Ostozhenka
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Ostozhenka street
Moscow
View of the Opera Singing Center of Galina Vishnevskaya, " Opera House "(right) General Information Country Russia
The city of Moscow
CAO District
Khamovniki District
Length 1.1 km
The nearest metro stations are Park Kultury, Kropotkinskaya
Former names of Metrostroevskaya street
Postal code 119034 (#1-51 and 2-44), 119021 (№ 46, 48/2, 53)
on OpenStreetMap on Yandex.
On Google Maps Ostozhenka Street on Wikimedia Commons
Coordinates: 55°44 ' 25 "s. w. 37°35'50" v. d. / 55.74028° s.
w.
37.59722° v. d. / 55.74028; 37.59722 (G) (O) (I)
Ostozhenka Street (in 1935-1986 — Metrostroevskaya Street) is a street in the Central Administrative District of the city of Moscow.
It runs from Prechistensky Gate Square to Krymskaya Square, lies between Prechistenka and Prechistenskaya Embankment.
The numbering of houses is carried out from the Prechistensky Gate Square.
The name of the XVII century, given by the ancient tract of Ostozhye.
Content
1 History 2 In the XXI century 3 Notable buildings and structures 3.1 On the odd side 3.2 On the even side
4 Public transport 5 Notes 6 Literature 7 References
History[edit / edit wiki text]
Ostozhenka is a low lying, floodplain area on the bank of the Moskva River.
There were meadows and mowing, haystacks were a common element of the landscape, which is why the area was called Ostozhye.
In the XVII century, the royal Stable settlement and the Ostozhensky (Ostozhsky) sovereign stable yard were located on the Ostozhye.[1]
In October 1917, during the October Revolution in the Ostozhenka district, the Bolsheviks fought for the possession of the headquarters building of the Moscow Military District (house 15/17[specify]) and the Supply(Quartermaster) warehouses on Krymskaya Square.
Here P. Dobrynin was mortally wounded and the Bolsheviks Pavel Andreev (14 years old) and Lyusya Lyusinova (20 years old) were killed, whose names in Soviet times were named Moscow streets in the Zamoskvorechye district[2]
Ostozhenka Street retained its name from the XVII century until it was renamed Metrostroevskaya Street in 1935 in connection with the laying of the first stage of the Moscow metro here in an open way.
In 1986, it became the first Moscow street to return its historical name[1].
In the XXI century[edit / edit wiki text]
According to local historian Konstantin Mikhailov ("Archnadzor"), during the reign of Yuri Luzhkov, "only a few historical buildings remained on Ostozhenka, and the Zachatievsky Monastery stands surrounded by entire New Russian quarters, absolutely deserted, dead, where dead lawns are behind fences this is the new Moscow, absolutely frightening"[3].
From the point of view of the cost of housing, Ostozhenka is the most expensive street in Moscow, Russia and the countries of the former USSR.
Residential real estate prices here are among the highest in the world[4][5].
In 2013, Ostozhenka took the 8th place in the ranking of the most expensive streets in the world according to the Knight Frank agency.
The cost of apartments reached $29 thousand per 1 metr2, which is 8% more expensive than similar housing on New York's Fifth Avenue[6].
Notable buildings and structures[edit / edit wiki text]
On the odd side[edit / edit wiki text]
No. 1/9, residential building of the Ostozhensky worker of the HBC
The building was built in 1926, architects A.V. Konorov, A.V. Kossakovsky, engineer I. P. Rybakov[7].
No. 3/14, apartment house of Ya.
M. Filatov
architectural monument (newly identified object) The right part of the building was built in 1907-1909 by architects V. A. Dubovsky and N. A. Arkhipov[8][7]; the left part was rebuilt and built over by E.-R.
Nirnsee in 1904.
It is known as the "House under the glass", since the corner turret looks like an inverted glass.
No. 5, apartment house of Count V. A. Baranov
The building was built in 1913-1914, the architect is V. V. Voeykov.
No. 7, house of Varvarinsky joint stock company of homeowners
The 1st stage of the building, built according to the project of architect A.V. Ivanov, was ready in 1899, the 2nd in 1903.
Among the residents of the Ostozhenka building were engineer V. G. Shukhov (1903-1904), professor of the Moscow Conservatory Adolf Yaroshevsky (1906-1911), artist V. P. Drittenpreis (1910-1911), editor of the journal "Mathematical Review" Joasaf Chistyakov (1913-1915).
In 1901, the historian M. V. Dovnar Zapolsky, professor of Moscow University A. I. Abrikosov, economist A. A. Manuilov lived and worked in the building on 2nd Obydensky Lane; the historian V. I. Picheta (1924-1947), biologist, founder of experimental biology in the USSR N. K. Koltsov (sq. 69, 1915-1940) lived and worked in the building on Pozharsky Lane, the writer M. A. Bulgakov repeatedly visited here, in sq.66[9].
In 1996-2002, actor Vitaly Solomin lived in the house[10].
No. 11 (ex. house No. 13/12), the address of Shustrov's tavern "Dovecote"
The old building was demolished in 2007 to make room for the construction of the residential complex "Ostozhenka 11" (architect — S. Kisilev).
vl.
No. 15, on the site of the modern square, the Church of the Resurrection of the Living on Ostozhenka was located, destroyed in 1935 No. 17, building 1, the apartment house of V. I. Gryaznov
an architectural monument (a newly identified object), a building built in 1901, architect L. N. Kekushev (with the participation of S. S. Shutsman).
No. 19, p .
1, apartment house of A. I. Kekusheva
No. 19, p .
1, apartment house of A. I. Kekusheva
architectural monument (federal), building built in 1902-1903, architect L. N. Kekushev[11].
In 2016, the mansion became the property of the RPA Estate company, which paid 390 million rubles for it.
No. 19, p. 2, Kireevsky Chambers
architectural monument (federal), a three story residential building based on the construction of the XVII century (rebuilt in the XIX century).
Since the late 1980s, the building was empty and subsequently gradually destroyed, having survived several fires[12].
In 2014, under the cover of the restoration of facades commissioned by the Zachatievsky Monastery, the walls of the architectural monument were illegally dismantled to the basement by the contractor Kapitel LLC[13], new construction began on the vacant site[14].
The architect of the project is Alexander Ryzhov, who previously destroyed the Stalmeister House in Maly Znamensky Lane under the guise of reconstruction[14].
No. 21, Kekusheva House
No. 21, the mansion of A. I. Kekusheva
an architectural monument (federal), the building was built in 1900-1903 according to the project of architect L. N. Kekushev (with the participation of V. S. Kuznetsov)[8].
In appearance, the building resembles a medieval castle in miniature.
Lev Kekushev built this house for himself and his family, but after the divorce, the house passed into the possession of his wife Anna.
Currently, the building houses the Office of the Egyptian Military attache.
Like another building of the architect, the List mansion, this building is called one of the possible addresses of Bulgakov's Margarita[11][15].
No. 25, p. 1, Galina Vishnevskaya Opera Singing Center / Opera House residential Complex
At the beginning of the XXI century, a building bearing the features of the so called Luzhkovsky style was built on the site of the only square on Ostozhenka in the beginning of the XXI century, according to the project of M. M. Posokhin, in violation of the regulations (the building is higher than it was originally announced) and bypassing the restrictions established for the protected area of the city[16].
The pseudo classical structure with columns of different orders violates the historical architectural appearance of the quarter and, according to art critic and architectural critic G. I. Revzin, is "the apotheosis of bad taste"[17].
I. S. Turgenev Museum on Ostozhenka
No. 37/7 I. S. Turgenev Museum on Ostozhenka
From 1839 to 1851, the mansion belonged to Varvara Petrovna Turgeneva, the mother of the writer Ivan Turgenev.
The action of the story "Mumu" took place in this house.
In 2009, the I. S. Turgenev Museum was opened in a heavily rebuilt building (only the hall was preserved).
His collection includes a music album of the writer's beloved Polina Viardot, a note inviting her to a concert from her relative, violinist Leonard Hubert, the original letters of the writer, a cast of his hand and his death mask, and other exhibits that came to Ostozhenka from the collections of other Russian museums[18].
The actor Pyotr Glebov lived in the house[19].
No. 37/7, p. 2
The four storey building was built in 1901 by the architect N. I. Kakorin.
It was intended for storing and selling things donated to the Moscow Council of Orphanages, which at that time managed the neighboring building (No. 37/7) [7].
No. 39, children's shelter
The building was built in 1902, the architect is S. I. Tikhomirov.
No. 41, residential building
The building was built in 1925-1928 using the unique technology of "P. KOSSEL A/O" (Paul Kossel and Co.)
, It is the first multi storey and multi entrance house of the USSR, in the structures of which monolithic reinforced concrete was used.
The poet Mikhail Zenkevich lived in the house[20].
No. 47, apartment house of the parish of the Assumption Church
Central Federal District, building built in 1913, architect I. P. Mashkov.
No. 49, Vsevolzhsky Mansion house
No. 49, Vsevolzhsky Mansion
The building, built between 1817 and 1825, was part of the city estate of Loshakovsky Vsevolozhsky.
Mikhail Bakunin and the Kireevsky brothers lived here.
No. 51/10, Apricot Mansion
The building was built in 1873, the architect was M. K. Puzyrevsky, in 1916 it was rebuilt by the architect S. E. Chernyshev[21].
With ?
the press office of the Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation is located here for a year.
No. 53/2, Tsarevich Nicholas Lyceum
Tsarevich Nicholas Lyceum, architect A. E. Weber (1875)
architectural monument (federal), building built in 1875, architect A. E. Weber.
Since 1952,the building has been occupied by the Diplomatic Academy of the Russian Foreign Ministry.
On the even side[edit / edit wiki text]
No. 4 the main house of the Rimsky Korsakov estate(1816; 1860[22]).
№ 6, p. 1 the apartment house of Chilishcheva (ca. 1816; 1847, architect V. F. Gromovsky; 1870, architect N. I. Gushchin[22]); burned down in 2003, is in a ruined state[12]; the construction project on the property plot 4-6, including a new six story building and underground space, was rejected by the Architectural Council of the city in March 2016[23].
No. 8, p. 1, Central Federal District an apartment building (1901, architect O. O. Shishkovsky), a valuable city forming object[22].
No. 10/2/7, p. 1 residential building, XVIII XIX centuries.[22]
No. 12/1, p. 1, Central Federal District residential building (1824; 1855; 1874, architect S. V. Dmitriev)[22].
No. 12/1, p. 3, Central Federal District N. P. Sokolov's apartment house (1874, architect N. P. Delektorsky)[22].
No. 16 a house on the corner of Ostozhenka and Lopukhinsky Lane.
On January 16, 1853, the philosopher Vladimir Sergeevich Solovyov, the son of the historian Sergei Mikhailovich Solovyov, was born here.
In a safe house in this house in March 1906, an expanded meeting of the Moscow Committee of the RSDLP was held, at which V. I. Lenin made a speech on preparations for the IV (Unification) Congress of the party.
In memory of this event, a memorial plaque was installed on the building[2].
In the summer of 2006, during the reconstruction, the historical building was demolished entirely with the exception of the facade[12].
Currently, the Multimedia Art Museum (MAMM) is located in House No. 16, founded in 2003 on the basis of the Moscow House of Photography, which existed from 1996 to 2003.
No. 20, architectural monument (newly identified object) - the apartment house of G. E. Boydo (1902, architect N. I. Zherikhov[24][7])[22].
In the late 1990s, the house was reconstructed with the replacement of ceilings, as a result of which the interiors lost most of the elements of the original decoration[24].
The singer V. A. Bunchikov lived in the house [25] No. 24, an architectural monument (regional) - the mansion of Lyzhin E. E. Kartashov (1830s; 1875-18787, architect A. L. Ober; 1902)[22][7].
No. 26/1 residential building (1837).
The actors Lavrovs, Saburovs, Vasilievs lived in the house[22].
No. 28 — UN Mission in the Russian Federation.
No. 30 apartment house (1886, architect M. G. Piotrovich).
No. 32, p. 1 - hotel "Kebur Palace".
No. 32/2 the house of the Moscow Council of orphanages of the Department of institutions of the Empress M arias (VOIM).
(1889-1890, architect Ya. I. Antonov[26]).
Faculty of Economics and Law of MSLU.
No. 36 — the house of the Council of Orphanages, the wing was rebuilt in 1896 according to the project of the architect N. E. Pelits[27]).
No. 38, an architectural monument (federal) - the Eropkin house (late XVIII century, architect M. F. Kazakov)[22][28].
In 1806, it was purchased for the Moscow Commercial School.
The building is now occupied by the Moscow State Linguistic University.
No. 40/1 apartment house (1913, architect N. I. Zherikhov[29]).
In 1995-2007, the animator Alexander Tatarsky lived here[30].
No. 42/2 apartment house of M. V. Golubitskaya (1842; 1891; 1899, architect N. D. Strukov[22]).
No. 48/2, architectural monument (federal) - Food warehouses (side facade) (1832-1835, architect V. P. Stasov)[22].
Public transport[edit / edit wiki text]
The lobby of the metro station "Park Kultury" at the corner of Ostozhenka and Novokrymsky passage
Metro stations "Park Kultury" and "Kropotkinskaya" of the Sokolnicheskaya line.
Bus A
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ 1 2 Murav'ev V. B. (2006), p.234.
↑ 1 2 the Names of Moscow streets (1988).
↑ Caution, story: Alexey Klimenko, Konstantin Mikhailov // "Echo of Moscow", September 26, 2010.
↑ http://www.rokf.ru/realty/2008/08/07/101643.html ↑ Ostozhenka was in the top ten of the most expensive residential streets in the world ^ the Most expensive housing in Russia — the artist in the world Pollock's Path in Hong Kong on the website topkvadrat.ru, Dec 26, 2013 ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 Moscow: an Architectural guide / I. L. Buseva Davydova, M. V. nashchokina M. I. Astafieva Dlugach.
— M.: Stroyizdat, 1997.
— P. 290-293, 297.
— 512 p.
— ISBN 5-274-01624-3.
↑ 1 2 Nashchokina M. V. Moscow Art Nouveau.
- 2nd ed. - Moscow: Giraffe, 2005.
- p. 489 — - 560 p. - 2500 copies.
— ISBN 5-89832-042-3.
Городской The City Register of the immovable cultural heritage of the city of Moscow.
The official website of the Committee on Cultural Heritage of the City of Moscow.
Verified on September 11, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 18, 2012.
Сол Vitaly Methodievich Solomin.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Verified on March 14, 2015.
↑ 1 2 Murzina, Marina.
From the modern to the "panel" / / Arguments and facts.
- 2014.
- No. 12 (1741) for March 19.
- p.
42. (Checked on June 11, 2016) ↑ 1 2 3 Moscow Architectural Heritage: the point of no return (issue 1).
www.maps moscow.com.
Verified on June 5, 2015.
↑ The case was initiated on the fact of dismantling the wall of the monument in the center of Moscow.
// July 18, 2014.
↑ 1 2 "Restoration in Moscow": the chambers of the XVII century were demolished at the Zachatievsky monastery under the guise of emergency work // "Real Estate News", July 14, 2014 Вост Vostryshev M. I., Shokarev S. Yu.
Moscow.
All cultural and historical monuments.
- M.: Algorithm, Eksmo, 2009.
- p. 192 — - 512 p.
— (Moscow encyclopedias).
— ISBN 978-5-699-31434-8.
Хран The guardian.
Alexey Ilyich Komech and the fate of Russian architecture / N. Samover.
- M.: Art XXI century, 2009.
- p. 68. - 383 p — - 1100 copies.
— ISBN 978-5-980-51-060-2.
Revzin G. I. Luzhkovskaya Moscow: vampire style / / "Profile", November 24, 2003.
Chernova, Vera.
The house "Mumu" became the Turgenev Museum / / Metro Moscow.
- 2009.
- No.
for October 8.
- p.
5. (Checked on June 11, 2016) ↑ Glebov Pyotr Petrovich.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Verified on March 22, 2015.
Зен Zenkevich Mikhail Alexandrovich.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Verified on March 19, 2015.
Зод The architects of Moscow of the time of eclecticism, Art Nouveau and neoclassicism (1830s 1917): fig. dictionary / State Scientific research.
museum of Architecture named after A.V. Shchusev and others.
- M.: KRABiK, 1998.
- p. 206, 261 — - 320 p.
— ISBN 5-900395-17-0.
↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 The city register of the immovable cultural heritage of the city of Moscow.
The official website of the Committee on Cultural Heritage of the City of Moscow.
Verified on September 11, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 18, 2012.
↑ Construction of the site at the beginning of Ostozhenka: the project was rejected by the Arch Council / / "Archnadzor", March 31, 2016 ↑ 1 2 Nashchokina M. V. Moscow Modern.
- 2nd ed. - Moscow: Giraffe, 2005.
- p. 365 — - 560 p. - 2500 copies.
— ISBN 5-89832-042-3.
Московская Moscow encyclopedia / S. O. Schmidt.
- Moscow: Publishing center "Moskvovedenie", 2007.
- Vol. I, Faces of Moscow.
- p. 241.
- 639 p — - 10 000 copies.
— ISBN 978-5-903633-01-2.
Зод The architects of Moscow of the time of eclecticism, Art Nouveau and neoclassicism (1830s 1917): fig. dictionary / State Scientific research.
museum of Architecture named after A.V. Shchusev and others -Moscow: KRABiK, 1998.
- p. 22. - 320 p.
— ISBN 5-900395-17-0.
Зод The architects of Moscow of the time of eclecticism, Art Nouveau and neoclassicism (1830s 1917): fig. dictionary / State Scientific research.
museum of Architecture named after A.V. Shchusev and others -Moscow: KRABiK, 1998.
- p. 194.
- 320 p.
— ISBN 5-900395-17-0.
Владение The possession, which consisted of the connection of four adjacent plots, was issued when in 1764 the wife of P. D. Eropkin, Elizabeth Mikhailovna, bought the estate of Colonel Alexey Ivanovich Dubrovsky, who purchased it from Princess Anna Vasilyevna Kaltsova Masalskaya; in 1772, Eropkina bought the adjacent possession of Captain Telegina, and in 1794 another possession - from the widow of the Life Guard Lieutenant Anna Alexandrovna Mikulina; in addition, a small empty place was attached.
- see: Imperial Moscow Commercial School on Ostozhenka / / History of the Moscow Merchant Society.
- M., 1914.
- Vol. 4. - pp.
78-81.
Зод The architects of Moscow of the time of eclecticism, Art Nouveau and neoclassicism (1830s 1917): fig. dictionary / State Scientific research.
museum of Architecture named after A.V. Shchusev and others.
- M.: KRABiK, 1998.
- p. 102 — - 320 p.
— ISBN 5-900395-17-0.
Татар Tatarsky Alexander Mikhailovich.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Verified on March 14, 2015.
Literature[edit / edit wiki text]
Names of Moscow streets: A guide.
- 5th edition.
- Moscow: Moskovsky rabochy, 1988 — - 480 p ..
ISBN 5-239-00067-0 Muravyov V. B. Moscow streets.
Secrets of renaming.
- M.: Algorithm, Eksmo, 2006 — - 336 p.
— (People's Guide).
- ISBN 5-699-17008-1.
A. L. Batalov, L. A. Belyaev.
The sacred space of medieval Moscow.
- M.: Feoria, Design.
Information.
Cartography, 2010.
- 400 p.
— ISBN 978-5-4284-0001-4.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Yandex Maps — Ostozhenka Google Maps — Ostozhenka Diploma.
<url> about Ostozhenka Old Moscow.
Ostozhenka Ostozhenka Moscow which does not exist: Ostozhenka, 19, p.
2. Kireevsky Chambers
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=Ostozhenka&oldid=81981534"
Categories: Streets alphabetically Streets of Moscow Khamovniki
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