Palace of the Republic, Chișinău

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Palace of the Republic
Дворец Республики, Кишинев, Молдова Palatul Republicii, Chisinau, Moldova Palace of Republic, Chisinau, Moldova (49422207273).jpg
The palace in July 2013
General information
StatusActive
Location16 Maria Cebotari Street, Chișinău, Moldova
Completed1984
OwnerGovernment of Moldova
Technical details
Floor count4 floors
Design and construction
Architect
  • Ivan Zagoretsky
  • Alexander Shevtsov
  • Mikhail Orlov
  • Stanislav Makarchuk

Palace of the Republic (Romanian: Palatul Republicii) is an official multi-purpose building as well as a concert and theatre hall in Moldova.[1] It is located at the Buiucani sector in the commune of Condrița in Chișinău.[2]

History[]

The palace in 1984.

It was initially in established in 1984 as the Friendship Hall and was renamed in 1988 to the Republican Center for Culture and Art. Its creation was timed to the golden jubilee of the establishment of the Moldovan Soviet Socialist Republic. It was considered one of the more major works of Bessebarian architect Ivan Zagoryetskiy (Иван Андреевич Загорецкий).[3] On 29 June 1994, the center was converted into the Palace of State Officials with the aim of providing services to the foreign ministry and government. Today, conferences, meetings, workshops are held at the Palace of the Republic. The national government actively rents out the halls in the palace, with the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova meeting here from 2009 to 2014 while the official government building was being repaired.[4] It was later renamed the following year to its current name.

Events[]

Igor Dodon's swearing in

See also[]

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Palace of the Republic | Chișinău | Moldova | OzOutback".
  2. ^ https://www.prospect.md/en/tourism/concert-halls-and-ticket-offices/palace-of-the-republic.html
  3. ^ МАРГАРИТА МОРАРЬ (2017-10-29). "Советское наследие Кишинева: Какими зданиями жители столицы могут гордиться" (in Russian).
  4. ^ "Кишинев".
  5. ^ "Молдова: выиграл Додон, победил Плахотнюк". Rabkor.ru (in Russian). Рабкор.ру. 17 November 2016. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  6. ^ "Pro-EU Maia Sandu sworn in as Moldova's president". Macau Business. 2020-12-24. Retrieved 2020-12-24.
  7. ^ "JSC "Zarubezh-Expo" (495) 721-32-36, "EXPO-RUSSIA" Russian Industrial Exhibitions".
  8. ^ "Anti-gay summit finds mixed reception in Moldova | Eurasianet".

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