
Vyacheslav Ilyichev
Background
Kuibyshev Moscow Civil Engineering Institute (1960, with honors), Faculty of Industrial and Civil Engineering.
Vice President of the Russian Academy of Architecture and Building Sciences in the field of Innovation
Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation, Honorary Builder of Russia, Honorary Builder of Moscow, laureate of the I.M. Gubkin Prize, laureate of the Government of the Russian Federation.
Doctor of Technical Sciences, Professor, Academician of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, Academician of RIA.
The main stages of professional activity:
1963-1971 – V.A.Kucherenko Central Research Institute (Junior, Senior Researcher),
1971-2006 – N.M. Gersevanov National Research Institute of Physics and Technology (Head of the Laboratory of Soil Dynamics, Director of the Institute),
1998-2006 – SIC "Stroitelstvo" (General Director),
In 1994, he was elected an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences and held elected positions (Vice President, First Vice President),
from 2006 to 2011, ANO ANTC RAASN (Scientific Director),
from 2011 to the present – LLC "Podrandproekt" (scientific director).
Based on field research, he developed a theory of vibrations and wave propagation in the ground from machines with dynamic loads, supervised and developed joint ventures for foundations of machines with dynamic loads, regulatory documents for explosive stamping installations, stamping hammers with spring-spring vibration isolation, propagation of vibrations from the subway, joint ventures on earthquake resistance of pile foundations, vibration creep of bases of high-power turbine units, including for nuclear power plants. Founder of the scientific field "Technological mechanics of soils". He developed principles for the creation of biospherically compatible settlements that develop humans and a draft Doctrine of urban Planning.
Author of 250 scientific papers, including one monograph and five inventions, five reference books.
Awards: the Order of the Badge of Honor, the Order of St. Sergius of Radonezh.