ACM Group continues survey work on the only surviving post station from the early 19th century, located in Pomerania, between Tosno and Lyuban in the Leningrad Region. On May 19, 1811, the design by the distinguished architect Luigi Rusca was approved, and construction of the station began that same year. The settlement's unusual name was given by German colonists who settled there in the late 18th century. The name "Pomerania" comes from "po more," meaning "land by the sea."
The station complex in Pomerania consisted of a main building, side wings, and a connecting fence with arched passages. The stationmaster himself lived in the central building, and there was also a hotel for travelers from St. Petersburg to Moscow. The left wing housed the coachmen, while the right housed the postmen and the kitchen.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the station buildings housed the Komarov ceramics factory, which won a gold medal at the 1910 World's Fair in Brussels. In 2006, the factory closed, and today the historic buildings are not in use.