The Aeroflot Building designed by Dmitry Chechulin, 1934.
Stalin, Social Realism, Monument, Imaginary Cities
An unrealized project, the Aeroflot Building was posed to be placed where the Belorussky Station was built. Dmitry Chechulin, later becoming chief architecture of Moscow in 1945, intending the building to memorialize the heroism supposedly typified by the Soviet fleets.
Slide 8
http://www.slideshare.net/doina/moskow-30-50-unrealised-projects
The building of the People’s Commissariat of Heavy Industry, architectural team, A. Vesoin, V, Vesnin, S. Lyaschenko, 1934.
imagined cities, Stalin's Plan, minicab 2,
One of the most ambitious architectural works during this period, the People's Commissariat of Heavy Industry if built would have been one of the tallest and largest complexes in the world. If built, the complex would have stretched over four hectares of land, and would of had a volume of 110,000 cubic meters. Like other project, this building revisits while recycles neoclassical values, while also typifying the developing of a social realist aesthetic.
http://www.joe0.com/2006/05/21/the-architecture-of-moscow-unrealised-projects/