Ryasnea ( Ukrainian. Ryasne , usually does not lean and pronounced “Ryasne”, Polish. Rzęsna Polska ) is an area in the Shevchenko district of Lviv ( Ukraine ), located on the north-western outskirts.
Ryasnoye consists of two microdistricts: Ryasnoy-1 and Ryasnoy-2, which are separated by railway tracks. Ryasnoye-1 in the past was the village of Ryasnoye-Polskoye with the Polish population, which in 1925 numbered about 2000 people [1] . The village was a parish Roman Catholic church, built on the site of a wooden 1742 year . During World War I, the village of Ryasnoye-Polskoye and the nearby fields were the site of a battle between Russian Austro-German troops on June 21, 1915 , as a result of which the Russian army was forced to leave Lviv the next day [1] . The lands of the village Ryasnoe Polskoye began along the present-day Shevchenko street, starting from the Kleparov railway station; The territory north of Kleparov station became part of Lviv already in the 1930s, when it was built up with individual houses and received the name of Batorievka (in honor of King Stephen Batory ) [2] .
The current microdistrict of Ryasne has grown as a housing estate north of the previous Batoriyevka near the buildings of the Electron plant, which produced televisions and military radio electronics. The construction of a metallurgical plant was also started. Ryasnoye was annexed to the city according to the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Ukrainian SSR of March 9, 1988 No. 5541-XI. The annexed territory in accordance with this regulatory act was 477 ha. Residential tracts of Soviet and modern construction are located north of the axial street of the district - st. Shevchenko , and south of it - the industrial zone.
By the time of joining Lviv, intensive housing construction was already being conducted here, workshops of plants were built: conveyor, Khimmash, Elektron auto-loaders. Unlike Sykhiv , where the development was carried out according to a well-thought-out concept, Ryasnoye was built, although according to the approved master plan, but in separate fragments - by industrial enterprises [2] .
There are three churches and one Catholic church on the territory of Ryasny-1, and one Greek Catholic church in Ryasny-2.
The main streets of the neighborhood: Shevchenko Street (the main street connecting parts of the neighborhood with each other and in general with the central part of the city), Bryukhovichskaya, Ryasnyanskaya, Velichkovsky.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Orlowicz M. Ilustrowany przewodnik po Lwowie. Wydanie drugie rozszrone. Lwow-Warszawa: Zjednoczone zaklady kartogr. i wydawnicze tow. naucz.szkol sredn. i wyz.sa, 1925. S. 238.
- ↑ 1 2 Melnik Igor. Lvivskii vulitsі і Kam'yanitsі, muri, caulks, before the world and other specialties of the Korolivka metropolitan mist of Galicini. - Lviv: Europe Center, 2008. - 384 pp .: 330 Il. ISBN 978-966-7022-79-2