Slavic Boulevard - a boulevard in the Western administrative district of Moscow in the area of Fili-Davydkovo .
| Slavic Boulevard | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | Company |
| Area | Fili Davydkovo |
| Length | 1.2 km |
| Underground | |
| Postcode | 121352 [1] |
| Phone numbers | +7 (495) XXX-XX-XX, +7 (499) XXX-XX-XX |
Description
The boulevard runs parallel to Kutuzovsky Prospekt , connecting Davydkovskaya and Kremenchug streets . House numbering starts from Davydkovskaya Street.
The boulevard is a single-lane two-way road and a narrow strip of green space between Kutuzovsky Prospekt and this road. Moreover, part of the boulevard adjacent to Kutuzovsky Prospekt was reserved for light indoor garages (in 2015, garages were dismantled and free parking was equipped in their place).
Building 1968-1972
The boulevard was built up in 1968-1972 according to a single project of architects A. Afanasyev, E. Raevskaya, A. Chasov, engineer Yu. Avrutin and others. [2] A complex of 4 multi-story vertical towers and 4 horizontal 13-story buildings was created in series elongated along the boulevard and creating a panorama of Kutuzovsky Prospekt in the area. In the built-in and attached to 13-storey residential buildings trading enterprises housed the Gastronom store, the Slavyanka cafe with the Culinary store (now the Perekrestok supermarket, Dixie supermarket and the Yakitoriya-Bento Japanese cuisine store), the department store Minsk β(now M.Video supermarket for consumer electronics and Magnit store), andβ Household βself-service store (now Sportmaster store). The residential part of the houses is located on a large platform, it was separated from the shops by a technical floor. In front of the trading companies, they arranged green stalls and parking for cars.
Storehouses were provided in the basement floors. Their loading was carried out through the tunnels under the attached part of the store. As a result, autonomy was created for the operation of commercial and residential parts of the building.
The trading floors occupied the entire 23-meter-wide width of the first floors and had two-sided daylight, since the windows went both to Slavyansky Boulevard and to the inside of the block. Stained glass windows facing the highway stretch along the front of each store for more than 100 meters. [2]
Building and reconstruction in our time
Currently, there is an active development and reconstruction of the street. In place of the old demolished houses, new high-rise buildings appeared, some of which can be attributed to the category of long-term construction. At the beginning of the street, a multifunctional shopping and entertainment center was built, the commissioning of which was planned for the end of the 3rd quarter of 2015, but the opening was periodically postponed to a later date. The opening took place on August 25, 2016. It was reconstructed with expansion on Kutuzovsky Prospekt Street, and a new underground passage was built under it to replace the outdated and unable to cope with the flow of people.
Also, it is planned to build the Slavyanskiy Boulevard railway station, which will be located not on the boulevard itself, but on the Smolensk direction next to the metro station of the same name. The opening of which will take place in the third quarter of 2019. In 2013, reconstruction was planned on Slavyansky Boulevard with the introduction of one-way traffic (traffic from Davydkovskaya to Kremenchugskaya Street) and the arrangement of the corresponding traffic signs on the posts, however, the project is currently frozen.
Name Origin
The boulevard was named August 2, 1966 "in honor of the fraternal Slavic peoples who embarked on the path of socialist construction." [3]
Transport
Nearest underground station
- Slavic Boulevard
It was originally planned that the station would be built between the boulevard and Kutuzovsky Prospekt , even a foundation pit was partially dug. However, then the project was changed and the station was located on the opposite side of Kutuzovsky Prospekt in relation to the boulevard. As a result, the Slavyansky Boulevard metro station does not have direct access to Slavyansky Boulevard.
Ground transportation
- Bus routes No. 77, 104, 104K (on weekdays), 325, 329, 641, 641k, 732 with stops on the boulevard: "Kindergarten", "Metro" Slavyanskiy boulevard "(before the opening of the metro called" Davydkovo ") ) β,β Davydkovo (before the opening of the metro it was called Slavyansky Boulevard β)β and βAleksey Sviridov Streetβ (previously called βMinsk Department Storeβ).
- On Kutuzovsky Prospekt there is a stop βMetro Slavyansky Boulevard (before the opening of the metro it was called Davydkovoβ) of city ββbuses No. 91, 157, 157K, 205, 231, 622, 840 and H2 (night) and suburban buses 139, 339, 454 , 477, 523, 818, 818e.
- At the beginning of the Staromozhayskoye highway, the Metro Slavyansky Boulevard stop is located, which was introduced after the expansion of Kutuzovsky Prospekt of buses No. 58, 103 and 464.
- Urban transport routes
- 58 : Youth - Kuntsevskaya - Slavic Boulevard - Minsk - Lomonosov Avenue - Kosygina Street
- 77 : Matveevskoe - Artamonova Street - Slavic Boulevard
- 91 : Matveevskoe - Aminievskoe highway - Slavic Boulevard - Victory Park - Kutuzovskaya / Kutuzovskaya - Kievsky Station - 4th Setunsky passage
- 103 : General Dorokhov Street - Slavic Boulevard - Minsk - Lomonosov Avenue - University - New Cheryomushki - The 23rd quarter of New Cheryomushki
- 104 : Filevsky park - Slavic Boulevard - Platform Work Settlement
- 104k : Slavic Boulevard - Platform Work Settlement
- 157 : Bialowieza Street - Slavic Boulevard - Victory Park - Kutuzovskaya / Kutuzovskaya - Kiev railway station
- 157k : Bialowieza Street - Slavic Boulevard
- 205 : Dovzhenko Street - Kievsky station - Kutuzovskaya / Kutuzovskaya - Victory Park - Slavic Boulevard - State Farm "Zarechye" - Shopping Center
- 231 : Bialowieza Street - Slavic Boulevard - Filevsky Park
- 329 : Southwest - Ozernaya street - Matveevskoe platform - Slavic Boulevard
- 464 : Akademika Pavlova Street - Youth - Kuntsevskaya - Slavic Boulevard - Minsk - Lomonosov Avenue - University
- 622 : Ozernaya street - Ryabinovaya street - Slavic Boulevard
- 641 : Matveevskoe - Matveevskaya street - Nezhinskaya street - Slavic Boulevard - Vatutina Street
- 641k : Matveevskoe - Nezhinskaya street - Slavic Boulevard - Vatutina Street
- 732 : Krylatskoe - Krylatskoe - Youth - Kuntsevskaya - Slavic Boulevard
- 840 : 66th quarter of Kuntsev - Slavic Boulevard - Victory Park - Kutuzovskaya / Kutuzovskaya - Kiev railway station
- 883 : Filevsky park - Slavyanskiy Boulevard - Skolkovo Platform - Shopping Center
- H2 : Bialowieza Street - Slavic Boulevard - Victory Park - Kutuzovskaya / Kutuzovskaya - Library named after Lenin - Manezhnaya Square - Theater Square - Lubyanka - China town
Incidents
On July 15, 2014, at the entrance to the Slavyansky Boulevard station of the Moscow metro, three train cars went off the rails.
According to preliminary data, about 30 people suffered as a result of the emergency. Some of them are blocked in one of the train cars. Evacuation was ongoing, rescuers used hydraulic tools.
According to Viktor Biryukov, the head of the press service of the Russian Ministry for Emergencies in Moscow, the wagons went off the rails due to a decrease in voltage on the contact rail between the Slavyansky Boulevard and Victory Park stations. Because of this, a false alarm occurred, which caused a sharp stop of the electric train [4] .
Films and TV shows related to Slavic Boulevard
- Irony of Fate or Enjoy Your Bath! (Titles and the return of Lukashin from Leningrad during a bus trip).
Notes
- β Slavic Boulevard // Moscow Postal Codes
- β 1 2 P.P. Zueva, I.V. Shishkin. "Trading buildings of Moscow in the Soviet period." Moscow, 2006. ISBN 5-9647-0073-X
- β Slavic Boulevard // 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 Three cars went off the rails in the subway: about 30 people were injured .
Links
- Slavic Boulevard . - All-Moscow Classifier of Moscow Streets (OMK UM). Date of treatment June 20, 2009. Archived March 24, 2012.
- Slavic Boulevard // 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 .
- Slavic Boulevard . - on Yandex: Maps . Date of treatment June 20, 2009.