When the Slavdom company was offered to participate in the restoration of the Church of the Resurrection of Christ and the chapel of St. Xenia the Blessed at the Smolensk cemetery, as well as in the renovation of the parish of the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker on Kolomyazhsky Prospekt, the decision was made at that very moment.
The Church of the Resurrection of Christ has long needed the help of restorers. Laid down on June 16, 1901 and built a few years later, the church has experienced many events. For a long time she served the Orthodox believers, it was here that the poet Alexander Blok was buried in 1921 on August 10. But in January 1930, the Resurrection Church was closed and converted into a hostel. In 1977, a pumping station was equipped there, as a result of which the premises were changed beyond recognition. Only in 1995 the church was returned to the believers, and then restoration work began.
The company "Slavdom" joined the restoration at the final stage of work, providing lime plaster
Kalk Mortel and Renovier Spachtel White repair filler from Baumit.
The same building materials were supplied by Slavdom to the project for the restoration of the chapel of St. Xenia the Blessed, erected in 1902 by the architect A. A. Vseslavin. During the war, the purpose of the chapel changed, it housed a warehouse for containers from fuel and lubricants. In 1946, the chapel was again used for its intended purpose. But in 1962, by decision of the authorities, it was closed and given over to a sculpture workshop, which soon finished its work. For a long time, the chapel stood in desolation, and only in 1984 it was handed over to the community. In 2002, the chapel was restored, and it opened its doors wide to all believers.
The St. Petersburg shrine shone with new colors in 2015, after another renovation, with which the chapel was helped by the Slavdom Company.
But not only century-old buildings require renovation. The Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, located in St. Petersburg on Kolomyazhsky Prospekt, was erected and opened to the public in 2006. In 2014, the building needed the help of craftsmen.
For the restoration work, the Slavdom company provided building materials
Baumit, including UniPrimer Repro universal primer, Silikat Color Repro silicate paint.
Slavdom is a federal dealer of leading manufacturers of building materials from Russia and Europe. The main field of activity of the company is retail sales of wall, roofing and landscape and finishing materials, project sales for construction sites and distribution through a network of business partners in Russia.
The range of products on offer includes more than 40,000 products, which are presented in more than 60 product lines. More than 150 Russian and European brands from Germany, Belgium, Holland, Poland, Estonia, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Austria, Slovakia, France, Spain, England, Sweden are represented in four professional showrooms of Slavdom in St. Petersburg and Moscow and the USA.