Giancarlo Mazzanti (architect, Colombia), Perry Chen (artist, co-founder of Kick-Starter), as well as new local heroes, such as Yegor Korobeynikov (founder of UrbanUrban.ru), Alexei Mityayev (initiator of a bicycle lane project in Moscow), Anton Polsky (founder of Partizaning), and many others. During the workshops, university professors from Central Saint Martins, Hyper Island and Parsons School of Design, together with young professionals, citizens and representatives from local governments will design and deliver changes and improvements to various districts of the city, including Mitino, Tagansky and Otradnoye. Urban transformation and the projects created this summer will be open for one and all.
Katya Girshina, summer programme curator

In the academic year of 2010-2011, the first 33 students worked on research projects within the bounds of one of five themes: Preservation, Energy, Thinning, Design, and Public Space. The process was curated by 15 tutors and resulted in research products of various formats, ranging from a documentary to a performance. In late June 2011, the research projects were presented to the public.
Strelka’s president Ilya Oskolkov-Tsentsiper explains the essence of education at the institute:
«I think that the main objective of a year at Strelka Institute is to take on tasks that are so significant, complicated and ambitious that you can hardly come across them in real life. However, when finally you find a solution to this or that absolute problem, you can then apply it to easier, more down-to-earth, more commercial problems. This is what education at Strelka is based on».
In 2011, the following people graduated from Strelka Institute:
Alena Lanina, Anastasia Albokrinova, Anastasia Chernyshova, Andrei Goncharov, Anna Butenko, Anna Shevchenko, Anna Trapkova, Anton Ivanov, Daria Nuzhnaya, Daria Paramonova, Daria Syuzeva, Denis Leontiev, Evgenia Nedosekina, Gleb Vitkov, Ivan Kuryachiy, Ivan Solomin, Jezi Stankevich, Karina Bunyatova, Kuba Snopek, Maria Gulieva, Merve Yucel, Minkoo Kang, Naina Gupta, Natalia Zaychenko, Oleg Semakin, Olga Khokhlova, Pavel Geichenko, Sergey Shoshin, Shi Yang, Tamara Muradova, Victoria Kudryavtseva, Xenia Makarova, Yefim Freidine.

© Sergei Leontiev
Bar Strelka is a project of Strelka Institute and a comfortable urban space.
The eclectic interior comprises elements of art deco, and Italian and Scandinavian designs of the 1960’s and 70’s.
The guests are offered an extensive cocktail list and an international menu created by the chefs Nathan Dallimore and Natalie Horsting.
At weekends, one can listen to DJs or jazz music played on an antique J. Becker piano. In summertime, there is a rooftop terrace with a unique view of the Moscow River and Christ the Saviour Cathedral.
All the profits of the bar go to support Strelka Institute.
From Monday till Friday the bar is open from 9 a.m, at weekends—from 12 p.m. On Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays we close at midnight, while on Fridays and Saturdays the parties go on until 5 a.m. the next day.
Follow Strelka at
March 25, 2011, 12:49 • educational programme, thinning

One of the vital parts of the educational program at Strelka is field trips, which are taken by students both to other cities and around Moscow to gather material for their research projects. In early December, the students traveled together to Hong Kong, while students in the Preservation research theme group recently visited St. Petersburg to study architectural conservation issues in that city.
In early March, students in the Thinning research theme visited several suburban communities in the Moscow area, seeking to understand what kinds of approaches to land use exist outside the city center. In the Thinning research theme, we remind you, students study changes in urban structures that are related to population mobility and to changes in the regional economy and in culture. The suburban communities known as dachas serve as a good example of both the specific Soviet-Russian culture of land use (spaces that are not urban but at the same time not rural) and of changes that accompanied urban development in the 20th century. In this case work in the field was, of course, a necessity. Students were accompanied on these journeys by one of the very best Russian architectural photographers, Alexey Naroditsky, whose photos from this trip can be found in our collection on Flickr.
Several places in and around Moscow were chosen for examination. The first was the famous Sokol Village, built 90 years ago this year. It was one of Soviet Russia’s first housing cooperatives and one of the government’s attempts at a solution to the country’s housing problem. The village was designed on the basis of Ebenezer Howard’s idea of a «garden city». The best architects of the period, including Alexei Shchusev and the Vesnin brothers, just to name a few, took part in designing the community, both as a whole and specific houses within it. Following the example of Sokol Village, which became the home of many artists (and where all the streets are named after artists), the same Vesnin brothers later built residential communities for laborers, for instance one near Baku.
The idea of the garden city mutated and become part of the concept of «dezurbanism», and then part of late-Soviet notions of life in the countryside. Students got acquainted with how these changes were implemented by exploring examples of later suburban communities around Moscow. Among them was a village known as «Avtobusniki» («Bus Drivers»), a place founded in 1989 by the Yasenevski bus depot that consists of plots measuring 600 square meters each, a customary size for land plots from the 1960s onward. In addition to land, residents of the community were also given shells of old buses, which are now used for the most diverse purposes: as wood sheds, greenhouses, and even for breeding rabbits.
To what use students will put the material they gathered on these excursions we will find out in June, when they will present the results of their research.
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4 comments
тигран арутюнян — March 25, 2011, 20:42
интересно...
Daniel Kempa — March 28, 2011, 18:24
Dear all,
I am sorry to bother you. However I am currently in distress to find a 3D model / massing model of moscow.
I am studying Architecture at the State Academy of the Arts in Stuttgart (www.abk-stuttgart.de), and am working on my final dissertation which is to plan a european cultural centre in moscow. Through Google Earth I found a site at the crossing of ulitsa Nov. Arbat / ulitsa Vozdvizhenka and Arbatskaya ploshchad'. Obviously, my aim is to work with the surrounding of the the site. For that reason it seems mandatory for me to get hold of a massing model or a 3d model of moscow (or atleast the arbat area) -also for the presentation of the project.
I was trying to find one on the internet but failed.
I would appreciate it very much if you could help me out, even if it is just a suggestion to where i could find such a model.
Best regards, Thank you very much,
Daniel Kempa
Наталья — April 06, 2011, 10:53
Безусловно народ, оторванный от земли, эти участки хотя бы на лето к земле возвращали.Кто-то приращивал, кто-то переезжал в деревню.Сейчас ограничений по земле нет, только по деньгам.Минимальная возможность почувствовать себя частью космоса была.
kate — April 16, 2011, 00:44
Dear Daniel!
i have tried to find for you some models,but was also failed,but I wouldnt give up)do you need some special foto of these places for the first step?