Moshkovo is a working village in the Novosibirsk region . The administrative center of the Moshkovo district and urban settlement is the working village of Moshkovo .
Working village | |
Moshkovo | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Novosibirsk region |
Municipal District | Moszkowski |
Urban settlement | working village Moshkovo |
History and Geography | |
Based | 1893 |
Former names | until 1933 - Alekseevskoe (Alekseevka) |
Working village with | 1961 |
Center height | 208 m |
Timezone | UTC + 7 |
Population | |
Population | ↗ 9856 [1] people ( 2017 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Telephone code | +7 38348 |
Postcode | |
OKATO Code | |
OKTMO Code | |
moshkovo-nso.ru/home | |
Content
Geography
Moshkovo is located 56 kilometers northeast of Novosibirsk , 70 kilometers southwest of the city of Bolotnoye on the Trans-Siberian Railway . Near the village is the federal highway M53 .
History
Moshkovo owes its appearance to the Trans-Siberian Railway. When laying it, two settlements were founded on the site of the modern village: Alekseevskoe and Romanovskoe. At the same time railway a trip in the area between the two settlements was called Moshkovo . The year of foundation of the village Alekseevskoye - 1896 - is now considered the time of birth of the administrative center of Moshkovo. In the 1900s the village of Alekseevskoe absorbed the village of Romanovskoe and became the administrative center of Alekseevskoy volost . In 1925, the Alekseevsky volost was reorganized into the Alekseevsky district . In 1933, the village of Alekseevskoe was renamed Moshkovo, taking the name from the railway station located in the village. station [2] . At the same time, the district was renamed Moshkovsky .
In 1961, the settlement of Moshkovo received the status of a working village [3] .
From 1963 to 1972 he was part of the Bolotninsky district .
Population
Population | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1959 [4] | 1970 [5] | 1979 [6] | 1989 [7] | 2002 [8] | 2007 [9] | 2009 [10] |
5601 | ↗ 5794 | ↗ 7088 | ↗ 9571 | ↗ 10 678 | ↘ 10 149 | ↘ 9579 |
2010 [11] | 2012 [12] | 2013 [13] | 2014 [14] | 2015 [15] | 2016 [16] | 2017 [1] |
↗ 10 224 | ↘ 10 055 | ↘ 9864 | ↘ 9645 | ↘ 9496 | ↗ 9682 | ↗ 9856 |
According to the All-Russian Population Census, in 2010 10,244 residents lived in Moshkovo, of which 4,750 were men, 5,474 were women, 868 were men per 1,000 women [17] .
Education
Moszkowska Secondary School No. 1 is the largest school in the Moszkowski district [2] .
In 1941, before the start of the war, a new brick building was built for a secondary school, where a hospital was located from the end of 1942, and the children were engaged in other rooms. A memorial plaque hung on the old building of the railway station, from which it followed that the 148th Infantry Brigade was formed in the district center. At the end of April 1942, she was sent to the front. One of the new post-war streets is named after the honor of the hero of the Soviet Union Kobelev Arkady Vasilyevich. The names of the defenders of the motherland who fell during the war were carved on the monument of glory - on the square near the GDK and in high school number 1. In the 90s, high school number 1 was overhauled. Also in Moshkovo there is the Moshkovo Children's Music School, which is engaged in the cultural development of children.
Attractions
- Museum of Local Lore. Located in 2 rooms of the Schoolhouse. The museum is rather modest, it contains 659 exhibits: materials on the history of the Komsomol and pioneer organizations of the Moszkowski district, ancient objects of peasant life [18] [19] .
In 2010, the museum moved to the building of the Moszkowska Children's Music School.
- The station square of Moshkovo station bears the name of the former Minister of Railways N. E. Aksenenko, in 2006 a memorial sign was installed on it.
Media
- Internet: In a village in apartment buildings, Rostelecom provides Internet access; in the private sector, GPON-based technology provides a regional provider “Vokrug Online” to each house.
Oil Spills
According to media reports [20] , in April and December 2008, two oil spills occurred in the Moshkovo area of the Omsk – Irkutsk oil pipeline, which flooded the Baltic River and the nearby ponds of garden societies. Local residents claim that no reclamation was carried out, a new channel was dug for the river, and the spills were simply buried. An examination of the Novosibirsk City Committee for the Protection of the Environment and Natural Resources revealed a multiple excess of the maximum permissible concentration ( MPC ) of oil in water in the old channel of the Balta and the highest, fifth, level of soil contamination with oil products according to the classification of the Ministry of Natural Resources in the earth at a depth of 1.5-1, 8 m in the vicinity of the old channel.
The Transsibneft press release dated October 2010 stated that the oil spill during the accident on December 26, 2008 was 7 tons, of which 1 ton flowed into the Balta River, and the volume of oil collected and pumped back into the pipeline amounted to 6 m³; In addition, stripping and reclamation were carried out and accepted, and environmental damage in full was paid. According to the laboratory research data from the TsLATI in Siberian Federal District federal research laboratory, the concentration of oil products in water today does not exceed the MPC standards [21] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (July 31, 2017). Date of treatment July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
- ↑ 1 2 Kalantayev P.A. PGT Moshkovo
- ↑ Moshkovo // Geographical names of Russia
- ↑ 1959 All-Union Census. The number of rural population of the RSFSR - residents of rural settlements - district centers by gender
- ↑ 1970 All-Union Population Census. The number of urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender. . Demoscope Weekly. Date of treatment September 25, 2013. Archived on April 28, 2013.
- ↑ 1979 All-Union Population Census. The number of urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender. . Demoscope Weekly. Date of treatment September 25, 2013. Archived on April 28, 2013.
- ↑ 1989 All-Union Population Census. The urban population . Archived on August 22, 2011.
- ↑ 2002 All-Russian Population Census. Tom. 1, table 4. The population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, regions, urban settlements, rural settlements - district centers and rural settlements with a population of 3 thousand or more . Archived February 3, 2012.
- ↑ Register of settlements of the Novosibirsk Region (prepared by the Department of Organization Management of the Administration of the Novosibirsk Region). The newspaper "Soviet Siberia", No. 146, July 31, 2007 . Date of treatment January 14, 2015. Archived January 14, 2015.
- ↑ The number of permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and regions as of January 1, 2009 . Date of treatment January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014.
- ↑ 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of urban and rural settlements of the Novosibirsk region . Date of treatment April 5, 2016. Archived April 5, 2016.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 . Date of treatment May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
- ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service of Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) . Date of treatment November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
- ↑ Table 33. The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 . Date of treatment August 2, 2014. Archived on August 2, 2014.
- ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 . Date of treatment August 6, 2015. Archived on August 6, 2015.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
- ↑ Volume 1. The size and distribution of the population. 5. The population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements - district centers and rural settlements with a population of 3,000 or more // Results of the All-Russian Population Census . - 2012.
- ↑ Le Petit Fute: Novosibirsk Oblast / Michel Strogoff & Ass., City-Guides, Country-Guides; Comp. A. Yudin; Repl. ed. V. Petrov. - Paris - Luxembourg - Moscow, 2000 .-- 192 p. - S. 166. - ISBN 5-86394-104-9
- ↑ Moshkovsky Museum of Local Lore // Museums of Russia
- ↑ “We were digging with a shovel - and there is oil ...” // Novaya Gazeta, No. 116 dated October 18, 2010. Archived copy of November 22, 2010 on the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Transsibneft Company. The circumstances of the incident with the release of oil at the Omsk-Irkutsk oil and gas pipeline in the Moshkovsky district of the Novosibirsk region
Links
- Moshkovo (Novosibirsk region) - article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia .
- Official site of the Moshkovsky district