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Gagarinsky Lane

Gagarinsky Lane (until the XVIII century - Old Konyushennaya Street , Dolgiy Lane , in 1962-1993 - Ryleyev Street ) - lane in the Central Administrative District of Moscow . Passes from Gogolevsky Boulevard to Plotnikov Lane , lies south of the Sivtsev Vrazhek lane parallel to it. House numbers are from Gogolevsky Boulevard.

Gagarinsky Lane
The photo
Gagarinsky Lane, 11.
general information
A countryRussia
CityMoscow
CountyTsAO
AreaKhamovniki
Length0.7 km
UndergroundKropotkinskaya (150 m.)
Postcode119019 (No. 1, 1/3 and 2-8), 119034 (No. 3-31), 119002 (from No. 33 and 10 to the end)
Phone numbers+7 (499) XXX ----
Gagarinsky Lane (Moscow)
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One of the few toponyms with the surname Gagarin, not associated with the world's first astronaut .

Content

History

 
Gagarinsky Lane (lower center) on the plan of Moscow 1917

Gagarins owned a large estate in this place from the end of the XVII - beginning of the XVIII century. In the 30s of the XVIII century there lived a steward - Prince Bogdan Ivanovich Gagarin . Then the lane was called Old Konyushennaya street, as it was the main street of Konyushennaya Sloboda. Towards the end of the 18th century, the alley began to be called Gagarinsky, although the Gagarins' estate was already sold out in separate sections.

In 1962, Gagarinsky Lane was renamed Ryleyev Street in honor of the poet, the head of the Northern Society of Decembrists Kondraty Fedorovich Ryleyev , who during his stay in Moscow in 1824 stayed at the house of the Decembrist V.I.Shteyngel . But Steingel sold his house in Gagarinsky Lane back in 1819 , and Ryleyev lived in his house on Chistye Prudy. In 1994, the street again became Gagarinsky Lane [1] .

In musical Moscow, the lane is known as the "homeland" of the famous Gnesinka (the school was located in the lane from 1895 to 1900, the building has not been preserved to this day).

Noteworthy buildings and structures

Odd side

  • No. 1 - the house belonged to a family of famous Moscow bakers Filippov. Until the mid-1990s, a bakery functioned in the courtyard.
  • No. 3 - branch of Rosselkhozbank.
  • No. 5, p. 1 - residential building. In apartment No. 1 in 1972-1986, the artist A. T. Zverev lived and worked [2] .
  • No. 5, p. 2, 3 - city estate of A. T. Rzhevsky - Likhachev - M. Philip (middle of the 18th century - 1st half of the 19th century; 1990s), object of cultural heritage of regional significance . In 1839-1842, the owner of the estate was the Decembrist M.F. Orlov . Here, in 1885, the landscape painter I. I. Levitan lived, in 1915, the poet B. L. Pasternak [2] .
  • No. 7 - a residential building. In apartment No. 3 in the years 1935-1938 lived the family of M.E. Plisetskiy : wife, actress Ra Messerer and daughter, future ballerina Maya Plisetskaya .
  • No. 9 - apartment building (1906, architect I. A. German )
  • No. 11 - the private mansion of the architect N. G. Faleev (1810s; 1817-1845; 1895-1896, architect N. G. Faleev), an object of cultural heritage of regional significance [2] . In the 1920s and 30s, the house was provided to foreign diplomats and was called the 10th house of the People’s Commissariat of Foreign Affairs. In this house lived the famous American journalist John Reid , author of "10 Days That Shook the World." The Dutch rococo-style stove, parquet of the 19th century, was preserved in the interiors; the date of the last reconstruction of the house “1896” was laid out in the vestibule at the entrance to the floor with mosaics. House owned by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, renovated in 2012
  • No. 15/7 - the house of Baron Steingel built in 1816. In 1830 he starred in the Turgenev family. Since the second half of the XIX century. belonged to the family of professor N. M. Lopatin . As E. N. Trubetskoy wrote, “in Moscow at that time there was no house that would so vividly personify the spiritual atmosphere of the Moscow cultural society as the Lopatins' house”; many famous writers, university professors gathered here on the "Lopatin environment" ... Now - the architecture department of the Academy of Arts. [3] One of the “ceremonial” reception rooms of Zurab Tsereteli (photos of Tsereteli along with Putin and Medvedev are visible in the window). In the courtyard there is a Georgian restaurant and a mini zoo with rabbits, goats and a hand boa.
  • No. 23, p. 1, 2 - the ensemble of tenement houses O. A. Gartman (1910-1911, architect D. M. Chelishchev ), a valuable city-forming object [2] .
  • No. 25 is a manor house built in 1820 . The house was built in 1820 after the fire of Moscow and retained the appearance of a modest empire house. In the years 1867-1879. the Decembrist P.N. Svistunov lived in the house. Decembrists M.I. Muravyov-Apostol , M.A. Bestuzhev , A.E. Rosen , who returned from exile, were here. In 1878, the Decembrist twice visited L.N. Tolstoy . In 1912-1947, the architect A. V. Shchusev lived in the mansion [2] . In 2000-2008, an office complex was built in the courtyard (architects M. Khazanov, D. Razmakhnin, G. Mudrov) [4] . By the beginning of the 2000s, the manor house was dilapidated, with the funds of the investor building the office complex in 2005-2007, the mansion was restored. The building has well preserved interiors of the XIX century [5] .
  • No. 29 - residential building (1905, architect M. Ya. Kulchitsky )
  • No. 33/5/2 - office building of Vneshtorgbank (architect A. R. Vorontsov )
  • No. 35 - the mansion of A. D. Muravyov (1905, 1913, architect A. D. Muravyov ). Here lived the actor and director Sergei Jurassic .
  • No. 37 - a mansion (1907, architect S. M. Kalugin ). In January 1907, Prince A. V. Chegodaev bought from the honorary citizen of Moscow I. A. Ermolov , a “courtyard” with a one-story wooden house, instead of which a two-story building for a surgical hospital was built.

On the even side

  • No. 2 - the house was built in 1852 by arch. Nikolai Kozlovsky. Here, until his death in 1881, the architect Konstantin Ton lived.
  • No. 4/2 - the house of the sisters L. M. and A. M. Ilyinsky (recreated), an object of cultural heritage of regional significance. Here in 1831 an ode. A.S. Pushkin lived with his friend P.V. Nashchokin [2] .
  • No. 6 - a residential building. Here lived the actor Vyacheslav Tikhonov [6] , military leaders Georgy Egorov [7] and Mikhail Zaitsev [8] .
  • No. 8A - the mansion of S. D. Mstislavsky (1925, architects A. V. Schusev , B. K. Roerich, engineer S. I. Makarov) [2] At present, the house is a workshop of the artist-illustrator Vladimir Chapli, who calls himself grandson of S. D. Mstislavsky.
  • No. 14/5 — the apartment building of I. M. Korovin (1914, architect I. G. Kondratenko ) [9] . Actor and director Oleg Efremov lived in the house [10] .
  • No. 16 - a residential building. Here lived the Soviet and Russian politician A. N. Yakovlev [11] .
  • No. 18/2 - Manor Kazarinova-Vishnyakova. The main house (1817, 1877) - the mansion of Nikolai Petrovich Vishnyakov (Annexes of 1903, architect M. A. Felkner ).
  • No. 18/2, p. 3 - The house in which the composer S. I. Taneev lived in 1900-1915 [2] .
 
Church of St. Blasius
  • No. 20 - Church of the Holy Martyr Blasius in the Old Konyushennaya Sloboda
  • No. 22/8 - House of the clergy of the Church of St. Blasia, 1822
  • No. 24/7 - residential building. Prominent doctors lived here - neuropathologist E. V. Schmidt [12] , radiologist I. L. Tager [13] , cardiac surgeon G. M. Solovyov [14] .

Lane in works of literature and art

  • Mentioned in the story "Hunters 2" series "Ethnogenesis."
  • The mansion with griffins (No. 11) is described in a rogue novel by George Davydov “Apollon”.

Notes

  1. ↑ Vostryshev M. I. Moscow: all streets, squares, boulevards, alleys. - M .: Algorithm , Eksmo, 2010 .-- S. 112. - ISBN 978-5-699-33874-0 .
  2. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 City Register of the Immovable Cultural Heritage of the City of Moscow (Neopr.) . The official website of the Committee on Cultural Heritage of Moscow . Date of treatment September 12, 2012. Archived October 18, 2012.
  3. ↑ Prechistenka Archived December 3, 2013 on Wayback Machine
  4. ↑ Malinin N.S. Architecture of Moscow. 1989-2009: A Travel Guide. - M .: Ulei, 2009 .-- S. 382. - 400 p. - ISBN 978-5-91529-017-3 .
  5. ↑ Moscow Architectural Heritage: Point of No Return (Issue 1) (Neopr.) . www.maps-moscow.com. Date of treatment June 5, 2015.
  6. ↑ Tikhonov Vyacheslav Vasilievich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  7. ↑ Egorov Georgy Mikhailovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  8. ↑ Zaitsev Mikhail Mitrofanovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  9. ↑ Moscow: all streets, squares, boulevards, alleys / Vostryshev M. I. - M .: Algorithm , Eksmo, 2010 .-- S. 554-555. - 688 p. - ISBN 978-5-699-33874-0 .
  10. ↑ Efremov Oleg Nikolaevich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  11. ↑ Yakovlev Alexander Nikolaevich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  12. ↑ Schmidt Evgeny Vladimirovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  13. ↑ Tager Joseph L. // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
  14. ↑ Soloviev Gleb Mikhailovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].

Literature

  • Muravyov V. B .. Moscow streets. Renaming Secrets. - M .: Algorithm, Eksmo, 2006 .-- 336 p. - (People's Guide). - ISBN 5-699-17008-1 .
  • Names of Moscow streets: a toponymic dictionary. (unavailable link) (unavailable link from 06/14/2016 [1154 days]) - M .: OGI, 2007. ISBN 5-94282-432-0

Links

  • Yandex Maps - Gagarinsky Lane
  • Google Maps - Gagarinsky Lane
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gagarinsky lane&oldid = 97993978


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Clever Geek | 2019