Shevchenko street - one of the main streets of Lviv ( Ukraine ), located in the Shevchenkovsky district . It starts from Gorodotskaya street and ends at the exit from the city ( Ryasnoe-2 microdistrict). Street construction: classicism , secession , constructivism of the 1970-2000s, industrial development of pre-war and post-war times. On the street Shevchenko tram route number 7.
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During the German occupation, part of the street (at that time - Yanovskaya) was occupied by the Yanovsky forced labor camp (September 1941 - November 1943 ), in which the Jewish population was concentrated, then taken out for destruction to the death camps. In place of the Nazi concentration camp in Soviet times, a correctional colony VL-315/30 was created, which continues to operate [1] .
Content
- 1 Name
- 2 Noteworthy buildings
- 3 See also
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
Title
- Since 1805, Yanovskaya street , as it heads to the town of Yanov (now Ivano-Frankovo ). Part of the street from the Kleparov railway station was called Yanovskaya Road .
- During the German occupation - Weststrasse (West Street).
- Since 1944, it was named in honor of the Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko .
Notable Buildings
- No. 3-a from the Soviet era, the apartment-operational department of the Western Operational Command.
- No. 34 until 1939 - an institution for Jewish orphans, in the 1950s they placed a special orphanage No. 2, and later secondary school No. 33 opened here.
- No. 38 until 1939, the beneficent institution of St. Helena, later the reception center of the regional juvenile inspection. Under the same address is a specialized judicial police battalion “Griffin”.
- No. 60 until 1939, the steam mill “Tom and the Son”, on the basis of which a glass-and-glass factory operated since 1947 , which ceased to exist during the years of independence of Ukraine.
- No. 66 Former church of reform monks and theological seminary who left Lviv in the late 1940s. In Soviet times, the building was used as a mailing point for new recruits, and the premises of a theological seminary were used as a workers' dormitory, and later a club of a glass-mechanical factory. In 1991, the building was transferred to the UAOC community, which re-consecrated the building under the Church of St. Andrew the First-Called. The building was restored and significantly rebuilt in 1993-1998 , three domes were built.
- No. 90 in the 1950-1960th hostel of the Trade and Economic Institute , later the Regional Department for Emergencies.
- No. 115 until 1939, the mill "Edmin and Son" and the First Lesser Steam Mill of millet and cereals, in the Soviet period - the mill number 25, with the independence of Ukraine, the plant was stopped and its buildings partially destroyed.
- No. 120 in the 1950s, vocational school No. 3.
- No. 158 Railway station Kleparov. A memorial table is placed on its wall in memory of the fact that over half a million Jews were taken to concentration camps through this station in 1942-1943 .
- No. 188 Chapel of St. Vladimir the Great ( UGCC ), since the 1990s.
- No. 205 Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary ( UOC-KP ). Until 1939, the chapel was closed in the 1940s, in 1958 it was rebuilt as an ordinary residential building, at which there was also a volunteer squad, and in the late 1980s a pharmacy. In September 1990, worship was restored in the building, over time, the local community reconstructed the temple and consecrated it in September 1994.
- No. 311-a Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity.
See also
- Shevchenko Avenue (Lviv)
Notes
- ↑ Miller Іgor. Lviv vulitsy and kam'yanitsі, Muri, Zamarca, mimicry and special features of the Royal capital city of Galichini. - Lviv: Center of Europe, 2008 .-- 384 p.: 330 il. ISBN 978-966-7022-79-2
Links
- Shevchenko street on the Yandex.Panorama service.