Where to take a walk on Novoslobodskaya. Restaurants and cafes - bars near the Novoslobodskaya metro station
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Dolgorukovskaya (formerly Kalyaevskaya) street
metro station "Novoslobodskaya" Initially, Novoslobodskaya Street led from the Garden Ring north to the Savyolovsky Station.In 1891, part of Novoslobodskaya Street from Seleznyovskaya Street to the Garden Ring, by decision of the Moscow City Duma, was renamed in honor of the Governor General of Moscow Vladimir Andreevich Dolgorukov (1810-1891), who did a lot for the improvement of the city. Under V.A. Dolgoruky in Moscow appeared: gas lighting, horse-drawn railway, artesian wells, Petrovsky Agricultural Academy, Conservatory, monument to A.S. Pushkin, Historical Museum, etc. In 1875, Dolgoruky was awarded the title of honorary citizen of the city of Moscow. In 1924, Dolgorukovskaya was renamed Kalyaevskaya Street, “in honor” of the terrorist I.P. Kalyaev, who killed the Moscow Governor-General, Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich Romanov (1857-1905), by throwing a homemade bomb under his stroller. In the 19th century, Dolgorukovskaya Street consisted of small buildings built by poor citizens. Now there are only a few buildings left on it, built at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries.
Modern residential 12-storey building in eclectic style
Dolgorukovskaya street, 6, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"A 12-story monolithic brick residential building with 70 apartments equipped with video intercoms. The area of the apartments is from 60 to 250 sq. m. m. Ceiling height 3 meters. On the ground floor there are shops and an Italian restaurant. Landscaped adjacent protected area (gazebos, lawns, landscaping, children's playground, benches), underground parking.
Residential house of merchant Evgenia Kovrigina
Dolgorukovskaya street, 17, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"Built in 1902. Architect V.I. Myasnikov.
Residential house of merchant Elena Finogenova
Dolgorukovskaya street, 19, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"Built in 1902. Architect D.A. Gushchin.
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Pit on the territory of the bankrupt Zinto plant
Dolgorukovskaya street, 21, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"The construction of a multifunctional residential complex with an underground parking lot “Italian Quarter” on the territory of the Zinto plant was frozen due to the fact that the builders stumbled upon an underground river. In the 19th century there was a pond on this site. In 2012, the “Italian Quarter” was successfully built.
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Film studio "Soyuzmultfilm"
Dolgorukovskaya street, 25, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"The building was rebuilt from the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, “which is in Novaya Sloboda.”
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Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, “in Novaya Sloboda”
Dolgorukovskaya street, 25 (until recently - Dolgorukovskaya street, 23), Novoslobodskaya metro stationThe first mention of a wooden church on this site dates back to the 16th century. At the end of the 17th century, by decree of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, a stone temple was built in place of the wooden one. This temple is depicted in the famous painting by V.I. Surikov "Boyaryna Morozova". Built in 1672-1712. (in 1703 - the main church) through the efforts of the local priest K. Fedorov, at the expense of parishioners and donations, on the site of the wooden church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker (first quarter of the 17th century). The main altar is the Smolensk Icon of the Mother of God. In 1903-1904 architects S.F. Voskresensky and N.S. Kurdyukov erected a new refectory (with the chapels of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker and the Conception of St. John the Baptist) and a year later - a bell tower. In 1922, the authorities confiscated over 17 pounds of gold and silver church decorations and utensils, but services continued. In the early 1930s, the temple was captured by renovationists, their leader was the false metropolitan A.I. Vvedensky in 1934, after the closure of the Church of Peter and Paul on Novo-Basmannaya, moved his pulpit here. In 1936, the temple was closed and then given over to the Soyuzmultfilm film studio. Nowadays, from the eastern, oldest part of the temple, which has not undergone reconstruction since its construction in the 17th century, a five-story building with columns has been added through reconstruction. Extensions were made to the refectory with side chapels and the bell tower. The community of the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker was registered in 1993, but there are no services; on major holidays, prayer services are held near the walls of the building.
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Dog area behind the bell tower of the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker
Dolgorukovskaya street, in the depths, between buildings 25 and 27, Novoslobodskaya metro station -
Wooden house of the collegiate assessor E.P. Palitskaya
between houses 25 and 27 on Dolgorukovskaya street, Novoslobodskaya metro stationBuilt in 1830. As a result of the change in the numbering of houses, at the moment a small one-story wooden house with three windows, which belonged to the collegiate assessor E.P. Palitskaya, to whom the land of the merchant Ivan Makarov passed after the fire of 1812, is deprived of a number and is in deplorable condition.
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Mansion of the Prussian subject August Siebert
Dolgorukovskaya street, 27, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"In 1891, August Siebert purchased part of the E.P. site. Palitskaya and built a mansion here according to the design of the architect R.I. Klein. In Soviet times, the publishing house “Physical Culture and Sports” was located here, which was reflected in some decorative elements on the facade (Olympic rings, etc.). At the beginning of the 21st century, there was a sports journalists' club restaurant on the second floor, the heavy interior of which used ancient Greek motifs. Nowadays a commercial bank is located here.
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Dolgorukovskaya street, 29, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"
Built in 1913-1914. architect V.V. Voeikov for State Councilor M.I. Fisher. After the revolution it belonged to the Dolgorukov Partnership for the construction of apartments.
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Residential two-story house
Dolgorukovskaya street, 32, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"Two-story stone building from the 1890s. buildings. The lavishly decorated window casings are the result of the renovation of the building's façade in 1910 by architect I.A. Gushchin.
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Butyugina's house
Dolgorukovskaya street, 33, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"1887 Architect V.P. Zagorsky. The Mayakovsky family lived in this house, including young V.V. Mayakovsky, who, as a high school student, took part in the dissemination of revolutionary proclamations. In 1908, Vladimir Mayakovsky was ambushed at an underground printing house, was arrested and taken to the Sushchevskaya police station located not far from his house. He sat there for a short time and in comfort - his sister, at his request, brought pencils and paper for exercises in art. Before the revolution and in the first years after it, this house was the apartment of the famous agricultural scientist and writer A.V. Chayanov (1888-1937), shot by the communists. Nearby there is a street named in 1992 in honor of this remarkable scientist (former Gottwald Street, until 1966 - 3rd Miusskaya Street).
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House of hereditary honorary citizen V.I. Zhdanovsky
Dolgorukovskaya street, 34, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"In 1898, architect P.P. Shchekotov built this house for the hereditary honorary citizen V.I. Zhdanovsky. The house is notable for its bay windows on both sides and domed top.
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Residential 6-storey building
Dolgorukovskaya street, 36, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"1909 Architect F.N. Kolbe. On the site of this large 6-story building stood a small one-story wooden house that belonged to the actress of the famous Mamontov theater Tatyana Spiridonovna Lyubatovich. Rehearsals for many opera performances of the Mamontov Theater took place here, and behind it, in the courtyard outbuilding, Fyodor Ivanovich Chaliapin, who had recently married, settled. In a modern building on the ground floor there is the editorial office of the magazine “Behind the Wheel”.
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Profitable 6-storey house
Dolgorukovskaya street, 38, building 1, Novoslobodskaya metro station1913 Architect N.I. Zherikhov (according to other sources - M.M. Cherkasov).
Residential 7-storey building
Dolgorukovskaya street, 39, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"1940-1952 Architects N.A. Levitan, P.S. Skulachev.
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Church of St. Pimen, “which is in Novye Vorotniki in Sushchev”
Novovorotnikovsky lane, 3, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"Vorotniki - gatekeepers at the city gates, guarding the gates of the Kremlin, Kitay-Gorod and the White City. To make room for the Streltsy courtyards, they were moved from their Vorotnikovskaya settlement (now Vorotnikovsky Lane) to Sushchevo, where they built themselves a Trinity Church with the chapel of St. Pimen. The wooden church, founded in 1658, was rebuilt into a stone one at the end of the 17th century. The chapel and refectory were built at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1881-1883. the church was expanded, the side chapels were extended to the east, while both side altars were brought in line with the main one. A tented entrance with three domes was attached to the bell tower, probably by the architect K.M. Bykovsky. During 1923-1936 the temple remained Orthodox, since 1936 it belonged to the renovationists, it was the only renovationist church officially recognized in Moscow, and the last of all the renovationist churches to be returned to the Patriarchate. In 1928-1929 At the temple there was a large youth choir, led by the monk Platon, later Patriarch Pimen. In the 1970s within the walls of the temple chants of indescribable beauty sounded, since since 1976 the regent of the temple was the church composer A.A. Tretyakov.
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Federal Arbitration Court of the Moscow District
Seleznyovskaya street, 9, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"The building of the Federal Arbitration Court of the Moscow District made of glass and concrete was built in the early 2000s. and surrounded by a 2-meter fence around the perimeter.
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Sushchevskaya police fire department
Seleznyovskaya street, 11, building 1, Novoslobodskaya metro stationThe Central Museum of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia has been opened in the 19th-century architectural monument “Sushchevskaya Police Station”.
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Slava Stadium
Seleznyovskaya street, 13A, building 2, Novoslobodskaya metro stationThe 400-seat Slava Stadium has been the home base for rugby players since 1974.
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Seleznyovsky baths
Seleznyovskaya street, 15, metro station "Novoslobodskaya"Built in 1888 according to the design of architect A.P. Popova.
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Seleznevsky (Antropov) pond
Located at the intersection of Seleznyovskaya Street with 3rd Samotechny Lane, Novoslobodskaya metro stationIn the 19th century, water was taken from here for the Seleznevsky baths.
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Building 1902
Seleznyovskaya street, possession 24, building 3, Novoslobodskaya metro stationStage of construction of an elite residential building. But in the background there is a building built in 1902.
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Novoslobodskaya street
metro stations "Novoslobodskaya", "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"Novoslobodskaya Street appeared in the 16th-17th centuries. along the road from the Kremlin to Dmitrov, on the territory of the New Dmitrovskaya Sloboda or New Sloboda, separated from the Old Dmitrovskaya Sloboda, located in the area of Bolshaya Dmitrovka Street and Malaya Dmitrovskaya Sloboda (Malaya Dmitrovka Street). Hence the name - Novoslobodskaya Street. The main church of the New Sloboda was the church in the name of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, which was first mentioned in the 16th century. In the middle of the 17th century, Novodmitrovskaya Sloboda merged with Sushchevskaya Sloboda. In the 17th century, a fort was built here, on the site of which the Butyrsky prison castle, built by the architect Matvey Fedorovich Kazakov, arose in the 18th century. In the 18th century, there were country houses of noble families here - the Lyapunovs, Vadkovskys, Skavronskys, Tolstoys, Golitsyns and others.
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Novoslobodskaya metro station
Novoslobodskaya street, Novoslobodskaya metro stationStation of the Circle Line of the Moscow Metro, between the Belorusskaya and Prospekt Mira stations. Opened in 1952. The name is given from the street of the same name, at the very beginning of which it is located. Exit through the ground lobby with a columned portico, located on Novoslobodskaya Street and decorated with gray marble. The authors of the project are A.N. Dushkin and A.F. Strelkov. The decoration of the station is 32 spectacularly illuminated stained glass windows, made by the Latvian branch of the USSR Art Fund (artists E. Veylandan, E. Krests and M. Ryskin), based on sketches by the remarkable artist Pavel Dmitrievich Korin (1892-1967). He is the author of the mosaic panel “World Peace” at the end of the central hall of the Novoslobodskaya metro station. The panel depicts a happy mother with a child in her arms - under Khrushchev, Stalin’s face, to which the child was stretching out his hands, was removed from the panel. In 2003, the station's design elements were restored. In 1988, a transition to the Mendeleevskaya station of the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya line was opened. In the photo - the ground lobby of the Novoslobodskaya metro station was built in 1952. Architects A. Dushkin, A. Strelkov.
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The entrance to the Mendelevskaya metro station from the Novotel Novoslobodskaya hotel is combined with an underground passage through the busy Novoslobodskaya street.
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Monument "Sympathy"
Novoslobodskaya street, Mendeleevskaya metro stationDedicated to humane treatment of homeless animals. Installed in 2007 in the lobby of the Mendeleevskaya metro station. Sculptor A. Tsigal, architect A. Nalich.
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Apartment building 1910
Novoslobodskaya street, 10, metro station “Novoslobodskaya”, “Mendeleevskaya”1910 Architect V.I. Stankevich.
Apartment building 1909
Novoslobodskaya street, 12, metro station "Novoslobodskaya", "Mendeleevskaya"1909 Architect S.A. Chernavsky.
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Apartment building 1914
Novoslobodskaya street, 14, metro station “Novoslobodskaya”, “Mendeleevskaya”1914 Architect S.A. Chernavsky.
Possession of Ivan Fedorovich Chernenko
Novoslobodskaya street, 28, metro station “Novoslobodskaya”, “Mendeleevskaya”End of the 19th century. Property of Ivan Fedorovich Chernenko. Previously, there was a small one-story house with a mezzanine, which Chernenko rented out as a workshop. In the 1880s Konstantin Korovin settled here, Mikhail Vrubel stayed with him. Later, Chernenko built another workshop nearby for Valentin Serov.
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Apartment building 1911
Novoslobodskaya street, 33, metro station “Novoslobodskaya”, “Mendeleevskaya”Apartment house built in 1911. Architect E.K. Nirnsee.
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Administration building
Novoslobodskaya street, 41, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"The project was carried out by architects of workshop No. 20 of the Mosproekt-2 Directorate under the leadership of academician of architecture A.R. Akhmedova, L.G. Khachaturyan, A.I. Chernyavsky.
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Residential building at the intersection with Lesnaya Street
Novoslobodskaya street, 43, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"On the left is a corner residential building No. 43, the next two buildings on the right No. 45 belong to the Moscow Penitentiary Institution. Behind them is the famous Butyrka prison.
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Passport and visa center of the Federal Migration Service of Russia in Moscow
Novoslobodskaya street, 45, building B, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"The four-story building on the right (Novoslobodskaya street, 45, building B) is the Passport and Visa Center of the Office of the Federal Migration Service for Moscow (FMS of Russia for Moscow). Behind it lies the famous Butyrka prison - Pre-trial detention center (SIZO) No. 2 “Butyrka”.
Butyrka prison (Butyrka, Butyrka pre-trial detention center No. 2)
Novoslobodskaya street, 45, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"The largest prison in the capital. It is located on Novoslobodskaya street, near the Butyrskaya outpost, from which it got its name. During the time of Peter I, rebel archers were kept here, and under Catherine II, the rebel Emelyan Pugachev was kept here. In 1879, on the site of a prison castle erected under Catherine II by architect M.F. Kazakov, the current prison building was built. Hundreds of participants in the Polish uprising of 1863 passed through the old castle. In 1883, Narodnaya Volya members sat in the prison towers, and in 1886, participants in the Morozov strike of 1885. In 1904-1905, prominent figures of the Bolshevik Party were imprisoned in Butyrka - N.E. Bauman, V.F. Lengnik, E.D. Stasova and others. In 1908-1909, Vladimir Vladimirovich Mayakovsky served his sentence in Butyrka for revolutionary propaganda among workers. In 1907, an investigative department was created in the Butyrka prison, which in 1908 was replenished with a convict department. In 1910-1917, Felix Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky, Emelyan Yaroslavsky and other Bolsheviks were imprisoned here. However, not for long - during the February Revolution of 1917, Moscow workers freed political prisoners. In September 2001, the famous Butyrka “became famous” for its high-profile escapes, which cost the positions of the head of Butyrka and the head of the Moscow Department of Corrections. A major overhaul was urgently carried out with the “relocation” of residents - some of the prisoners were transferred to other detention centers. In the empty cells, the floors were concreted, bars on the windows were strengthened, and an alarm was installed at each door, which goes off when opened. Due to the construction of Novoslobodskaya Street in the 1970s with tall buildings belonging to the Moscow penitentiary system, it is very difficult to see the legendary Butyrka, unless by visiting the Butyrka Prison Museum, which is located there, at 45 Novoslobodskaya Street.
All-Sorrow Convent
There was also the Golitsyn estate, the surrounding lands of which were rented out for the summer as entertainment venues. For some time, the German club Tivoli of Karl Rappo was located here. In 1865, Princess Praskovya Nikolaevna Golitsyna established a house church in the estate in the name of the icon of the Mother of God “Joy of All Who Sorrow,” and a shelter for visiting nuns-collectors was opened in the estate. Soon the Filaretov Hospital was opened under him. On September 6, 1889, the Synod officially transformed the Golitsyn orphanage into a communal convent, named in honor of the icon of the Joy of All Who Sorrow Vsekhskorbyashchensky (Skorbyashchensky). 1889-1894 At the expense of the merchant widow from Voskresensk, Akilina Alekseevna Smirnova (in the monastic life of Raphaila), a cathedral church was built in the monastery in the name of the All-Merciful Savior. The temple was built according to the design of the architect Ivan Terentyevich Vladimirov in the Russian-Byzantine style. Also in the monastery were built churches of the Archangel Raphael (1900), the Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God (1901), a chapel over the grave of A.A. Smirnova. In 1894, the monastery cemetery was opened. More than a thousand people were buried in the cemetery, among them the son of Fyodor Chaliapin Igor, the famous lawyer Plevako, the thinker N.F. Fedorov, trainer A.L. Durov, historian D.N. Ilovaisky. By 1917, the monastery had 5 churches with 7 altars, and was home to 265 nuns. The monastery was visited several times by Grand Duchess Elizaveta Feodorovna. After the revolution, in 1918 the monastery was abolished. The nuns remained in place, organizing a sewing artel. The rector of the Church of the All-Merciful Savior, Mikhail (Slavsky), was sentenced to 5 years in the camps. In 1922, cavalry units were stationed in the monastery.
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Temple of the All-Merciful Savior
Novoslobodskaya street, 58, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"Now the Church of the All-Merciful Savior has been disfigured, the tented bell tower and its five domes have been broken, and floors have been built inside. Here was the school of the Machine Tool Institute (Stankin), which also occupied part of the former territory of the monastery; behind the temple, on the site of the cemetery, its multi-story buildings rise (Vadkovsky Lane, 3A). Since 1990, the Stankin Computing Center has been located inside the temple. With great difficulty, (so far unsuccessful) negotiations are underway to transfer the temple to believers. The three-story building that belonged to the monastery 8-grade theological gymnasium, in which the Higher Theological Women's Institute was opened in 1914, was built on, a large extension was made from the north on the site of the refectory monastery and the Church of the Archangel Raphael, and the 15th police detachment was located inside. In the photo - the beheaded Cathedral of the All-Merciful Savior of the All-Sorrow Convent in 2011.
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Chapel over the grave of nun Raphaila
Novoslobodskaya street, 58, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"All that remained of the monastery cemetery was the chapel above the burial of the builder of the Church of the All-Merciful Savior, nun Raphaila, which until recently was in a neglected state; traces of a fire were visible. Now the chapel has been restored, painted, a dome with a cross has been installed, and reopened in 2008. In the photo - the chapel over the grave of the merchant widow A.A. Smirnova (nun Raphaila), with whose funds it was built in 1890-1894. Cathedral of the All-Merciful Savior of the All-Sorrow Monastery.
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Children's Park No. 1
Now there is almost nothing that reminds us of the monastery and the cemetery that used to be there. During Soviet times, the cemetery was completely demolished, and Children's Park No. 1 was built on the site of the graveyard. A monument to Stalin was erected opposite the park administration building, and blue spruce trees were planted around it. Old-timers remember how, during the construction of the martial arts hall, the remains of people in uniform were pulled out of the ground, and for some time until the end of the 1960s, gravestones and monuments lay piled in a heap in the corner of the park. The monastery cells located east of the cathedral were demolished in the summer of 1978. One building of cells (a former handicraft building) has been preserved in the depths of the park; it has now been transferred to the church. Now the Church of the All-Merciful Savior is located here. Services are held here and a Sunday school operates.
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Cell building of the All-Sorrow Monastery
Novoslobodskaya street, 58, metro station “Novoslobodskaya”, “Savelovskaya”The cells of the All-Sorrow Monastery of the monastery, standing to the east of the cathedral, were demolished in the summer of 1978. One building of cells (a former handicraft building) has been preserved in the depths of the park; it has now been transferred to the church. Now the Church of the All-Merciful Savior is located here. Services are held here and a Sunday school operates. The photo shows the only surviving cell building of the All-Sorrow Monastery. Built at the end of the 19th century in Russian style.
Novoslobodskaya street towards Savelovskaya overpass
Novoslobodskaya street, 46, metro station "Mendeleevskaya", "Savelovskaya"Novoslobodskaya street. View towards the Savelovskaya overpass and the Savelovsky station from building 46.
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Sushchevsky Val street
metro station "Savelovskaya", "Rizhskaya"Sushchevsky Val Street is a major highway in the north of Moscow, about 3.3 km long, which today is the northern part of the Third Transport Ring. It arose in 1922 on the site of the Kamer-Kollezhsky Val, adjacent to the former village of Sushchevskoye, which determined its name. Previously the street was called Kamer-Kollezhsky Suschevsky Val. It stretches from the Savelovsky station (more precisely, the Savelovskaya overpass) to the Rizhsky station (Rizhskaya overpass).
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Savyolovsky station
metro station "Savelovskaya"The only one of the 9 railway stations in Moscow that serves only suburban electric trains. Initially it was called Butyrsky - from the Butyrskaya outpost located nearby. Electric trains depart from Savelovsky station to Dubna and Savelovo (Kimry), along the route they follow - Dolgoprudny, Lobnya, Dmitrov, Taldom, etc. Some trains go to the Belorussian direction. On June 10, 2008, traffic to Sheremetyevo Airport was opened. The initiator of the construction of a 130 km long railway to the village of Savelovo in 1897 was Savva Ivanovich Mamontov, Chairman of the Board of the Moscow-Yaroslavl Railway Society. In the future, it was planned to extend the road to Kalyazin, Uglich and Rybinsk. Construction of the station, which began in 1897, was carried out under the leadership of A.S. Sumarokov, who may have been the author of the project. On March 10 (March 23 - new style), 1902, the work was completed and the grand opening and consecration took place. The building was one-story, two-story only in the center, where service apartments were located. In the distance there were barracks and a cargo yard. By the 1980s, Savelovsky Station had become dilapidated and could no longer cope with the increased passenger traffic. In 1987, under the leadership of Ya.V. Shamraya began its expansion, completed on September 1, 1992. Train traffic did not stop during the work. As a result, the station became two-story, increasing the internal area by 2.5 times, but did not lose its stylistic features. In 1988, a metro line was extended to the station - the Savelovskaya metro station opened.
Metro station "Savelovskaya"
Savyolovsky station square, metro station "Savelovskaya"Station of the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya line of the Moscow metro. Opened on December 12, 1988. Architects: N.I. Shumakov and N.V. Shurygina. There are no ground-based lobbies. Entry and exit to the Savelovskaya metro station is through underground passages from the Savelovsky station square. Near the metro there are: one of the most complex multi-level transport interchanges, Nizhnyaya Maslovka, Sushchevsky Val (part of the Third Transport Ring), Butyrskaya, Novoslobodskaya streets; and also - Savelovsky market. On the track walls there are smalt mosaics illustrating the history of railway transport by artists: N.I. Andropova, Yu.L. Rodina, V.L. Rodina, Yu.A. Shishkova.
Sights of Dolgorukovskaya Street
Sights of Seleznyovskaya Street
Sights of Novoslobodskaya Street
It often happens that we judge a particular city only by its main attractions. However, any city, like any person, the more you get to know it, the more it opens up with new, unexpected facets. Below are 10 must-see places in Moscow. They are very interesting for understanding the multifaceted image of the capital.
Planetarium
The restored planetarium is of great interest to both adults and children. Anyone will find something to do here. There is a stereo cinema, as well as a small star hall with dynamic seating. The planetarium boasts the largest screen dome in Europe, which displays pictures of the starry sky. There are 2 halls
Lunarium, where you can learn in a playful way about the refraction of light, gravity, the creation of black holes, craters, etc. Everything can be turned, twisted, rocked, touched. At the Astro Site they will tell you a lot of interesting things about the moon, the starry sky, and time zones.
The planetarium is located on the street. Sadovaya-Kudrinskaya in building 5, building 1. Walking distance from Krasnopresnenskaya or Barrikadnaya metro stations. Opening hours: 9–21 (on weekends until 22).
A ticket costs from 80 to 600 rubles.
Ostankino TV tower
It has long been a real symbol of the capital. Now there is a great opportunity to visit not only its open (at an altitude of 340 m) and closed (at an altitude of 337 m) observation decks, but also to be in the museum, and then have lunch in a restaurant right under the clouds.
Sightseeing tours run daily from 10 am to 10 pm.
The viewing radius in good clear weather is 60 km. The TV tower itself, 540 m high, weighs 55 thousand tons. Do you know that the Ostankino TV tower is an image of a ten-petal inverted lily?
People are allowed into the tower only if they have an identification document. The ticket can be purchased before the start of the show after registration.
Address: st. Academician Koroleva, 15, building 2. From VDNH or Alekseevskaya metro stations by any trolleybus.
Moscow City observation deck
Now it is not at all necessary to go abroad in order to see skyscrapers. Moscow has its own. They became its integral attraction.
The Moscow City project can confidently be called the most ambitious and expensive long-term construction project in Russia. Many are still debating its feasibility and its appearance, which distorts the historical appearance of the capital. However, Moscow is so diverse that high-tech architectural cacophony has become its modern feature.
Moscow can now be seen in all its glory from a bird's eye view. One of the observation decks is located on the 58th floor of the Empire Tower. From here you can clearly see Moscow State University. M.V. Lomonosov, Ostankino TV Tower, White House, Cathedral of Christ the Savior, etc.
From the Delovoy Tsentr or Vystavochnaya metro station you need to go to the Afimall City shopping center, go up to the 2nd floor and walk to the southern entrance of the Empire tower. Tickets are sold at the Reception desk.
Apothecary garden
It is located on Prospekt Mira, building 26, building 1 and is the oldest botanical garden in Russia. We can confidently say about it: it is the very best - informative, well-groomed, conveniently located, photogenic and cozy.
It was founded by Peter I for the cultivation of medicinal plants in 1706, and in 1805 it was purchased by Moscow State University. Of course, he went through different times with his country, but he always fulfilled a noble mission: he talked about the world of plants on Earth.
Summer always reigns in his greenhouses. It is especially pleasant to visit them on frosty winter days. In the Palm Greenhouse you can see a large collection of orchids from all over the world. They grow among huge bananas, ancient palms and tropical vines. 1500 types of succulents will not leave anyone indifferent. Moreover, now you can even touch some plants.
Museum "House on the Embankment"
This is the only museum of its kind in the country and one of the few of its kind in the world. The atmosphere of the 30s is recreated here. XX century based on materials from the history of the house and its inhabitants - photographs, interior items, books, personal belongings and documents.
The decision to build the house was made in 1927 due to the fact that there was no longer enough housing in Moscow for senior party workers. In 1931, the first residents were party leaders, scientists, old Bolsheviks, Heroes
Soviet Union and Socialist Labor, famous writers, heroes of the war in Spain, etc. Among the residents of the house over the years were Alliluyeva, Aroseva, Demyan Bedny, Zhukov, Kosygin, Lepeshinskaya, Rykov, Tukhachevsky, Khrushchev and others.
The house was built in the style of late constructivism according to the design of B. Iofan, who planned it to be red, like the Kremlin. But due to lack of funds, the house was built gray. In total, it has 24 entrances, 12 floors and 505 apartments.
The museum is small in area and occupies one apartment. Open Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 10 am to 6.30 pm, Thursday from 11 am to 9 pm, on weekends from 11 am to 6 pm.
Get to the stop. "Udarnik Cinema" from metro Polyanka, Library named after. Lenina or Oktyabrskaya on any trolleybus. Address: st. Serafimovicha, house 2, entrance 1.
Museum "Lights of Moscow"
In Armenian Lane, 3–5, building 1, there is another interesting place that is worth visiting - the “Lights of Moscow” museum. It is hidden in a cozy park. Call the intercom and go down to the basement. You will be given a remote control and an interesting program about the museum. The remote control is needed to turn the fancy lanterns-exhibits on and off, thereby creating the atmosphere of bygone times.
Once on the second floor, you will see the recreated life of apartments from different times and lighting fixtures. The museum is small but informative. The inspection fee is a symbolic 30-130 rubles. Open from 11 to 18.
You can get there on foot from metro station Lubyanka, Kuznetsky Most or Kitay-Gorod.
Museum of Musical Culture named after M.I. Glinka
This museum has no analogues in the world and is a true treasury of monuments of musical culture. Here you can find music editions, literary manuscripts, studies on cultural history, and rare books. The museum stores letters, autographs, and documents related to the work of Russian and foreign musical figures.
The museum is especially proud of its unique collection of musical instruments of the peoples of the world, including string instruments - masterpieces of Stradivarius, the Amati and Guarneri families.
Located on the street. Fadeeva, 4. From Mayakovskaya and Novoslobodskaya metro stations - on the troll. 3, 47 to the stop. "Museum of Musical Culture", troll. "B" or 10 to the stop. "Vorotnikovsky Lane".
Peredelkino
Peredelkino is such a unique place that you can enjoy nature and landscapes, admire the beauty of Orthodox churches in the Patriarch's residence and plunge into the literary world. You need to get out here for the whole day.
The village is located 5 km from the Moscow Ring Road in the southwest of Moscow. You can get there by train.
The Writers' Town with its museums of Pasternak, Chukovsky, Okudzhava is the embodied history of Soviet literature.
Restaurant “In the Dark?!”
This restaurant is for those who like to visit original places. The dinner will take place in pitch darkness, and blind waiters will serve. The restaurant was founded by an ophthalmologist to help the blind find their place in life.
The sighted and the blind exchange places here. The restaurant has 4 rooms, but the main one is dark. You must first choose one of 5 sets for dinner costing 2 thousand rubles: blue (fish), red (meat), yellow (Japanese), green (vegetarian) or white (assorted).
Then you leave your things in the safe. Dinner in complete darkness will take you 2 hours. They say that people behave the same in the dark - they make acquaintances more readily, speak louder and joke more often. In the dark, hearing, smell, touch, and taste become more acute.
From metro station Novoslobodskaya or Dostoevskaya to st. Oktyabrskaya, 2/4.
Savvinskoye Compound
Few Muscovites know about its existence, because it is hidden from the eyes of passersby, while being located in the very center. While walking along Tverskaya, be sure to look into the arch of house No. 6.
A beautiful architectural monument will open before you, which was built in 1907 by architect Kuznetsov in a fabulous Russian style with decorative elements of Baroque and Art Nouveau. Compound - apartment building of the Savvinsky Monastery. I wonder what it's up to
1937 was located directly on Tverskaya. In 1938-40. the houses on the even side of the street were to be moved to the north. Many buildings were mercilessly demolished, but the Savvinsky courtyard was lucky - with the help of special technology developed by the engineer Handel, it was moved deeper into the block onto a new foundation. It’s hard to imagine, but a structure weighing 23 thousand tons was moved on the night of November 4, 1939. And, what is quite surprising, without evicting its residents.
We selected restaurants near the Novoslobodskaya metro station.
Book a table at the restaurant on Novoslobodskaya!
We choose original restaurants, bars and cafes on Novoslobodskaya
On the Novoslobodskaya metro station there is a huge number of cafes, bars and restaurants that allow guests to have a good rest, relax and forget about all their problems. These establishments have gained great popularity both among Muscovites and foreign guests of the noisy and business capital of Russia. But the thing is that cafes and restaurants always impress visitors with their coziness, hospitality, high level of comfort, a large “set” of entertainment, delicious delicacies and quality drinks. Expand
At Novoslobodskaya you can always find establishments that allow you to relax as your heart desires. If you want to have a lot of fun and have a blast, then you should definitely visit nightclubs and bars. There, visitors can always expect show programs, themed parties, live concerts and music, hookahs with different flavors, high-quality drinks, karaoke with a large selection of songs and a dance floor.
Do you like to follow sporting events? Do you want to do this with friends while drinking a glass of cold beer? Pubs will give you this opportunity. In the pubs, guests can enjoy large screens, a wide selection of beer (light, dark, live, German, Czech) and delicious snacks.
Do you want to relax in a pleasant and unusual atmosphere? In this case, you should definitely visit a cafe where you can try delicious food and high quality drinks. Most of these establishments also have their own confectionery shop. Those with a sweet tooth will always be pleased with a large assortment of delicious delicacies. You can also relax in the cafe with the whole family, together with children. There are professional and cheerful animators working there for little guests.
In the restaurants, guests can always discuss new business projects, organize a romantic dinner in an intimate setting, or celebrate a family celebration. To do this, we are always ready to offer you delicious dishes from many cuisines - Italian, Russian, Ukrainian, French, European, Uzbek, English, Spanish, as well as juicy delicacies from the meat menu. You can wash all this down with exquisite wines, cocktails, elite vodka, whiskey, beer and other high quality drinks.
We reserve a table in a cafe on Novoslobodskaya
Today, to book a table in a cafe or restaurant, you don’t have to look for a phone number and spend hours calling the establishment. Everything can be done much faster and more conveniently. And a high-quality, reliable and convenient service – “Gettable” – will help in this matter. With its help, you can book a table in just a few minutes.
It should be noted that the service offers you not only a large selection of cafes, bars and restaurants, but also detailed descriptions of these establishments. These descriptions will let you know if there is live music, what the average bill for a vacation is, what food and drinks you can try, and much more.
In order to book a table using the Gettable service, you do not have to provide your passport details or pay. All that is needed is to fill out a special form in which you should indicate contact information, approximate time of arrival and number of people. Gettable will do the rest on its own.
Nadezhda Sinyakova
February 25, 2019 Theater "Magic Lamp"Tili-bom, tili-bom, unusual “Cat House”...
...we looked at the children's book “The Magic Lamp” at the Moscow Theater. And it’s unusual because it’s made using the “black cabinet” technique - this is when objects or actors can suddenly appear in the darkness of the stage. This is the first time we have seen this kind of performance; it is quite unusual to watch how the dolls change bodies or only their heads fly in the air. It is interesting that some roles were played by two people at the same time, for example, the hands of the Cat were performed by the artist Elena Teryokhina, and the body and head of the Cat were performed by Lyubov Rumyantseva. Puppets that are easy to understand for young spectators, made in the theater’s workshops. The houses were also unusual - they were performed by actors dressed in coats and hats, on which windows and doors were depicted, so the house seemed alive and similar to its owners. I was especially fascinated by the Pig’s house, 10 piglets were sitting on a tray and banging spoons at the same time, and my daughter was impressed when a barefoot actor came out and, dressing him, the characters began to build a new house. At the play “Cat's House” I always wait to see how the fire will be shown, here first the red numbers 01 appeared, and then the actress in a costume that looked like tongues of flame danced. The artists not only danced, but also sang, it’s a pity that sometimes they were accompanied by a soundtrack, but live voices could also be heard. This is how the director and founder of the Magic Lamp Theater, Vladimir Stein, wanted to show us “Cat House” by S. Ya. Marshak. Afterwards, my daughter and I discussed that friends can betray, and that we need to learn to ask for forgiveness and forgive.
Recommended for children over 4 years old, duration 1 hour 20 minutes with intermission. During the intermission we looked into the buffet; the price tag is average, and the handmade confectionery from “Sweet Religion” is very tasty. In addition, meetings with writers, presentations of children's literature, and exhibitions of illustrators are held here. This is how we met a member of the Russian Writers' Union, Mark Schwartz.
The end of the intermission was announced by a real theater bell, which administrator Alexander Mikhailovich invited all children and adults to ring. And before the performance, he reminded the young spectators how to behave in the hall and suggested which seats to sit in order to have a good view of the stage. When leaving the theater, my daughter said that we would come here again, which means she liked it :)
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Nadezhda Sinyakova
February 25, 2019 Russian Army TheaterThe fact that the world can be cruel, but pleasant and amazing moments still happen to those who believe in them and wait for them - this is what the play “The Extraordinary Escape of Toys” at the Central Academic Theater of the Russian Army is about. Director Andrei Badulin took the work of J. Rodari “The Journey of the Blue Arrow” as the basis for the musical fairy tale, but one should not expect a complete match. Nevertheless, the production turned out to be touching, sometimes moving me to tears.
The fairy tale begins with a prehistory with text behind the scenes, and at this time a video sequence is broadcast on stage. There is not much scenery: two houses with stairs and lampposts, the rest is supplemented by video footage. Special effects include yellow smoke and flashing lights. There are quite a lot of songs in the play, but all with a soundtrack. I also noticed a few inconsistencies in the script, but these are not that important. When Cleopatra Lvovna appeared on stage, I realized that it was a man and thought: was there really no suitable female actress? And then I realized that Roman Bogdanov is the best in this role, one might say that he is the “highlight of the program”! His facial expressions, jokes - everything makes not only children, but also adults laugh. We love Roman in the role of Matvey the Cat, but here he revealed himself even more, in general, for everyone who also likes Roman Bogdanov, the fairy tale “The Extraordinary Escape of the Toys” is a must-watch. The roles of toys in the play are played by adults, and the roles of children are played by children. I really like it when young actors are on stage.
In the story, toys escaped from the store, and together they went to the boy Seryozha to give themselves to him. But not everyone will be able to get there: someone will be left with another poor boy who met on the way or with a girl freezing in a snowdrift; someone will divert the pursuit or take the fight so that the rest can freely leave. Seryozha, by the will of fate, will end up in the store from which the toys escaped and an unexpected meeting awaits him there.
Duration of the performance: 1 hour 15 minutes without intermission. Program 50 rub. Age limit is 3+, but for understanding it is more likely 6+
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Nadezhda Sinyakova
February 25, 2019 Theater "Magic Lamp"We saw whether there is friendship between cats and dogs in the play “A Kitten Named Woof” at the Moscow Children's Book Theater “The Magic Lamp”.
The production based on the fairy tale by G. Oster was invented and created by:
production designer Marina Gribanova, production director Viktor Plotnikov, composer Sergei Mirolyubov. As the plot progresses, chapters from the book are recognized: “Only Trouble,” “The Middle of the Sausage,” “So Not Fair,” “Echo,” “What’s Your Name?” The performance is a puppet show, played by five puppets: the kitten Woof, the puppy Sharik, the Cat, the Dog and the Mouse. All the dolls except the mouse are quite large (cane ones, if I’m not mistaken), they don’t look like the usual cartoon characters, with big eyes, opening mouths, loops made of threads or pastel-colored rags imitate fur (the kitten and puppy look similar, I confused them at first). The dolls are controlled by professional actors, they sing well and convey the mood of the characters with their facial expressions. The puppeteers are dressed in gray T-shirts and jeans, with caps on the men's heads - one gets the feeling that these are just residents of the city in which the action takes place. The scenery on stage includes two apartment buildings with drainpipes and antennas, between the houses there are wires and a wooden table. There is a lot of children's humor in the play; for the first time, my daughter laughed not because I found it funny, but because she was the one who was having fun. And I liked the mischievous Cat and the kind-hearted Dog. In addition, the performance is instructive, it helps children understand and accept that there are different creatures, but we must try to live in peace with everyone. The duration of the performance is 1 hour with intermission. Recommended for children over 3 years old.
Photo 1987 by V. Schultz. Novoslobodskaya st., 10. In this house there was a Bakery (I would even say: Buloshnaya), and in it there was another Bublichnaya (we talked about the first one, on the corner with Seleznyoskaya Street yesterday). And these same rosy, fragrant bagels, with a crunchy crust (6 kopecks each with poppy seeds, 5 kopecks without poppy seeds) were sold through a special window. The window is to the left of the door to the Bakery.
3.
Photo 1986 by I. Nagaitsev.
4.
Photo from 1980. In Tsarina. House No. 16 with the famous inscription "MEAT FISH TRADE". And next to him on the left, what a handsome man he was!
The house on the right (No. 14), where "Products" is, was built at the beginning of the 20th century according to the design of E.-R. K. Nirnzee. It has been preserved.
5.
Photo 1987 by V. Schultz. Left - February, right - October. And there are no houses... Now in their place is a plastic bastard.
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Photo from the 1960s.
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Photo 1986 by I. Nagaitseva
8.
Photo con. 1980s D. Borko. On the right are houses No. 19, 21 on Novoslobodskaya Street. On the left is the imprint of house No. 16 on house No. 14. Moreover, there are imprints of two houses. Also visible is the imprint of a one-story house that stood at the beginning of the 20th century on the site of a house with the inscription "MEAT FISH TRADE".
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Still from the film “Happy, Zhenka!”, 1984. View from house number 16 towards the center.
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Photo 1986 by I. Nagaitsev. Novoslobodskaya street house number 20.
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Photo gray 1950s In the background is house number 20.
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Photo from 1905. Dolgorukovskaya street, 76 (according to pre-revolutionary numbering; now - Novoslobodskaya street, 26). Buildings of the Renome confectionery factory (Gerasim Matveevich Weinstein). The factory itself was located in the courtyard. And these are apartment buildings. The apartments of the factory employees were also located here.
After the revolution, the houses were built on and combined, with the addition of additional architectural volume. Although I read somewhere that they were rebuilt back in 1914. But the photo below clearly feels Soviet. And the houses there have not yet been rebuilt. I'll have to look for information on this property at my leisure. Moreover, it has been preserved.
12a.
Photo 1905
13.
Photo con. 1920s(?) Panorama of the even side of Novoslobodskaya street from house number 26 to Palikha. The houses of the Renome factory have not yet been rebuilt.
Unfortunately, there is no greater resolution.
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Photo from the 1930s. Novoslobodskaya street, 26. It became like this. And now it’s about the same.
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Photo beginning 1930s from the TsIG archive. Novoslobodskaya street, houses No. 31 and 33. House No. 33 is also designed by E.-R. K. Nirnzee built (1911)
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Photo from the 1960s. A. Zilova. On the right are houses No. 31 and 33. View towards the center.
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Photos from 1971 and 2009 Contemporary photograph and collage by A. Sorokin. Novoslobodskaya street, houses No. 31 and 33.
Original
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Photo beginning 1930s from the TsIG archive. Novoslobodskaya street, no. 33, 35 and 37
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Photo beginning 1930s from the TsIG archive. Novoslobodskaya street, no. 37 and 39
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Photo beginning 1930s from the TsIG archive. Novoslobodskaya street, no. 39, 41 and 43
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Photos from 1971 and 2009 Contemporary photograph and collage by A. Sorokin. Novoslobodskaya street, nos. 39 and 41. Modern house no. 41, built on the site of a historical building on the corner with Lesnaya, is, of course, a very plastic scribe. Lego constructor with columns and trinkets. Well, why, why aren’t architects invited to design houses??!!
Original
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Photo beginning 1930s from the TsIG archive. Novoslobodskaya street. Historical buildings on the corner with Lesnaya Street.
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Photos from 1974 and 2009 Contemporary photograph and collage by A. Sorokin. Novoslobodskaya near Lesnaya Street. The current house is No. 41.
Original
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Photo beginning 1930s The intersection of Novoslobodskaya street with Lesnaya and Palikha. On the left you can see the wall of Butyrka prison. Now the prison is covered by a multi-storey residential building (it is visible in the pictures above).
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Photo 1973 by Yu. Slavina. Corner of Novoslobodskaya and Palikha.
Let's walk a little forward along Novoslobodskaya and look back towards the center
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Photos from 1968 and 2009. Contemporary photograph and collage by A. Sorokin.
Original
Let's go back and turn towards Palikha.
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Photo from 1958. Corner of Novoslobodskaya and Palikha. House with Food Store No. 27 (visible in the photo above).
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Photo from 1982. Palikha from Novoslobodskaya street.
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Photo 1985 V. Tsarina. Palikha, house No. 3
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Photo gray 1960s St. Palikha, view towards Sushchevskaya street.
Let's look into the courtyards
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Photo 1965 by V. Kozulina. Courtyard of house number 10 on Palikha.
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Photo from 1963. Courtyard of house No. 10 on Palikha.
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Photo beginning 1960s Courtyard of house number 10 on Palikha.
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Photo 1960 by D. Kuznetsov. The backyards of Palikha. View from the courtyard of houses No. 12 and 14 towards Sushchevskaya Street.
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Photo 1968 by A. Zilova. Corner of Palikha and Tikhvinskaya. The tram travels past the Tikhvin Baths. The bath pipe is clearly visible. Now an exact copy stands on the site of this house.
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Photo con. 1970s Right there.
Let's go forward a little and look back
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Photo from 1978. View of Palikha from Perunovsky Lane.
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Photo 1983 by A. Zilova. Right there.
Let's turn onto Sushchevskaya Street
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Photo from 1978. Sushchevskaya street from Palikha.
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Photo from 1988. View towards Palikha.
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Photo from 1966. Sushchevskaya street near houses No. 27 and 29.
On the right you can see a beautiful fence. Here it is large:
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Photo from 1986. View from the front garden of house No. 29 on Sushchevskaya Street. The fence, oh, miracle, has been preserved (unless there is a copy there now).
The school building is vaguely visible in the background of the photo. On the site of the school until 1939 (or 1938) stood the Church of the Kazan Mother of God in Sushchev.
She did not survive the so-called “school campaign”. One joy is that at least the school is still a school.
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Photo of 1882 from the albums of N. A. Naidenov. Church of the Kazan Mother of God in Sushchev. The name of the village of Sushchevo comes, apparently, from the non-canonical name Sushch.
A wooden temple in the palace village of Sushchev stood already in the time of Ivan Kalita. Stone church - since 1682. Rebuilt in 1877 according to the design of P. P. Zykov (senior). The bell tower was rebuilt in the beginning. 20th century.
Demolished in 1939 (or 1938).
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Photo 1984 James Mitchell. Sushchevskaya street, house number 20. Monogram "E.K." in the attic are the initials of the pre-revolutionary owner of the house, Elizaveta Krotova.
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Photo con. 1980s I. Nagaitseva. House No. 14.
This is an interesting house. Library building named after I. Z. Surikov ( now - A. P. Bogolyubova).
S.K. Romanyuk in the book “On the lands of Moscow villages and settlements”, chapter “Sushchevo” writes about him:
"The history of this building is curious. In 1825, there was an undeveloped (as they said then - “empty”) plot, left after the construction of the Sushchevskaya police station. In the middle of the century, it belonged to the collegiate adviser F. F. Courtener, who may have been the author one of the plans for Moscow, published in 1805
In 1878, part of this property was acquired by the actual state councilor N.P. Bogolyubov, speaking on behalf of his brother, the then famous painter Alexei Petrovich Bogolyubov.
A.P. Bogolyubov graduated from the naval school and became a sailor, but he was always attracted to painting: even during the final exam, he was so carried away that instead of preparing for the answer, he painted portraits - not very handsome - of his examiners, and he was saved only by the intercession older brother. Once on the ship on which Alexey Bogolyubov served, the President of the Academy of Arts, Duke Maximilian of Leuchtenberg, was a passenger. He saw the drawings of the young sailor and contributed to his entry into the Academy. Over time, Bogolyubov became a famous marine painter who created a picturesque history of the Russian fleet, and a landscape painter who had a great influence on many Russian artists. Due to illness, he was forced to live permanently (since 1873) outside Russia, in Paris, where for many years he was the head of a large Russian colony.
Almost every summer A.P. Bogolyubov came to Russia and, as it now turned out, was thinking about a permanent workshop for himself in Moscow. In October 1877, he issued a power of attorney in Paris to his older brother (also a sailor, but also the author of several books, including a guide to the Volga, illustrated by A.P. Bogolyubov) to purchase a plot “in that part of the city where new wooden buildings are permitted by the City Duma."
My brother found such a plot on Sushchevskaya Street and in 1878 built on it a large wooden hut-workshop with a low stone first floor and a high second floor, with wide square windows. But the artist, apparently, never took advantage of it, continuing to live abroad, where he died in 1896.
In the early 90s. this site passed to Nikolai Sergeevich Tretyakov, a representative of a glorious family of textile manufacturers who did so much for Russian art and Moscow. Everyone knows Pavel Mikhailovich Tretyakov, the founder of the gallery, a collector of works by Russian artists, much less - his brother, Sergei Mikhailovich, who also collected paintings, but also worked in the field of social activities - he was the mayor of Moscow in 1877 - 1881.
His son Nikolai Sergeevich was himself an artist. Not only was he very capable of painting, but he was generally close to art - he wrote poetry and was a talented actor. P. M. Tretyakov, donating his collection to Moscow, appointed his nephew as the first trustee of the gallery, but he lived very little and died before Pavel Mikhailovich, thirty-nine years old, in 1896.
When N. S. Tretyakov acquired the Bogolyubovsky plot, he decided to leave the wooden building of the artist’s workshop, but remodel the facade half of the house, in the place of which the architect A. E. Erichson erected a representative building with a front hall, staircase and beautiful halls.
After the death of the owner, his widow Alexandra Gustavovna, sister of the railway engineer Konstantin Dunker, lived in this mansion for a long time. The son of N. S. Tretyakov, Sergei Nikolaevich, grew up here, and became a famous political figure - a member of the Provisional Government."
During Soviet times, the above-mentioned library was opened in the house.
The wooden part (where the workshop was) has now been reconstructed. Instead of a wooden house, a relatively accurate concrete copy was built.
Photo from the 1900s. View of Sushchevskaya Street towards Palikha from house No. 7 (not preserved)
Now it’s like this: https://maps.yandex.ru/-/CVDZaCyq
The surviving house No. 9 (before the revolution - the Rossiya insurance company) has not yet been built.
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Photo con. 1960s - early 1970s Almost the same point, but a slightly different angle.
And from here we will turn left in front of the end of house No. 9 with the poster “Call 01 about a fire.”
Yesterday we already remembered that previously here was the final stop of buses that carried Muscovites and guests of the capital “to the far reaches of Dmitrovka, Vs. Vishnevsky Street, etc.”
And, by the way, it was from here that you could take bus number 72 to one of the specialized stores of the Vesna company (later they all became Hymens) for newlyweds.
Self-quote: “The choice in the store on Timiryazevskaya was better, because you had to go there by bus about forty minutes from the Novoslobodskaya metro station.” “A rare bird will fly...”
I wrote about these stores a long time ago. You can. Or maybe someone hasn’t read it at all.
So, let's turn left into the alley, where this final stop for a number of buses was located
49.
Photo 1985 by R. Newhouser. The final bus station is "Novoslobodskaya". View towards Novoslobodskaya street.
Let's turn back towards Sushchevskaya Street