Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Kremlin and Red Square, Moscow' has mentioned 'Construction' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Dmitri's son Vasily I resumed construction of churches and cloisters in the Kremlin.
After construction of the new kremlin walls and churches was complete, the monarch decreed that no structures should be built in the immediate vicinity of the citadel.
After the preparations were over, construction was delayed due to lack of funds.
The construction of a large modern public building in a historic neighborhood generated an uproar, especially since the building replaced several heritage buildings including the old neo-classical building of the State Armory and some of the rear parts of the Great Kremlin Palace.
Although this was not the first time that the Soviet government had destroyed architectural heritage (notably the Chudov Monastery and Ascension Cloisters) in the Kremlin and in the country in general, by the mid 1950s laws were in place effectively considering all pre-Soviet constructions as historical monuments and preventing their demolition, in some ways making the construction illegal[further explanation needed].
Until the Russian Revolution, it was the tallest structure in the city, as construction of buildings taller than that was forbidden.
To stop disruptions to traffic caused by motorcades, President Vladimir Putin authorized the construction of the Kremlin helipad.
The most noteworthy civil construction of the 17th century built by Russian masters is the Teremnoi Palace.
The construction of Red Square was finished by the late 19th century together with the erection of the Imperial Historic Museum (today the State Historical Museum), the Upper Trading Rows (GUM) and the Middle Trading Rows.
The influence of the style was clearly felt when Rudolfo Aristotele Fioravanti built the Cathedral of the Dormition (1475-79) and grew stronger with the construction of the Granovitaya Palace (Hall of the Facets, 1487-91) by Marco Fryazin and Pietro Antonio Solario.
The history of the Moscow Kremlin and Red Square is reflected in the archival documents of 12thxe2x80x9319th century, for example in medieval chronicles, cadastral surveys, estimated construction books, painted lists, inventories, foreign notes and in graphic matters such as manuscripts, chronicles, plans, drafts, engravings, lithographs, sketches of foreign travelers, paintings and photographs.