Gannushkina embankment is an embankment along the left bank of the Yauza River , in the Eastern Administrative District of Moscow in the Preobrazhenskoye District [1] . It lies between Preobrazhenskaya Street and Bogorodsky Val Street . In the south, after the Sailor's Bridge, it passes into Preobrazhenskaya Embankment ; in the north, after the Glebovsky bridge, it passes into Projected Ave. No. 1888, which, in turn, is adjacent to the Bogorodsky Highway through Projected Ave. No. 1889. In the middle, next to the Preobrazhensky metro bridge , the exit from Poteshnaya Street adjoins to the right.
| Gannushkina Embankment | |
|---|---|
Gannushkina Embankment, June 2010 | |
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | VAO |
| Area | Preobrazhenskoye district |
| Underground | |
| Former names | Amusing (until 1976) |
| Postcode | 107076 |
Car traffic is one-way; towards "from the center".
House numbering consists of one house.
Content
Name Origin
Former name: Poteshnaya embankment - along Poteshnaya street .
On the embankment is the Moscow City Clinical Psychiatric Hospital named after P. B. Gannushkin (3 Poteshnaya Street). It was opened in 1904 as the Kotovskaya part of the Preobrazhenskaya hospital (psychiatric hospital No. 3). On its territory are also located: Moscow Research Institute of Psychiatry and the Federal Scientific and Methodological Center for Suicidology.
The modern name was given on November 25, 1976 in memory of P. B. Gannushkin (1875-1933) - a psychiatrist, creator of the psychiatric care service, author of the concept of minor psychiatry. He developed the doctrine of pathological characters and proposed their classification: cycloids, asthenics, unstable, antisocial, constitutionally stupid. Additional subgroups have also been described: depressive, excitable, emotionally labile, neurasthenics, psychastenics , dreamers, fanatics, pathological liars. Gannushkin was also engaged in an experimental study of hypnosis . Initiator of the development of community-based psychiatric care. Under the leadership of P. B. Gannushkin, a system of neuropsychiatric dispensaries began to be created in the USSR as a new form of community-based care for the mentally ill.
Buildings and Structures
Bridges
Bridges across Yauza :
- Glebovsky bridge .
- Transfiguration metro bridge .
- Sailor's bridge .
Buildings
All buildings are on the odd side. In total: one house, No. 1, in which there is a gas station.
Transport
Ground transportation
Public transport runs along the street, but does not stop - bus 265, the nearest stop is "Poteshnaya street"; the street is accessible from vehicles moving along Preobrazhenskaya street .
- Stop "Preobrazhenskaya Square":
- Bus : No. 80, No. 171.
- Trolleybus : No. 14.
- Minibus taxi : No.
- Trolleybus : No. 14.
Nearest underground station
- Transfiguration Square metro station .
Notes
- ↑ Transfiguration, Gannushkina Embankment. Archived on April 20, 2010.
Literature
- Morozov V. M. P. B. Gannushkin (On the 20th Anniversary of Death) // Journal of Neuropathology and Psychiatry S. S. Korsakova. " - 1953. - T. 53. - Issue. 12.