Kovylinsky Lane - Lane in the Eastern Administrative District of Moscow on the territory of the Preobrazhenskoye District. Passes from Suvorovskaya street to Preobrazhensky cemetery [1] .
| Kovylinsky Lane | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | VAO |
| Area | Preobrazhenskoe |
| Length | 490 m |
| Underground | Preobrazhenskaya Square Semenovskaya |
| Former names | 2nd Cemetery Lane (until 1922) |
| Postcode | 107061 |
Content
Name Origin
The lane received its modern name in 1922 by the name of the merchant I. A. Kovylin , the founder of the Old Believers Preobrazhensky cemetery adjacent to the lane. Until 1922, the 2nd Cemetery Lane (in 1987, the former Cemetery Drive that led from Preobrazhensky Val to the entrance to the cemetery was also included in the lane), named after the same cemetery [1] [2] .
Description
The lane starts from house number 18 on Suvorovskaya Street , passes east, crosses Devyataya Rota Street, Preobrazhensky Val Street and ends with the Preobrazhensky Cemetery . Own houses on the lane are not listed.
Noteworthy buildings and structures
- No. 16 on the Ninth Rota street on the corner with Kovylinsky Lane - the city estate of G. K. Gorbunov, 1905 - 1911 , architects O. G. Piotrovich , Yu. F. Diterikhs . Here until 1917 the printing house of Gorbunov was located. Nowadays - one of the buildings of the Preobrazhensky district court.
- No. 24, Building 1 on Preobrazhensky Val Street at the corner with Kovylinsky Lane - one of the buildings of the residential building quarter (1929-1931, architects I. S. Nikolaev , G. M. Mapu , M. Rusanova) [3] in the style of constructivism [ 4] (the first post-revolutionary civil buildings), scheduled for demolition [5] .
- No. 25, buildings 1–4 along Preobrazhensky Val Street on the corner with Kovylinsky Lane — buildings on the territory of the former Moscow Nikolsky Monastery of the Believer .
Transport
Ground transportation
On Kovylinsky Lane does not pass public transport. At the intersection with Preobrazhensky Val Street, there is the Preobrazhensky Market stop of tram lines No. 2, 11, 36, 46 and bus lines No. 311, 346.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Starodubov, Yuri. How the Soviet government appreciated the merits of the merchant Kovylin // Eastern District . - 2015. - No. 38 (127) for October 18 . - S. 15 .
- ↑ Kovylinsky Lane // Streets of Moscow. Old and new names. Toponymic dictionary-reference book / E. M. Pospelov. - M .: Publishing Center "Science, Technology, Education", 2003. - 336 p.
- ↑ Vasiliev N. Yu., Evstratova M.V., Ovsyannikova E. B., Panin O. A. Avant-garde architecture. The second half of the 1920s - the first half of the 1930s. - M .: S. E. Gordeev , 2011 .-- S. 308. - 480 p.
- ↑ Goodbye, working settlement. Moscow decides the fate of the blocks of the era of constructivism // "Newspaper", January 27, 2009 (inaccessible link)
- ↑ History of tomorrow // Moscow and Muscovites