The Large Palace

Tsaritsyno Museum Reserve in Moscow

Published: September 15, 2016

Tsaritsyno is a park and museum complex in southern Moscow. One of the largest museum reserves in Moscow, the land started as an aristocratic estate. It was purchased by Catherine the Great, who commissioned a palace to be built there. However, it was not finished at the time of her death and the project was then abondoned.

The palace was eventually completed in 2007, when the city decided to develop the area into a large park, museum, and cultural center. So, though you can easily see the style and beauty of the palace reflects the 18th century, it is essentially a modern palace made into a public space.

Below are two experiences that SRAS students have had with this the Tsaritsyno Museum Reserve, one exploring it on their own, and another touring the park as part of an SRAS study abroad program in Moscow, for which the park is occasionally included in the cultural programs.

Exploring Tsaritsyno on Your Own

Statue of Architects
Statue of the Architects

As a museum-reserve, the Tsaritsyno Museum Reserve in Moscow definitely serves the public. There is an impressive array of events and community programs at Tsaritsyno, like opera and orchestral performances, zumba classes, and programs for children. You’ll see a yoga pavilion and advertisements for community events. There are even gymnastic bars and volleyball courts. Tsaritsyno itself houses a couple of museum-type collections of art and objects. There are also creative excursions, where you can see a dramatic tour or solve a mystery in the palace.

The palace itself is really beautiful and seems perfectly fit for the 18th century.

There are interesting features scattered around the grounds, too, like an opera house, an orangerie, buildings and gates that were attached to the earliest estates, and even a grouping of ancient burial mounds dating to the 11th century.

By far the greatest feature is the park itself. The lake at Tsaritsyno is a beautiful, tranquil area where swans can be seen, and visitors can walk the perimeter. There are ponds that feed into each other leading up to the palace. It’s a huge area, but easily walk-able, especially if you spread it out over a couple of hours. There are all kinds of trees, in some areas forming a canopy over the walkways. The whole area has the feel of a forest, but with modern walking paths. It’s the perfect place for a picnic, and there are benches throughout in case you get too tired from all that walking.

It’s also a unique place for tourists in Moscow, as it definitely has a St Petersburg feel. There is a large fountain display and royal carriage for pictures. If you haven’t seen the palaces of St Petersburg, or if you are missing that city, Tsaritsyno is a lovely reminder, with the architecture and estate style of the 1700’s.

To get there, there are two metro stations to choose from. The Metro station Tsaritsyno is an obvious choice, but if you go to “Orokhevo” (Dark Green line) you exit right to a rear gate, and in that way, enter through the woods and see all the scenery first, instead of a busy street. One of the bonuses of this trip is you’ll get to see the part of the metro that passes above ground and over the Moscow River between Kolomenskaya and Avtozavodskaya, which is a great view.

Sarah Parker

A Tour of Tsaritsyno with SRAS

We started our walking tour, offered by our SRAS study abroad program in Moscow, by meeting Roxana, the SRAS Moscow Student Coordinator, on the Tsaritsyno metro platform. Exiting the station, we only had short walk to the park. Still, we were far enough from the center of the city that the atmosphere on the street was decidedly different. There were kiosks and small stands similar to the ones downtown, but they were weathered and sold cooler things like watches and clothes (as opposed to the usual ice cream and snacks you could find in the city center kiosks).

Entrance arch to Tsaritsyno
Entrance arch to Tsaritsyno

Once we were at the park, Roxana began the informational part of the tour by giving us a general overview of the history of the park. She told us that Tsaritsyno began as an aristocratic family’s estate. It was purchased by Catherine the Great after she passed through the land and enjoyed the area, and thereby gained the name “Tsaritsyno”. As we walked down the gentle slope from the park entrance towards a large fountain and lake, Roxana continued. Speakers around the fountain were playing Africa by Toto, a song that felt hilariously out of place and definitely brightened my day. We then learned that the empress had her favorite architect, Vasilii Bazhenov, construct a palace on the reserve that would take him eight long years to complete. Unfortunately for Bazhenov, Catherine disliked his design and had his work torn down. His contemporary, Matvei Kazakov, took over and began building a second palace, but his work also fell into disfavor and was never completed.

We kept walking, and eventually made it to the main grounds of the palace. Roxana once again gave us the rundown. The large palace that is visible today was restored in the early to mid-2000s (and is based on Kazakov’s design, not Bazhenov’s). Several other important structures (all designed by Bazhenov) exist on the main grounds: the Bread House, the opera house, the small palace, a church, and an old bridge. The Bread House was the all-inclusive servant work space, as the aristocrats of the time didn’t want to see them in the palaces. The opera house was exactly what it sounds like. Strangely, the small palace wasn’t what it sounded like. According to Roxana, no one is really certain what the structure was built for, thus it received the name as a best guess. The church near the large palace predates Catherine’s ownership and stands out for its excellent examples of Russian-Orthodox religious iconography. As we walked through it, we saw that inside was painted with brilliantly colored depictions of saints, scenes from church history, and complex metalwork. Finally, we walked across the old bridge before heading behind the large palace to start our picnic. Roxana let us know that the bridge was an original (unlike the other rebuilt structures on the grounds) and was one of the best surviving examples of the Russian Gothic architectural style.

The Ruined Tower
The “Ruined” Tower

Sitting down for the picnic, we all helped unpack and generally had a good time sharing stories about our experiences so far. After the picnic, we continued on to the last part of the tour. Walking deeper into the reserve, we came across several smaller buildings that were apparently build to commemorate days and events that Catherine the Great enjoyed throughout her life so that she would always be able to remember them. Next, we walked by a “ruined tower”, that was actually built to look ruined on purpose at the empress’s request. This fact, compounded with everything else I learned about the estate, made me start to think that Catherine had some unresolved issues. At the very least, she seemed to have a fickle personality.

Finally, we finished off our walking tour with a mix of extremely ancient and modern history. The path leading out of the park wove through a very hilly area. We learned that these small hills were actually kurgans, which are ancient Slavic burial mounds. Then Roxana finished with the last hundred or so years of the park’s history. The park was open to the public in the late 1800s. It then became a space for dachas after the soviet revolution. Finally it was reconverted into a public park in the last few decades of the 1900s and so it remains today.

Of all the parts of the tour, I’d have to say my favorites were the church for its beautiful art, the ancient burial mounds for their mysterious history, and the stories about Catherine the Great for how capricious they made her seem. So if you’re trying to decide on taking the tour or not, you definitely should. The grounds are beautiful in the summer and are something you can’t afford to miss.

Jack Fischer

More Pictures of Tsarityno

Jack Fischer

About the authors

Jack Fischer

Jack Fischer, at the time he wrote for this site, was majoring in Physics with Russian and Economics minors at Iowa State University of Science and Technology in Ames, Iowa. He is studied Russian as a Second Language with SRAS over the summer of 2016 to improve his command of the Russian language. In the future, he’d like to work for himself and run a business, preferably abroad.

Program attended: Challenge Grants

View all posts by: Jack Fischer

Sarah Parker

Sarah Parker, at the time she wrote for this site, was a University of Utah student working on an undergraduate in Business Operations with a minor in Russian Language. After SRAS' Russian as Second Language program in 2014, she planned to complete her degree and begin work on her career goal of increasing commercial trade between Russia and the Americas. She is seen here being chased by a bear near Pavlovsk.

Program attended: Challenge Grants

View all posts by: Sarah Parker