Kolymazhny lane
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Kolymazhny lane
Moscow
Buildings of the Ministry of Defense in Kolymazhny Lane General information Country Russia
The city of Moscow
CAO District
Arbat district (No. 6 — residential); Khamovniki (No. 6 (p. 1), 14 residential, No. 4-8 / 4 (p. 1,7 non residential)
Length 0.45 km
The nearest metro stations are Kropotkinskaya (300 m)
Postal code 119019
Phone numbers +7(495) XXX----
on OpenStreetMap on Google Maps Kolymazhny Lane on Wikimedia Commons
Coordinates: 55°44'53" s.
w.
37°36'15" v. d. / 55.74806° s.
w.
37.604417° v. d. / 55.74806; 37.604417 (G) (O) (I)
Kolymazhny lane (in the XVIII XIX centuries. - alternately Konyushennaya Street, Kolymazhny Lane, Lukinsky Lane, Antipyevsky Lane (until 1962), 1962-1993 Marshal Shaposhnikov Street, 1993-1994 Kolymazhnaya Street) — a lane in the Central Administrative District of the city of Moscow.
It runs from Volkhonka to Gogol Boulevard, lies parallel to Znamenka, to the left of it.
The numbering of houses is carried out from Volkhonka.
Content
1 Origin of the name 2 History 3 Notable buildings and structures 3.1 On the odd side 3.1.1 Residential building (No. 7) 3.1.2 A.V. Buryshkin's house and wing (No. 7, in the courtyard) 3.1.3 Medical and Diagnostic Center of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation (No. 9) 3.1.4 City estate of A. Ya.
Radonezhskaya A. A. Nikiforov (No. 9, building 2)
3.1.5 City estate of E. M. Alekseeva (No. 13/16)
3.2 On the even side 3.2.1 The Department of Personal Collections of the State Museum of Fine Arts (No. 2) 3.2.2 The Mansion of V. A. Glebova (Buryshkin) (No. 4) 3.2.3 The City estate of the Glebov Ponomarevs (No. 6, p. 2) 3.2.4 Antipy Church on Kolymazhny yard 3.2.5 Administrative building of the People's Commissariat of Defense (No. 14/1)
4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 References
Origin of the name[edit / edit wiki text]
The name of the XVII XVIII centuries, given by the Kolymazhny yard, where the royal carriages kolymags were stored.
In modern realities, this is about the same as the garage of the President's managers.
History[edit / edit wiki text]
Since the XVI century, there were stables and a Kolymazhny yard on this place (closed in 1830).
Since 1912, the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts was opened on the site of the Kolymazhny Yard.
In the XVIII XIX centuries, the lane changed a number of names: Konyushennaya Street, Kolymazhny Lane, Lukinsky Lane (after the Church of the Apostle and Evangelist Luke, dismantled in 1816), Antipyevsky Lane (after the church of Antipy the Holy Martyr, which is near Kolymazhny Yard).
In 1962, Antipyevsky Lane was renamed Marshal Shaposhnikov Street in honor of the Soviet military commander B. M. Shaposhnikov.
In 1993, Marshal Shaposhnikov Street was renamed Kolymazhnaya Street, but in 1994 the renaming was clarified, and the street again became a lane.
Notable buildings and structures[edit / edit wiki text]
Kolymazhny, No.
2.
On the odd side[edit / edit wiki text]
Residential building (No. 7)[edit / edit wiki text]
The house was built in 1907 for A.V. Buryshkin by the architect F. F. Voskresensky.
A.V. Buryshkin's house and wing (No. 7, in the courtyard)[edit / edit wiki text]
It was built in 1914 by the architect V. V. Sherwood.
Medical and Diagnostic Center of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation (No. 9)[edit / edit wiki text]
City estate of A. Ya.
Radonezhskaya — A. A. Nikiforov (No. 9, building 2)[edit / edit wiki text]
It was built in the 1880s by the architect A. A. Nikiforov.
City estate of E. M. Alekseeva (No. 13/16)[edit / edit wiki text]
The wing of the estate was built in 1884 according to the project of D. N. Chichagov for the mother of the mayor N. A. Alekseev, E. M. Alekseeva.
After the Soviet government moved from Petrograd to Moscow in 1918, one of the departments of the Commissariat of Agriculture was located in the house for some time[1].
The author of the main house built in 1898-1908 is A. E. Erikhson.
On the even side[edit / edit wiki text]
house No. 4 the mansion of V. A. Glebova (Buryshkins)
Department of Personal Collections of the State Museum of Fine Arts (No. 2)[edit / edit wiki text]
The mansion of V. A. Glebova (Buryshkins) (No. 4)[edit / edit wiki text]
architectural monument (federal)
The building was built in 1826-1827 by the architect F. M. Shestakov [2] on a plot on the land of the Church of St. John the Baptist, which stood until 1793 at the corner of Kolymazhny Lane and Volkhonka.
In 1896, the house passed to the Buryshkin merchant family.
The last pre — revolutionary owner of the house P. A. Buryshkin collected here a collection of "everything that concerned old Moscow", intending to transfer it together with the house to the city property[1].
These plans were not destined to be realized; after the revolution, the building housed first the departments of the People's Commissariat for Ethnic Affairs, then the children's library and the MONO regional library; in 1932-1960, housing was located in the mansion.
In 1961, after the restoration, part of the collections of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts was transferred to the house.
The building is an excellent example of the Moscow Empire style[3].
The facade of the house is laconic; the attic with a semicircular window is supported by six semi columns of the Corinthian order; on the second floor there is a balcony with an elegant wrought iron lattice (the brackets were restored during restoration in the 1960s).
The interiors of the building are also noteworthy — in particular, the painting of the main staircase, containing Masonic symbols and images of human figures in strange poses.
For a long time it was believed that the composer A. N. Verstovsky lived in the mansion, but later this information was refuted[1].
Currently, the building houses the Department of engraving and drawing of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts.
The mansion has the status of a cultural heritage object of federal significance[4].
The city estate of the Glebovs Ponomarevs (No. 6, p. 2)[edit / edit wiki text]
The earliest of the existing buildings on this site — a wooden mansion in the Empire style was built in the first third of the XIX century on the lands of the former Miloslavsky estate, the buildings of which have not survived to this day — with the exception, probably, of a small outbuilding preserved in the courtyard.
The first owner of the mansion was a real state councilor P. I. Glebov, a friend of the Pushkin family, the godfather of Alexander Pushkin's younger brother Lev.
The building to the right of the main building dates back to the 1820s.
In 1913-1914, an extension to the main building in the neoclassical style was built according to the project of architect N. S. Shutsman[3].
At the same time, an Art Nouveau fence was built on the side of Kolymazhny Lane[1].
Before the revolution of 1917, the estate was owned by N. I. Pastukhov.
Since 1917, the building has housed children's institutions.
The entire ensemble with the surrounding garden was partially preserved, but by the 80s of the XX century it was dilapidated and was reconstructed.
Since January 2006, the former estate has housed the Center for Aesthetic Education of Children and Youth "Museion" at the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts.
In 1989, during the excavations conducted under the leadership of A. G. Wexler, the remains of buildings that burned down during the great Moscow fire of 1737 were discovered on the estate territory.
It is believed that the fire started here from a "penny candle", forgotten at the icon in the Miloslavsky house[1].
Antipy Church on Kolymazhny Dvor[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: Antipy Church on Kolymazhny Dvor
architectural monument (federal)
In different years, the church of Antipy was mentioned as the church "at the Big Stables" (1619), "that in the Church" (1625), "that at the Sovereign's big stables" (1667), "on the Lazy Torzhok at the old stables"[5].
The stone building of the church with the consecrated one in the name of the Holy Martyr Antipas, bishop of Pergamon, was erected in the third quarter of the XVI century, near the sovereign's Stable yard[6].
Later added the chapel of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker (in the Baroque style), the refectory, the narthex and the bell tower (1798) with a side chapel (classical style) the main temple of the building was hidden.
The main volume of the temple is small, covered with a cross vault and differs from other temples of the XVI century in that it has a two part altar[5].
The peculiarity of the temple that distinguishes it from a number of pillarless temples is the correspondence of the interior pilasters that divide the walls to the level of the vault to the facade pilasters[7].
After the closure of the church in 1929, the 1929 building was used for housing, until the transfer of the church building, the storerooms of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts were located there.
Inside the chapel and on the arches of the refectory, fragments of the original painting with floral ornaments have been preserved, on the arches and niches of the Predtechensky chapel — a wall painting of the middle of the XIX century.
Administrative building of the People's Commissariat of Defense (No. 14/1)[edit / edit wiki text]
architectural monument (regional)
The building was built in 1934-1938 according to the project of the architect L.
In Rudnev for the People's Commissariat of Military and Naval Affairs ("Narkomvoenmora").
Most of the planned complex was not implemented.
The tower of the constructed building became one of the architectural dominants of Kolymazhny Lane[1].
Now the building houses the Central TV and Radio Studio of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation.
The building has the status of an architectural monument of regional significance[8].
See also[edit / edit wiki text]
N. I. Podklyuchnikov.
The interior of the apartment of Alexey Matveevich Filamofitsky in Moscow in Antipyevsky Lane near Volkhonka Street.
After 1835.
Museum Town
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 Romanyuk S. K.
From the history of Moscow lanes (rus.).
Rusarch (2007).
Verified on May 24, 2015.
Гейд Heydor T., Kazus I. Styles of Moscow architecture.
- Moscow: Art XXI century, 2014.
- p. 100 — - 616 p.
— ISBN 978-5-98051-113-5.
↑ 1 2 Buseva Davydova et al., 1997, p .
80. ↑ Register of historical and cultural monuments.
Verstovsky's mansion.
The official website of the Department of Cultural Heritage of Moscow.
Checked on May 24, 2015.
↑ 1 2 Architectural monuments of Moscow.
White City / Chief Editor.
Makarevich G. V.-M.: Iskusstvo, 1989.
- P. 46 — - ISBN 5-210-02548-9.
Церковь The Church of Antipy on the Kolymazhny yard / / Moscow: Encyclopedia / Head.
ed .
S. O. Schmidt; Comp.: M. I. Andreev, V. M. Karev — - M.: Great Russian Encyclopedia, 1997 — - 976 p — - 100 000 copies.
— ISBN 5-85270-277-3.
Batalov A. Moscow stone architecture of the end of the XVI century : Problems of arts.
thinking of the epoch.
- M.: Publishing house of the firm "Maker", 1996.
- p. 386.
Реестр Register of historical and cultural monuments.
The administrative building of the People's Commissariat of Defense.
The official website of the Department of Cultural Heritage of Moscow.
Verified on May 24, 2015.
Literature[edit / edit wiki text]
Vaskin A. A., Golshtadt M. G.
From Volkhonka to Znamenka.
Historical photo guide.
- Moscow: Sputnik + Company, 2008 — - 302 p — - 1000 copies.
— ISBN 978-5-364-00900-5.
Moscow: Architectural guide / I. L. Buseva Davydova, M. V. Nashchokina, M. I. Astafyeva Dlugach.
- Moscow: Stroyizdat, 1997 — - 512 p.
— ISBN 5-274-01624-3.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Yandex.
Maps Kolymazhny Lane Google Maps Kolymazhny Lane Center for Aesthetic Education of Children and Youth "Museion" of the Holy Martyr Antipas, Bishop of Pergamon temple.
Streets of Moscow: CAO, Arbat
Main highways:
Mokhovaya • Boulevard Ring : Gogolevsky Boulevard / Nikitsky Boulevard • Garden Ring : Smolensky Boulevard / Novinsky Boulevard • Vozdvizhenka / Novy Arbat • Znamenka • Smolenskaya * Embankments : Smolenskaya
Squares:
Arbatskaya • Arbat Gate • Smolenskaya • Smolenskaya Sennaya • Spasopesovskaya
Streets inside
Boulevard Ring:
Bolshoy Znamensky Lane • Nizhny / Bolshoy Kislovsky Lane • Kolymazhny Lane • Krestovozdvizhensky Lane • Bolshaya Nikitskaya • Romanov Lane • Starovagankovsky lane
From the Boulevard
to the Garden Ring:
Arbat • Arbatsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Afanasyevsky Lane • Borisoglebsky Lane • Glazovsky Lane • Money Lane • Maly Kakovinsky Lane • Kaloshin Lane • Kamennaya Sloboda Lane • Karmanitsky lane • Kompozitorskaya • Krivoarbatsky Lane • Krivonikolsky Lane • Merzlyakovsky Lane • Malaya / Bolshaya Molchanovka • Maly / Sredny / Bolshoy Nikolopeskovsky Lane • Plotnikov Lane • Povarskaya • Maly / Bolshoy Rzhevsky Lane • Serebryany Lane • Sivtsev Vrazhek Lane • Tablecloth Lane • Spasopeskovsky Lane • Starokonyushenny Lane • Troilinsky lane • Trubnikovsky Lane • Filippovsky Lane • Khlebny Lane
From the Garden Ring
to the Moskva River:
Bolshoy Devyatinsky Lane • Konyushkovskaya • 1st / 2nd Nikoloshchepovsky lane • Novinsky Lane • Maly Novopeskovsky Lane • Panfilovsky Lane • Flow Lane • Straight Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Smolensky Lane • Shlomin Passage • Shubinsky Lane
Streets by districts of the Central Administrative District: Arbat | Basmanny | Zamoskvorechye | Krasnoselsky | Meshchansky | Presnensky | Tagansky | Tverskoy | Khamovniki | Yakimanka
Streets of Moscow: CAO, Khamovniki
Main highways:
Boulevard Ring : Soymonovsky Proezd / Gogolevsky Boulevard * Garden Ring : Zubovsky Boulevard / Smolensky Boulevard • Kamer Kollezhsky Val : Khamovnichesky Val • Znamenka • Volkhonka / Prechistenka / Zubovskaya / Bolshaya Pirogovskaya • Ostozhenka / Komsomolsky Prospekt • Smolenskaya * Embankments : Prechistenskaya / Frunzenskaya / Luzhnetskaya • Novodevichya / Savvinskaya / Rostov
Squares:
Borovitskaya • Zubovskaya • Krymskaya • of the Novodevichy Monastery • Prechistensky Gate • Smolenskaya Sennaya
Streets inside
Boulevard Ring:
Vsekhsvyatsky passage • Maly / Bolshoy Znamensky Lane • Kolymazhny Lane • Lebyazhy Lane • Lenivka
from the boulevard
to Sadovoye:
Bolshoy Afanasyevsky Lane • Barykovsky Lane • Butikovsky Lane • Vsevolozhsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Vlasyevsky Lane • Gagarinsky Lane • Glazovsky Lane • Money Lane • Eropkinsky Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Zachatievsky Lane • Korobeynikov Lane • Kropotkinsky lane • Kursovoy Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Levshinsky Lane • Lopukhinsky Lane • Mansurovsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Mogiltsevsky Lane • Molochny Lane • Nashchokinsky Lane • Novokrymsky passage • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Obydensky lane • Plotnikov Lane • Pozharsky lane • Pomerantsev Lane • Prechistensky Lane • Sechenovsky Lane • Sivtsev Vrazhek Lane • Starokonyushenny Lane • Turchaninov Lane • Khilkov Lane • Khrushchevsky Lane • Chertolsky Lane • Chisty Lane
from the Garden to the Third
transport:
10th Anniversary of October • Abrikosovsky Lane • 1st Archive Lane • Architect Klein Alley • Maly Bozheninsky Lane • Burdenko • 1st / 2nd Vrazhsky Lane • Dashkov Lane • Devichy Pole Passage • Dovator • Elansky • Efremova • Agricultural lane • Zubovsky passage • Cooperative • Krymsky proezd • Kseninsky Lane • Luzhnetsky Passage • Lev Vygotsky • Lev Tolstoy • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Nepalimovsky Lane • Nesvizh Lane • Novodevichy passage • Novokonyushenny Lane • Obolensky Lane • Olsufevsky Lane • Malaya Pirogovskaya • Pogodinskaya • Plushykha • Pugovishnikov Lane • Rossolimo • 2nd / 4th / 6th / 7th Rostov Lane • Ruzheyny Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Savvinsky Lane • Savelyeva • Serpov Lane • Timura Frunze • Trubetskaya • 1st / 2nd / 3rd lane of Workers • Usacheva • Usachevsky lane • Uchebny Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Frunzenskaya • Kholzunov Lane • Bolshoy Chudov Lane • 1st Shibaevsky Lane • Yazykovsky Lane
for the Third
transport:
Luzhniki • Novoluzhnetskiy proezd
Streets by districts of the Central Administrative District: Arbat | Basmanny | Zamoskvorechye | Krasnoselsky | Meshchansky | Presnensky | Tagansky | Tverskoy | Khamovniki | Yakimanka
Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kolymazhny Lane&oldid=79736282"
Categories: Streets alphabetically Streets of Moscow Arbat Khamovniki Alleys of Moscow
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