Lyublinsky Lane - a lane in the Admiralteysky District of St. Petersburg , in the historical district and the municipal district of Kolomna, on Pokrovsky Island .
| Lublin Lane | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | St. Petersburg |
| Area | Admiralteysky |
| Length | 150 m |
| Underground | |
| Former names | Blind Alley, Newfound Lane |
| Police unit | Kolomenskaya part |
Content
Geography
The lane runs from Spinning Lane to English Prospect . The original name - Deaf Lane - has been known since 1798 . In the mid- 19th century , the Newfound Lane option appeared. Apparently, it was associated with punching the alley to Spinning and creating a through passage.
History
On July 14, 1859, the lane was named Lublin, in honor of the Polish city of Lublin , which at that time was part of the Russian Empire .
Noteworthy buildings and structures
- House 2 (corner with house 5 on Spinning Lane) - apartment building, built in 1908 according to the project of A. L. Lishnevsky .
- House 4 - apartment building (1911, architect N.P. Basin )
Literature
- Gorbachevich K. S. , Khablo E. P. Why are they so named? On the origin of the names of streets, squares, islands, rivers and bridges of Leningrad. - 3rd ed., Rev. and add. - L .: Lenizdat , 1985 .-- S. 217. - 511 p.
- City names today and yesterday: Petersburg toponymy / comp. S.V. Alekseeva, A.G. Vladimirovich , A.D. Erofeev et al. - 2nd ed., Rev. and add. - SPb. : Lick , 1997 .-- S. 71 .-- 288 p. - (Three centuries of Northern Palmyra). - ISBN 5-86038-023-2 .
- Gorbachevich K. S. , Khablo E. P. Why are they so named? On the origin of the names of streets, squares, islands, rivers and bridges of St. Petersburg. - SPb. : Norint , 2002 .-- 353 p. - ISBN 5-7711-0019-6 .
Links
- Overview of street buildings on Citywalls