Vvedenskaya street - a street in the Petrograd district of the city of St. Petersburg . Passes from Bolshoi Prospect of the Petrograd Side to Kronverksky Prospekt .
| Vvedenskaya street | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | St. Petersburg |
| Area | Petrogradsky |
| Historical district | Petrograd side |
| Underground | |
| Former names | 2nd Bolshaya Belozerskaya street, 2nd Vvedenskaya street, Rosa Luxemburg Street, Oleg Koshevoy street |
| Postcode | 197198 |
| Police unit | Petersburg part |
Title History
The name comes from the Vvedensky church , built in 1732 in the settlement of the Yamburg garrison regiment and demolished in 1932. It was originally called Bolshaya Vvedenskaya, to distinguish it from those that received the name of the 1st Vvedenskaya (then Gulyarnaya, now named after Liza Chaykina ) and 2nd Vvedenskaya (now Syezhinskaya street ). All these Vvedensky streets were marked on the plan of the capital of 1756.
Subsequently, this street was called simply Vvedenskaya, in 1923-1944 - Rosa Luxemburg Street; in 1944-1952 - again Vvedenskaya (after the return of the previous names to the Leningrad streets), in 1952-1991 - Oleg Koshevy street. The secondary name - Vvedenskaya street - was returned in 1991.
Other place names
At one time there was Vvedenskaya street in Polyustrov, named after the Vvedensky Convent on the Porokhov highway (now the highway of the Revolution). From another Vvedensky church, located on Zagorodny Prospekt , in the Semenovsky Regimental Courtyard, they received the name Vvedenskaya Square, Vvedensky Canal (this name is kept on the street located on the site of the canal filled up). There was also the Vvedensky bridge across the former canal along the axis of Zagorodny Prospekt (it retained its name even after renaming the square and the canal into Vitebsk Square and the Vitebsk Canal until the canal was filled up).
Attractions and city features
- House 4 / Bolshaya Pushkarskaya Street , house 18 - three-story corner apartment building, built in 1879 - 1880 in the eclectic style, designed by L. F. Shperer for the hereditary honorary citizen I. A. Averin. The facade is decorated with rustication and window frames. From autumn 1889 to 1918, physiologist I.P. Pavlov lived in this house: until 1892 on the third floor, and then in a more spacious (7-room) apartment No. 21 on the second floor. In the 1920s, this building housed medical facilities. In 1949, plaques were installed on the facade and in the clinic - Pavlov’s former apartment. The apartment underwent redevelopment during a comprehensive overhaul ( 1977 - 1980 ). The house is a historical monument of regional importance.
- On the site, limited by Vvedenskaya street, Bolshaya Pushkarskaya street and Voskov street (formerly Big Belozerskaya), there is the Pushkarsky (Vvedensky) garden, on the site of which the Vvedensky church was formerly located.
- Building 5 / Bolshaya Pushkarskaya Street , Building 13 - a six-story residential building from the beginning of the 20th century, architect Dubinsky. On the top floor there was a stained-glass window in the Art Nouveau style with a landscape with sunrise in an oval cartouche . In November 2017, Zhilkomservice No. 2, responsible for the operation of the house, dismantled the stained-glass window and replaced it with ordinary plastic windows.
- House 7 - the profitable house of E.P. Mikhailov, in which the artist Boris Kustodiev lived in 1915-1927.
OKN No. 7831415000 - House 10 is a tenement house, built in 1904-1905 according to the project of the architect V.A. Reis in the Art Nouveau style for Colonel K. Z. Mikheev, from 1906 belonged to the wife of the titular adviser Olga Konstantinovna Petrusevich [1] , and in 1917 - Prince D. N. Svyatopolk-Mirsky [2] .
- House 10a - Petrograd District Post Office, 198th Post Office [3] . Until 1905, this section was an integral part of section 10, which belonged to Alexander Faddeevich Evmentiev, owner of the carp factory and construction contractor [4] . The modern building was built in the 1970s according to the project of architect E. Andrashnikov and engineer V. Ekiloyan (construction began in 1972) [5] .
- House 21 / Kronverksky prospect , 57 - residential complex "Diplomat", 2008 , modern retrospectivism.
- Building 24 / Kronverksky Prospect, 55 - a residential building, built according to the design of P.O. Osipov in 1889 , built on the design of S.V.
Intersections
- Big Avenue of the Petrograd Side
- Bolshaya Pushkarskaya street
- Voskov street
- Blagoev street
- Kronverksky Avenue
Notes
- ↑ All Petersburg in 1906.
- ↑ All of Petersburg for 1917.
- ↑ List of Post Office Post Offices in St. Petersburg Archived May 7, 2012 on Wayback Machine
- ↑ All Petersburg in 1905.
- ↑ L. Zagorovskaya . Oleg Koshevoy Street // Agitator's Notebook, No. 25, 1974
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. 268-269. - 511 p.
- City names today and yesterday: Petersburg toponymy / comp. S.V. Alekseeva, A.G. Vladimirovich , A.D. Erofeev et al. - 2nd ed., Revised. and add. - SPb. : Lick , 1997 .-- S. 31 .-- 288 p. - (Three centuries of Northern Palmyra). - ISBN 5-86038-023-2 .
- Architects of St. Petersburg. XIX - beginning of XX century / comp. V. G. Isachenko ; ed. Yu. Artemyev, S. Prohvatilova. - SPb. : Lenizdat , 1998 .-- 1070 p. - ISBN 5-289-01586-8 .
- 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