Igor Yaveyn


Igor Georgievich Yaveyn was a Soviet architect, notable for projects of multiple railway stations in the Soviet Union, including these in Novgorod, Kursk, and Dubulti.
Yaveyn was born in Saint Petersburg in 1903. His father was the epidemiologist and a professor at the Medical-Surgical Academy Georgy Yulyevich Yaveyn. His mother, Poliksena Shishkina-Iavein, was a physician as well and a notable suffragette. From 1923 till 1927 Yaveyn studied architecture at Leningrad Institute of Civil Engineering under Alexander Nikolsky, an avantguardist architect. Yaveyn's graduation project was a design of the Central Railway Station in Leningrad, and subsequently as an architect he mostly designed railway stations.
In 1932, Yaveyn participated in a competition for the project of a new building of Kursky Railway Station in Moscow. Whereas he did not win the competition, he realized there for the first time the idea that a railway station is not a usual building but a transport connection site where the architecture must be determined by the flow of humans and vehicles.