It features an ensemble of Petrine Baroque buildings of the early 18th century, including the Kunstkamera, Twelve Collegia, Menshikov Palace, as well as the neoclassical building of the Academy of Arts.
Twelve O'Clock High | Ocean's Twelve | Twelve O'Clock High (TV series) | The Twelve Chairs | Twelve Olympians | Twelve Girls Band | Twelve Knights of Glamorgan | Twelve Angry Men | President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | Ultrahouse The Twelve Inch Mixes | Twelve Oaks Mall | Twelve Angry Men (teleplay) | Twelve Angry Men (play) | Commission of Twelve | Twelve Level Cap and Rank System | Twelve Colonies | Twelve Collegia | Twelve | The Twelve Imams | The Twelve Chairs (1970 film) | The Number Twelve Looks Like You | Section Twelve of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms | Apocalypse: The Twelve | Twenty Twelve | Twelve Year Silence | Twelve wheel drive | Twelve Tribes communities | Twelve-string guitar | Twelve Stops and Home | Twelve South |
In 1998, in the building of the Twelve Collegia, Saint Petersburg State University's Center for Contemporary Art held a retrospective exhibit drawn from Apraksina's body of work in parallel with her "March Solo" festival, organized in partnership with the Center for Cultural Studies at the university's department of philosophy.