What we found in the archives: working with history at Alter
Archival drawings, letters from residents, and plans from the 1930s - how we integrate historical sources into modern solutions.
📜 Searching for traces: what we find
Before we take any action on site, we begin with historical research — often months in advance. We dive into state archives, museum collections, architectural bureaus, private family holdings, and even old newspapers.
Among the materials we typically uncover:
Original architectural drawings from the early 20th century
Urban development plans from the 1920s–1930s
Handwritten letters and memoirs from former residents
Photographs taken before Soviet reconstructions
Technical documents on materials used in specific facades
Community stories preserved by local historians or activists
These are not just references — they become the foundation of our design decisions.
🏗 How we use archival materials in real projects
At Alter, we don’t romanticize the past, but we respect it.
 We treat historical materials as guidelines for intelligent and responsible design — not as limitations.
We apply this information in several ways:
Reconstruction of lost elements
 We use original drawings to recreate window shapes, cornices, staircases, or metalwork details.
Understanding architectural intent
 Historical plans reveal why a room faces east, or how light was originally used in stairwells.
Authentic materials and techniques
 We reproduce plasterwork, tile patterns, or even fonts from signage based on visual or written records.
Rebuilding identity
 Letters from residents help us understand emotional value: what spaces meant to people and how we can keep that alive.
🔎 A case in point: reading the past, shaping the present
In one of our recent projects, we discovered a complete set of hand-drawn floorplans from 1937, hidden in a regional archive.
 The plans included unique ventilation shafts and curved balcony forms that had been completely lost in a post-war rebuild.
Using these, we were able to:
Restore the original flow of natural light and air through the building
Recreate ornamental details that had been covered by decades of modifications
Present the renovation not just as a technical update, but as a cultural act
🌱 Why this approach matters
Involving historical context in renovation is not just ethical — it’s strategic:
It adds long-term value by preserving authenticity
It builds public trust, especially in communities that often feel displaced by new development
It aligns with ESG principles: cultural responsibility is part of social sustainability
It allows us to differentiate our work in a crowded real estate market
đź§ From archive to future
What we find in archives isn’t just technical. It’s emotional, layered, and often unexpected.
 A note scribbled on a blueprint, a signature on a beam, a name carved into a stairwell — all of these become clues in our process of restorative innovation.
At Alter Development, we believe that the best future for cities begins by listening carefully to their past — and rebuilding not just structures, but continuity.