Pleshtevsky lane - a street in the center of Moscow in the Basmanny district between Spartakovskaya street and Aptekarsky lane . The Mosvodokanal is located here.
| Pleshkovsky Lane | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | CAO |
| Area | Basmanny |
| Length | 480 m |
| Underground | Bauman |
| Postcode | 105005 |
Content
Name Origin
It retains the name of the area of Pleteshka (XVIII century), which was distinguished by a confused configuration of driveways. Another previously used name is Plesheshevsky Lane [1] .
Description
Pleteshkovsky Lane starts from Spartakovskaya Street, runs south-east, then turns right to the south-west, then turns left again south and goes to Aptekarsky Lane. Lefortovsky Lane begins on the left side of it, and in front of it, the Pleeshkovsky impasse (abolished) earlier left to the right.
Noteworthy buildings and structures
On the odd side:
- No. 3, building 2 - Mosvodokanalbank ;
- No. 3A, Building 1 - International Jewish Newspaper;
- No. 19 - Children's Home No. 13;
On the even side:
- No. 2/10 (corner with Spartakovskaya street) - the former mansion of N. A. Golubeva, built in 1882.
- No. 2 - Mosvodokanal ;
- No. 4 - a former school, built by architect S. B. Zalessky in 1914 in the Art Nouveau style .
- No. 6 - a brick- built superstructure, before the revolution belonged to O.N. Mikhelson.
- No. 8 - former apartment buildings of F. D. and P. I. Kopylov.
- No. 10 - the former apartment building of S. R. Shukshina.
- No. 22 - Mosvodokanalniproekt.
Based on the memoirs of S. N. Durilin
In Pleteshkovsky Lane spent his childhood S. N. Durylin ; according to his recollections, their house was adjoining: on the one hand (from Spartakovskaya Street ) with the property belonging to the widow of Privy Councilor I.P. Matyushenkov , and on the other - with the property of the lieutenant's son F. P. Makerovsky ; on the contrary, “the possession of Golubeva stretched from Elokhovskaya itself”, where a house of the insane was placed in a “two-story building”. There was also a “tavern, which was in a twist to a dead end” [1] .
The house where the Durilins lived "was a large, two-story stone building of an old building of the beginning of the 19th century, and maybe of the end of the 18th ... Father bought it from some gentleman who had previously rented the house to the Pushkin School." <...> about the corner with our garden owned by the college registrar I. V. Skvortsov <...> Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin was born. " Also, “on the east side above Kukuy ” was a building from the time of Peter the Great, in which “the first Russian photographic record factory“ Victory ”of Captain Zankovsky” [2] , which owned the “Karabanov’s house” ( Baumanskaya Street , 38 bld. 1), appeared .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Vostryshev M.I. Moscow: all streets, squares, boulevards, side streets. - M .: Algorithm , Eksmo, 2010 .-- S. 436. - 688 p. - ISBN 978-5-699-33874-0 .
- ↑ Durylin S. N. In its corner: From old notebooks. - M.: Moscow Worker, 1991 .-- 336 p. - S. 76-115.