Organ Hall Yalta poster. Livadia Organ Hall. Notes from the press

This building is located in the city of Yalta on Pushkinskaya street, which is located next to the beautiful city embankment. If you arrive at the city bus station, then get to Roman Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary You can take a bus or trolleybus to the Spartak stop.

Description of the temple

The church was built in 1906 at the request and at the expense of the Catholic community, which at that time numbered 500 parishioners. Although the need for it arose in the middle of the 19th century, the tsarist authorities did not really want to give the green light to the construction of a temple for the “infidels.” The author of the project is the famous Russian architect N.P. Krasnov. In its architectural style, the building is similar to the construction of Western European medieval architecture. It should be noted that the church in Yalta is designed in strict colors outside and inside, without excessive pomp. The building operated as a temple until 1928, and then it housed various organizations. Since 1988 it has become a concert hall for organ music. In 1993, it was again consecrated as a church temple. Currently his parish numbers about 200 people.

The main attraction of the church

This is undoubtedly the organ that is located in the temple building. It was installed in the 80s of the last century. According to its characteristics, a very good organ - 2200 pipes and 34 registers make it possible to hold organ music evenings that are very popular among vacationers and guests of the city of Yalta. Therefore, this is a place of pilgrimage for tourists, Roman Catholic Church in Yalta. Address This church for those wishing to attend one of the concerts on occasion is simple, Pushkinskaya Street, 25.

Analyzing the composition of religious buildings located in Crimea, belonging to different religions, it should be noted that all religions coexist peacefully on its territory, parishioners of different religions live peacefully. And among such significant ones - Roman Catholic Church in Yalta occupies a worthy place both as a religious building for believers, and as a tourist attraction, very popular among everyone who visits one of the most beautiful cities, Yalta.

Former royal power plant. Now - Livadia Organ Hall

Livadia Organ Hall

*In 1910–1911 Simultaneously with the construction of the Livadia Palace, work was underway on the construction of a power plant building, which subsequently supplied electricity to the whole of Livadia. In 1927, the power plant equipment was dismantled, and a canteen and a club were located in the vacated premises.

During the Yalta Conference in 1945, the functions of the power plant were temporarily restored. Subsequently, a camp for German prisoners of war (1945 - 1947), warehouses, workshops, etc. were located here. The building fell into disrepair and by the end of the 80s. was in a dilapidated state.

During the reconstruction, a large amount of work was done to restore the destroyed parts of the building, and new decorative elements were added that transformed its appearance. In addition, thousands of tons of soil were removed from around the building, retaining walls were built, and metal fencing was made. On the north side, an additional room was built specifically to house the organ. The newly created interior included modeling consisting of tens of thousands of elements, hundreds of square meters of colored stained glass windows, metal fences, pilasters, capitals, etc. As a result of all the work carried out, the technical building turned into a brilliant architectural ensemble.

The new large organ in Livadia, built in 1998, is the first domestic instrument of this class created in the territory of the former Union and the largest in Ukraine. This organ has over 4600 pipes. The largest pipe is about six meters long, while the smallest is only a few millimeters long. The pipes are divided into 69 groups (registers) and through a complex system of rods (tractures) are controlled from the organ console using four keyboards for the hands (manuals) and one keyboard for the feet (pedals). In addition to the above, to control the registers, there are over 230 buttons and levers on the remote control.

In the construction of the instrument, its mechanical parts and pipes, wood from local tree species was widely used: cedar (Lebanese, Himalayan, Atlas), cypress, pine, oak, beech, pistachio, sequoia, elm, etc. and some tropical ones, as well as non-ferrous metals : tin, lead, copper and brass.

In the concert hall of the Center, traditional international organ music festivals LIVADIA-FEST are regularly held (annually), in which the best musicians from many countries participate, and master classes are organized for young Ukrainian and foreign organists. In addition to organ music, you can hear performances by choral and instrumental ensembles and numerous soloists. http://suntime.com.ua/sight_item.php?id=2568#tab=1

Construction in Livadia has been more intensive since 1910. The Grand Palace was built, the entire economic and technical base of the estate was reconstructed, and a power plant was built.

Livadia Organ Hall
One of the largest organs in the CIS, installed in the building of the former Tsarist power plant. Author and developer of the organ V. A. Khromchenko

Address: Livadia village, Baturina street, building 4.
Telephone of the Organ Hall in Livadia +7 365-4 31-25-15, +7 365-4 31-56-78

Geographical coordinates of the Livadia Organ Hall, on the map of Crimea GPS N 44.476874, E 34.142864.

The poster of the Livadia Organ Hall is published once a week in printed form only at the box office. The repertoire of the organ hall includes works by classics of organ music: Bach, Mozart, Lemmens, Liszt, Buxtehude, Yanchenko and other famous composers.
All performances start at 16-00 every day, seven days a week.
The Livadia Organ Hall is perhaps one of the most famous in the post-Soviet space and is one of the 10 largest organ halls in Russia.


The uniqueness of the Livadia Hall lies in almost everything, from the organ itself to the building in which it is located.
The building in which the organ is located was built in 1911 as a power plant to provide electricity. In 1927, the equipment was completely removed, some remained in Yalta, and some were transported to Simferopol. The building began to be used as a public canteen. In the evenings it was often used as a club. In 1945, 3 months before the start of the Yalta Conference, it was again equipped as a power plant; closer to October of the same year, all the equipment was removed again and the building was transferred to a prisoner-of-war camp, which partially restored the Crimean Peninsula. Already in 1946, the task was transferred to industrial warehouses. At the end of the 80s, the building fell into disrepair and was taken out of service, and later simply became abandoned.

Reconstruction of the building began in 1996. Changed the purpose several times. In 1997, it was decided to build an organ hall and the building began to take on modern forms. The foundation was strengthened, most of the walls had to be demolished and rebuilt, the supporting structures were strengthened and stucco was added to the facade. The building is surrounded by a wrought iron fence and has 18th-century style lanterns.
During construction, the question arose of how to purchase an organ; there were no funds for the purchase. One of the creators of the project for the organ hall building was V. A. Khromchenko, a graduate of the Tallinn Conservatory in organ class, and he proposed a bold solution: to assemble the organ himself. This did not happen in the practice of the USSR, and especially in the post-Soviet Crimea. A lot of materials on the construction of the organ were collected, many days were spent in consultations with foreign experts, and then construction began. Almost all materials for the organ were Crimean.

Crimean tree species were used to make organ pipes: oak, beech, cedar, pine and cypress. Also, some pipes were made of non-ferrous metals: brass, copper, tin and lead. The organ turned out to be almost classic: four keyboards for the hands and one for the feet. The organ consists of 4,600 pipes of different diameters and lengths and many mechanical traction systems, including a control panel located on the main panel of the organ. One of the highlights of the organ was the 700-channel electronic control unit, which significantly expanded the sound capabilities of the Livadia organ.
And in the fall of 1998, the Livadia Organ Hall opened to visitors and guests of Crimea. Organ music has been gaining more and more popularity in recent decades; many young people and older people are becoming familiar with the classics, because it is not for nothing that the organ is the “King” of musical instruments. It is for him that the most musical works in the world have been written. Livadia Organ Hall is one of the stunning

With the onset of spring, we dedicated one of the first school excursions to the South Bank to the blooming Livadia Park and the organ hall. On our part, this was a kind of challenge to teenagers who flaunted their ignorance. Not a botanical garden, not a zoo, not a cable car, but a concert of organ music! Will they survive?
The schoolchildren walked off, grimacing and mocking, and suddenly they calmed down. The combination of severity and festive warmth of colors literally hypnotized the children even before the concert began. They took their seats in the hall quietly, not even whispering to each other.
No epithet, the most sublime and flowery, will be an exaggeration in relation to the organ. Humanity knows neither the name of the inventor nor the exact date of the appearance of this divine musical instrument on earth. Its history, very approximate, can be traced back to the pipe, which the ancient Greeks depicted in the hands of the forest deity Pan. In the “book of books” of the Bible, the Old Testament says: “Praise the Lord with trumpets.” What was meant, of course, was not solitary shepherd’s pipes, but different-sized pipes collected together, the voice of which – clear, ringing, alarming and powerful – would gather fellow believers, generate a high and reverent mood in the soul, and direct thoughts and gazes to Heaven.
Russian music critic V. Stasov wrote about the organ: “It alone has those amazing sounds, those thunders, that majestic voice, as if speaking from eternity, the expression of which is impossible for any other instrument, no orchestra.” Church (or, as they now say, sacred music) deafens and confuses. But wasn’t it designed to listen and submit to the power of the Most High? It was then that the twentieth century layered on the previous ones, allowing earthlings to enter into conversation with someone who should only be revered in awe. You listen - and it begins to seem that the melodies stop time, delay glimpses of childhood and the best moments of youth, resurrect times of anxiety and enchantment, and gently heal black holes of loss. Filling the emptiness of the hall, the creation breaks the ascetic framework and spills into the living, natural, sinful interhuman space to capture us and lead us with its labyrinths.
The ancient Greeks and Romans had something like an organ. An image of the instrument was found on a coin or token from the time of Nero. The art of building organs came from Byzantium and Italy, then penetrated to France, and later to Germany. Since the 7th century, the organ has become an invariable attribute of the temple in Catholic worship. But not only cantatas and oratorios, not only Bach’s fugues, which are difficult and difficult for an amateur to understand, can be performed on this divine instrument, but also, for example, K. Gluck’s opera “Orpheus and Eurydice” - gentle, romantic melodies. Even the “Voice of Trumpets” stylized as folk music can be heard in the Livadia Organ Hall!
The guide to this infinity and its discoverer for Simferopol schoolchildren was not a clergyman, but a modern musician - Vladimir Anatolyevich Khromchenko. He graduated from the Tallinn Conservatory and moved to Yalta, dreaming of playing the instrument to which he dedicated his life. But there was no organ in the city! They offered a piano...What could a fan of incomparable music do? Relearn, reconcile, calm down? Or plan the impossible?
The musician orders literature from abroad with drawings and calculations, calculates and designs the instrument he has dreamed of. To create an organ, you need to be not only a top-class musician, but also a mathematician, physicist, engineer, a jack of all trades and, of course, a diplomat. To convince the authorities of the reality of their plan and the benefits of the final result.
Vladimir Anatolyevich built the first two instruments at the Yalta Music School and in the Armenian Church, and he worked alone. Happened. Believe it!
Here, in the former Livadia Club, which previously served as a power plant for the royal palace, a restless craftsman created a new instrument, the largest in Ukraine. He no longer worked alone, he headed an entire production. The modern world has never known such a precedent! Even in the Baltic states, there are only assembly and restoration workshops for working with finished parts that are produced in Western companies. And organs are collected mainly from metal, which experts can always determine by ear. Wooden pipes sound incomparably richer. The Livadia organ has 4,600 pipes, about a third of which are wooden. They are made from local wood species - cypress, cedar, sequoia, pistachio. Yes, these trumpets “glorify the Lord”, according to the indisputable estimates of experts, are better and more sonorous than branded ones...
The children listened to the concert with quiet delight, as if they had drunk nectar and penetrated into the mysteries that they had not suspected before this excursion. And the thunder of heaven, and the quiet spring drops - everything sounded for them this Sunday, everything will be deposited in their memory like a golden layer.

Dmitry Tarasenko, “Southern Capital”.

In 1910–1911 Simultaneously with the construction of the Livadia Palace, work was underway on the construction of a power plant building, which subsequently supplied electricity to the whole of Livadia. In 1927, the power plant equipment was dismantled, and a canteen and a club were located in the vacated premises.

During the Yalta Conference in 1945, the functions of the power plant were temporarily restored. Subsequently, a camp for German prisoners of war (1945 - 1947), warehouses, workshops, etc. were located here. The building fell into disrepair and by the end of the 80s. was in a dilapidated state.

During the reconstruction, a large amount of work was done to restore the destroyed parts of the building, and new decorative elements were added that transformed its appearance. In addition, thousands of tons of soil were removed from around the building, retaining walls were built, and metal fencing was made. On the north side, an additional room was built specifically to house the organ. The newly created interior included modeling consisting of tens of thousands of elements, hundreds of square meters of colored stained glass windows, metal fences, pilasters, capitals, etc. As a result of all the work carried out, the technical building turned into a brilliant architectural ensemble.

The new large organ in Livadia, built in 1998, is the first domestic instrument of this class created in the territory of the former Union and the largest in Ukraine. This organ has over 4600 pipes. The largest pipe is about six meters long, while the smallest is only a few millimeters long. The pipes are divided into 69 groups (registers) and through a complex system of rods (tractures) are controlled from the organ console using four keyboards for the hands (manuals) and one keyboard for the feet (pedals). In addition to the above, to control the registers, there are over 230 buttons and levers on the remote control.

In the construction of the instrument, its mechanical parts and pipes, wood from local tree species was widely used: cedar (Lebanese, Himalayan, Atlas), cypress, pine, oak, beech, pistachio, sequoia, elm, etc. and some tropical ones, as well as non-ferrous metals : tin, lead, copper and brass.

In the concert hall of the Center, traditional international organ music festivals LIVADIA-FEST are regularly held (annually), in which the best musicians from many countries participate, and master classes are organized for young Ukrainian and foreign organists. In addition to organ music, you can hear performances by choral and instrumental ensembles and numerous soloists.

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In 1910–1911 Simultaneously with the construction of the Livadia Palace, work was underway on the construction of a power plant building, which subsequently supplied electricity to the whole of Livadia. In 1927, the power plant equipment was dismantled, and a canteen and a club were located in the vacated premises. During the Yalta Conference in 1945, the functions of the power plant were temporarily restored. Subsequently, a camp for German prisoners of war (1945 - 1947), warehouses, workshops, etc. were located here. The building fell into disrepair and by the end of the 80s. was in a dilapidated state. During the reconstruction, a large amount of work was done to restore the destroyed parts of the building, and new decorative elements were added that transformed its appearance. In addition, thousands of tons of soil were removed from around the building, retaining walls were built, and metal fencing was made. On the north side, an additional room was built specifically to house the organ. The newly created interior included modeling consisting of tens of thousands of elements, hundreds of square meters of colored stained glass windows, metal fences, pilasters, capitals, etc. As a result of all the work carried out, the technical building turned into a brilliant architectural ensemble. The new large organ in Livadia, built in 1998, is the first domestic instrument of this class created in the territory of the former Union and the largest in Ukraine. This organ has over 4600 pipes. The largest pipe is about six meters long, while the smallest is only a few millimeters long. The pipes are divided into 69 groups (registers) and through a complex system of rods (tractures) are controlled from the organ console using four keyboards for the hands (manuals) and one keyboard for the feet (pedals). In addition to the above, to control the registers, there are over 230 buttons and levers on the remote control. In the construction of the instrument, its mechanical parts and pipes, wood from local tree species was widely used: cedar (Lebanese, Himalayan, Atlas), cypress, pine, oak, beech, pistachio, sequoia, elm, etc. and some tropical ones, as well as non-ferrous metals : tin, lead, copper and brass. In the concert hall of the Center, traditional international organ music festivals LIVADIA-FEST are regularly held (annually), in which the best musicians from many countries participate, and master classes are organized for young Ukrainian and foreign organists. In addition to organ music, you can hear performances by choral and instrumental ensembles and numerous soloists. Save changes

Concerts daily at 20.00 Concerts daily at 20.00