He was born in Moscow.
Parusnikov Mikhail Pavlovich
November 12th, 1893 - February 2nd, 1968Timeline
He studied at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.
He studied at the Higher art and technical workshops.
He worked in architectural and design organizations in Moscow and at the same time taught (1934-1941, since 1948 - professor) at Moscow Architectural Institute.
Senior researcher at the Academy of Architecture of the USSR.
He led the architectural and design workshops of the Committee for Architecture of the USSR.
He was awarded the Order of Lenin.
He was awarded academician of the Academy of Sciences of the BSSR and full member of the Academy of Architecture of the USSR.
Administrative buildings, the building of the National Bank of the Republic of Belarus, residential buildings and a bridge across the river Svisloch, a sports complex "Dynamo" in Minsk were built based on his projects.
He took an active part in the research work of the Institute of Construction and Architecture of the Academy of Sciences of the BSSR. Under his leadership and with his constant consultations, work was carried out to create area projects in Minsk and other cities of Belarus.
He was awarded the State Prize of the BSSR.
Noticeable works
- Project planning and development of Astrakhan (1930).
- Machine-building pavilion and audience at the All-Russian Agricultural and Handicraft Exhibition in Moscow (1923).
- A number of residential buildings in Mir avenue in Moscow (1936).
- "Houses with an arch" in Yaroslavl, including the house in Red Square (1936).
- Administrative building - KGB of Belarus (spring 1945-1947), the first building in the main street of Minsk after the Great Patriotic War.
- The State Bank of the BSSR (1950).
- Project planning and building of the center and the first line of Leninsky Avenue (now Nezavisimosti avenue) and Oktiabr'skaya Square.
- Leninsky Avenue ensemble (with a group of co-authors; laid and built up in the second half of the 1940s and 1960s).
- Residential buildings and a bridge over the river Svisloch, Dynamo Sports Complex (1946 - 1954, co-authored).