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Restored relics of St. Petersburg beckon

St. Petersburg’s enormous Winter Palace, once the home of the czars, is now the site of the Hermitage Museum.
St. Petersburg’s enormous Winter Palace, once the home of the czars, is now the site of the Hermitage Museum.

ST. PETERSBURG -- Once a swamp, then an imperial capital, now a showpiece of long-ago aristocratic opulence, St. Petersburg is Russia's most accessible and tourist-worthy city.

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Rick Steves’ Europe

The parklike medians separating St. Petersburg’s boulevards were once canals built by Peter the Great.

During the Soviet era, it was ­drab and called Leningrad. Its striking beauty today is all the more remarkable given that it was devastated by a 900-day Nazi siege during World War II.

IF YOU GO

SLEEPING: M-Hotel’s 61 rooms are tucked into a quiet courtyard just south of the main drag, Nevsky Prospekt (moderate, mhotelspb.ru). The Pushka Inn offers tasteful rooms in the heart of downtown, close to the Hermitage Museum (splurge, pushkainn.ru).

GETTING AROUND: Almost everything you’ll want to see is either along Nevsky Prospekt or a few blocks to either side. To go to more distant sites, use the city’s excellent subway system.

VISAS: Visitors from the United States and Canada must obtain a visa in advance to enter Russia (russianembassy.org). Exceptions are made for travelers arriving by cruise ship.

INFORMATION: visit-petersburg.ru.

As if turning the clock back to its glory days, the metropolis goes by its original name, and its architectural treasures have been spiffed up. St. Petersburg sparkles with restored palaces, gardens, statues and bridges arching over graceful waterways.

St. Petersburg was Russia's capital from 1712 until 1918. The wealthy Romanov czars and czarinas were in power and on a building spree. Their agenda went far beyond indulging their every whim for fancy digs -- they needed to keep their peasant population under control, maintain the loyalty of their military and impress visiting dignitaries. The imposing buildings they erected were one of the ways they said, "We're in charge here."

It started in the early 1700s, when Peter the Great, inspired by a trip to Amsterdam, laid out his city in a grid plan with canals. Many of those original neighborhoods survive, the canals now filled in and converted to parks. Palaces and fancy apartments line surviving waterways and boulevards.

On a sunny day, take a walk and admire the cityscape. Raise your eyes to see above the workaday grind. The upper facades are sun-warmed and untouched by street grime. The palette of robin's egg blue, petal pink and sunshine yellow is as pretty as a Faberge egg.

You can trace the city's story through the architectural legacy of its rulers and their favorite designers. Peter's daughter Elizabeth, who reigned from 1741 to 1762, spared no expense in elevating the city's profile. She imported the Italian architect Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli, whose grandiose buildings burst with baroque energy -- white stucco frills, wall-to-wall gold leaf and glittering mirrors reflecting noble and aristocratic egos. Rastrelli's most famous buildings are the huge Winter Palace on the Neva River and the grand Catherine Palace just outside of town.

Catherine the Great ruled Russia from 1762 until 1796. Catherine -- who was Prussian -- wanted to leave an indelible mark on her adopted country. To distinguish her buildings from Elizabeth's baroque excesses, she turned to the restrained Scottish architect Charles Cameron. Looking back to the glories of ancient Greece and Rome, Cameron gave the city a neoclassical makeover, with clean columns and geometric arches replacing baroque baubles and trimmings.

Catherine's grandson, Nicholas I, took neoclassicism even farther during his reign, from 1825 to 1855. He declared that St. Petersburg's buildings should conform to the "Russian-Empire" style. This was a heyday of architectural perfectionism, with every little thing made orderly and measured. The projects of the Italian Carlo Rossi epitomize the time, especially his Street of Perfect Proportions, with buildings as high as the street is wide and a clean line of neoclassical columns on each side.

Many of these architectural trends are mirrored in St. Petersburg's great Russian Orthodox churches. Under the communists, countless churches got no respect. They were destroyed or repurposed -- even as ice hockey rinks and swimming pools.

The grand neoclassical Kazan Cathedral, modeled on St. Peter's in Rome, was for years used as a "Museum of Atheism." Once again a place of worship, the cathedral draws lines of the faithful, who come to kiss the church's namesake: the Our Lady of Kazan icon, the most important in Russian Orthodoxy.

The oldest church in St. Petersburg, the early baroque Peter and Paul Cathedral, is intimately linked with the Romanovs. A Swiss-Italian architect designed the golden-spired building for Peter the Great in the early 1700s. Peter's marble tomb is here, surrounded by the Romanovs who came after him, including Catherine the Great.

With the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, angry mobs ransacked the church and desecrated the Romanov tombs. The age of czar rule was over. Only years later would a small chapel in the church be dedicated to the much-romanticized family of the final czar, Nicholas II.

Nowadays, the legacy of the Romanovs is finding new life among Russians, who have developed nostalgia for the art and architecture of those imperial days. They, and the tourists who visit St. Petersburg, have come to appreciate the remarkably harmonious cityscape conceived by Peter the Great and added to by his successors. From the grand mansions lining its wide boulevards to the impressive palaces of the czars, the city does full justice to the vision of its founder.

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Travel on 05/17/2015

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