Oleg Kerensky
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Oleg Aleksandrovich Kerensky (April 16, 1905, St. Petersburg, Russia - June 25 1984, London) was a Russian civil engineer, one of the foremost bridge designers of his time.
Kerensky was the son of Russian prime minister Alexander Kerensky, who survived the events of the Russian Civil War and emigrated to Paris in 1918. Both Oleg and his younger brother Gleb graduated as engineers in 1927, and both settled in England.
As an associate of Dorman Long, Kerensky assisted on the landmark 1932 Sydney Harbour Bridge. As an associate, and then a partner, in the firm Freeman Fox & Partners, Kerensky designed many British road bridges and structures such as the 1951 temporary Dome of Discovery in London, the largest dome in the world. He won the Gold Medal of the Institution of Structural Engineers in 1977. After his death, beginning in 1988, the same institution began their Kerensky Memorial Conferences.
Kerensky was the father and namesake of dance critic Oleg Kerensky (1930 - 1993).
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