It is located at 29 Nabereznaya Reki Moiki (Russian: Набережная реки Мойки, 29) in the Tsentralny district of Saint Petersburg.
[1] The building was constructed in 1851 for Aleksey Lobanov-Rostovsky, with reconstructions and extensions in 1868 and 1875.
[2] The decision to open a consulate-general in Leningrad, as it was then named, was taken by the Japanese cabinet following a bill passed in the Diet.
[3] This was part of a consular agreement in which consulates were also opened in Osaka, Sapporo and Nakhodka.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article related to government in Japan is a stub.