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Peter I's Winter Palace
Quarenghi, as architect of the Hermitage Theater,
decided to use Peter's old Winter Palace as the
foundation for the building. It is thanks to this
decision that you are able to see this exhibition
today, though a complete excavation of the old palace
is impossible as it would leave the theater
foundationless. Almost everything displayed is a
reconstruction of what was theoretically once there;
the only things left over from Peter's time are some
walls, a splotch of paint, and a 1726 bottle of wine
found nearly three centuries later during excavation.
Curiosity and thirst overcame any sense of obligation
the lucky workers may have had, and rather than
turning the bottle in to the museum they tried
drinking it, but it had long gone bad.
Peter's palace includes the Small Chambers, which
you're only allowed see through the windows (the
guide justifies this by saying that there's no way an
entire excursion group could fit in there, but seeing
how ten thousand people can jam into one trolleybus
this is hard to believe). Inside, among other things,
are items demonstrating that Peter was a hard-working
guy who liked a good laugh - an old lathe shares
space with a joke divan, that with the help of a
large spring mechanism, ejected would-be sitters into
the air.
The palace complex also features an early version of
central heating, where one central wood-burning stove
would distribute heat to four stoves in various
rooms. Peter designed the system himself because he
hated servants entering his work area. There's also a
room of portraits of Peter's family, including his
second son whose premature death caused him to change
the law of succession, and a wax dummy of Peter
(again visible only through a window) with his
original smock and shoes - for such a big guy, Peter,
like the rest of the Romanovs, had small feet.
Dvortsovaya Naberezhnaya 34, entrance from the Neva
Embankment. Metro: Nevsky Prospekt then trolleys 1, 7
or 10 to Dvortsovaya Ploshchad or 15 minute walk.
Open 10:30-18:00, closed Mondays. Recorded
information in Russian: 219 8625; Excursion bureau
open 10:30-15:30. Tel: 311 3725 (Russian only,
annoyingly enough).
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