Catherine the Great built the Hermitage in 1765 to house her art collection. Between
1840 and 1852, the Hermitage was extended by Nicholas I For the Tsars' works of art.
Today, the Hermitage has one of the world's foremost art collections. Many famous
French and Dutch painters are well represented, for example, Rembrandt, Poussin,
Wateau, Cezanne and Matisse.
The museum consists of about 1,100 rooms with very old floors. About 20 different
types of wood have been used on the floors and the blocks have been arranged in elaborate
patterns. Some of the floors are works of art in themselves.
All the rooms are coated regularly with D-503 Pacific Strong
. This is Bona's water-borne polyurethane finish for floors with
high levels of traffic. The traffic could hardly be higher than at the Hermitage
where 10,000-30,000 visitors pass through the museum each day.
But Pacific Strong
was not
just chosen for its strength. In this case, solvent-based finishes were out of the
question because the fumes could damage the priceless collection of paintings.