Guryanova Street (the name was approved in 1971 [1] [2] ) is a street in the Southeastern administrative district of Moscow on the territory of the Pechatniki district.
| Guryanova Street | |
|---|---|
Guryanova street at the intersection with Kukhmisterova street. Right - Tallinn Park | |
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | SEAD |
| Area | Printers |
| Length | 3.7 km |
| Underground | |
| Postcode | 109388, 109548 |
| Classifier | OMK UM |
Content
Location
The street has a complex configuration, breaking up into three segments:
1. From the nameless square at the Pechatniki metro station, the street goes to the northwest, then turns to the southwest and finally to the west. At the end of this section, the street abuts against a T-junction, to the north of which the Yuzhnoportovaya street leaves, and to the south - the second segment of Guryanova Street. On the even side, River Passage also adjoins the street, on the odd side - Shosseynaya Street . The continuation of the street to the southeast is Polbin Street .
2. From the T-junction described above, the street goes south, parallel to the Moscow River and Tallinn Park located on its bank. At the end of this segment, the street runs into a dead end near house number 77. On the odd (eastern) side, the street is adjacent to Kukhmisterova Street .
3. The third segment is not connected with the previous two. It starts from Shosseynaya Street , being a continuation of Projected Driveway No. 2263 (marked on some maps as Guryanova Street), goes southwest, then south and, completing a semicircle, rests on Shosseynaya Street near the Nikolo-Perervinsky Monastery .
House numbering - from the Pechatniki metro station.
History
The name was approved on December 7, 1971 in honor of the hero of the Great Patriotic War, Mikhail Alekseevich Guryanov , the commissioner of the partisan detachment, who died in captivity.
Terrorist attack
The street is notorious for the terrorist attack that took place on the night of September 8β9, 1999 , when the fourth and fifth entrances of house 19 were destroyed as a result of the explosion, house No. 17 was badly damaged. The tragedy claimed the lives of 109 people. In memory of the tragedy, a cross was set up for the dead, and in September 2003, the chapel of the Temple on Blood was opened [3] .
Buildings and Structures
The following houses are located on the street:
| Postcode | House numbers |
|---|---|
| 109388 | 31, 33, 35, 39, 41, 43, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 61, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77, 79, 81 |
| 109548 | 1, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23 (p. 1), 25/1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 15, 21, 23 (p. 2) |
Tallinn Park also adjoins the street.
- No. 51 - a residential building. The art critic Ivan Gorin lived here [4] .
Transport
Metro
There is metro station on the street Printers .
Ground transportation
Bus routes run along the street:
- 193 : Saratov street - Textile workers - Printers - Kozhukhovskaya - Avtozavodskaya (from Yuzhnoportovaya street to Polbina street)
- 292 : Kuryanovo - Pechatniki - Ulitsa Guryanova, 77 (from the final stop at 77 to the beginning of the street)
- 426 : Textile workers - Pechatniki - Ulitsa Guryanova, 77 (from the final stop at 77 to the beginning of the street)
- 736 : Kuryanovo - Printers - Ugreshskaya - Kozhukhovskaya (from Pechatniki metro station to Yuzhnoportovaya street)
Notes
- β Guryanova, street // Names of Moscow streets . Toponymic Dictionary / R. A. Ageeva, G. P. Bondaruk, E. M. Pospelov and others; author foreword E.M. Pospelov. - M .: OGI, 2007. - (Moscow Library). - ISBN 5-94282-432-0 .
- β Decree of the Government of Moscow of July 27, 1999 N 681
- β pechatniki.land.ru. site My District of Moscow, South-Eastern JSC, Pechatniki . Date of treatment October 20, 2008. Archived March 20, 2012.
- β Gorin Ivan Petrovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].