THE SECRET RUSSIAN VACATION SPOT
where you can rub elbows with
putin’s pals
Many towns
in Russia’s Golden Ring—a compact network of ancient, fairy-tale villages
northeast of Moscow—have connections to the country’s emperors and czars. Ivan
the Terrible vacationed in the 11th century town of Yaroslavl; Peter the Great
grew up in Pereslavl; the Romanovs were said to have links to the town of
Kostroma.
“Everywhere
you look here there are stories about power struggles or political intrigue,” a
local monk told South China Morning Post in 2015.
#Plyos, the
secret Russian vacation spot where you can rub elbows with Putin’s pals
Fast-forward
to 2017, and Plyos is occupying an increasingly large share of national
interest. For one thing, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has been regularly
vacationing in a sprawling compound just a few miles beyond the town’s main
road—complete with a ski slope and chairlift, a man-made lake, multiple
helipads, and a 20-foot-tall fence to conceal it all. (Officially, it’s a
guarded, government-owned residence.)
For luxury
travellers, Antarctica is about as exclusive as it gets
And Medvedev
is just one of a growing number of prominent local vacationers. The former
Russian ambassador to Washington has a dacha in Plyos, as does a former governor
of St. Petersburg and President Vladimir Putin’s national security adviser.
(The town is equidistant to Russia’s two largest cities.) No surprise, the
country’s richest businessmen are now sweeping up weekend homes. Even Putin
himself was rumored to be commissioning a house in the area.
So what’s
drawing the Russian elite to this burgeoning Hamptons on the Volga?
A
Seven-Figure Cash Injection
Plyos’s
revival is the result of one (very wealthy) man’s crusade: Alexey Shevtsov.
When the Soviet Republic collapsed in 1991, Shevtsov navigated the rocky
economy and became one of the country’s most renowned financial consultants.
#A houseboat
on the Volga River pulls into Plyos
Emotionally,
Shevtsov was invested in Plyos as a place of great nostalgic value—his
grandmother had owned a home nearby, and he’d always dreamed of having his own
dacha in the town that claimed his best summertime memories. So with a few
decades of financial success under his belt, he returned to Plyos in the early
2000s to discover a run-down town in need of a serious cash injection. “I
decided to leave stocks and bonds for younger people,” Shevtsov said of his
decision to switch gears from finance to architectural preservation. “Plyos was
in poor condition, and I wanted to do something for our Mother Russia.”
So in 1998,
Shevtsov bought a plot of land along the Volga River, in the middle of downtown
Plyos, and got to work figuring out what had been there before. With the help
of historical records, he learned the ins and outs of the town’s distinct
architectural heritage—and was able to re-create the former home on his land.
Plyos had
its ups and downs until a trading boom in the early 1800s inspired a wave of
ambitious development, largely in the form of highly ornamented wooden houses
and churches. “These fragile wooden details, they need to be restored like they
restore temples in Asia, every 25 years of so,” Shevtsov said. “It’s
complicated work and expensive one, to keep this magnificent wooden town in all
its splendour.”
But Shevtsov
accepted the responsibility, buying one building—then another, and
another—until he amassed more than three dozen restoration projects within a
roughly 1-mile radius. (Plyos, explained Shevtsov, is comparable in size to New
York’s Central Park.) When asked how much this has cost him, he laughed. “Many
millions I have spent.” More laughter. “Many, many millions. An important
percentage of what I have.”
A
Million-Dollar Crowd
Plyos has
had its fair share of posh visitors, past and present. “Levitan saved Plyos
from oblivion when he created several well-known masterpieces,” explained
Shevtsov. The artist was alive in the latter half of the 19th century and was
at the peak of his fame in the 1880s and ’90s. “And after that, Plyos became
fashionable among painters, opera singers, actors, bourgeoisie, and
intelligents.”
Plyos’s
chicness subsided until Shevtsov’s work started to reclaim the town’s
reputation. By 2008 a reporter revealed that Medvedev was developing a compound
nearby—and had stopped into a local restaurant for lunch with two governors.
Overnight, Plyos’s star reemerged.
Freediving
fisherwomen of Toba, Japan, preserve an ancient tradition
“A community
has formed here: diplomats with well-known names, businessmen, important
people, and interesting, intelligent, successful people,” explained Shevtsov,
who protects locals’ identities as a matter of business; these part-time
residents are buying his restored homes as private weekend oases.
That’s not
to say Plyos is empty during the week: A more permanent crowd of intellectuals
and artists has also set in.
How to Rub Elbows
With Russia’s Elite
Go in July or September for prime people-watching, said
Shevtsov, when you get peak summer weather and music festivals or vibrant fall
foliage. (Winter is so bitterly cold in Plyos, he likens it to a Eugene Onegin
drama.)
#In Russia’s early history, czars would arrive to Plyos on
the Imperial Yacht. You can follow their lead, but helicopters and cars are far
more common
According to Tepper, you might run into Medvedev at the
morning farmers market. “Russians love their own culture, and this is a place
where they reconnect with their own Russian-ness,” he explained. Then book
tickets for the opera (there’s a state-of-the-art theatre in town), and check
out the new brewery and Hidden Russia Museum Complex, which has individual
buildings dedicated to facets of the local lifestyle—everything from
yacht-building to fish-smoking and, of course, wooden architecture. Both debuts
are bound to draw attention.
Poke your head into La Villa Plyos—the home that was
supposedly earmarked for Putin and is now being converted into a six-star
spa—and queue up at Kuvshinnikova bakery for cooleyka, a local riff on American
cheesecake made with sweet cheese curds. “Our most distinguished guests always
take one back to Moscow,” said Shevtsov, so clearly you should, too.
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