Mosina Street - a street in the town of Sestroretsk in the Resort District of St. Petersburg . Passes from Voskov Street to 3rd Cross Street .
| Mosin Street | |
|---|---|
Telephone node on Mosin street | |
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | St. Petersburg |
| Area | Resort |
| Historical district | Spill |
| Length | 200 m |
| Former names | Petersburg road, Krestovskaya street / Petersburg road, Krestovskaya street / Petersburg street, Krestovskaya street / Petrogradskaya street, Krestovskaya street / Bolshaya Leningradskaya street, Mosina street / Bolshaya Leningradskaya street |
| Locality | Sestroretsk |
Before it was two streets. The section from Voskov Street to the Spillway Canal was called Krestovsky Street . The toponym has been known since the end of the 19th century and is probably associated with the fact that the street led to the crosses of the factory chapel (located at the beginning of Perepadskaya embankment ). The current embankment of the Builders was Krestovsky, and today Krestovsky Square was preserved - on the southwestern corner of Mosin and Voskov streets.
On December 15, 1952, Krestovskaya Street was renamed Mosin Street in honor of S. I. Mosin , the head of the Sestroretsk Arms Factory in 1894-1902, the creator of the Russian rifle of the 1891 model.
The section from the Spillway Canal to the 3rd Cross Street from the 18th century was the Petersburg road , since before the construction of the Primorsky highway it served as the beginning of the road to St. Petersburg. Since 1900, the road became St. Petersburg Street , since 1914 - Petrogradskaya Street , since 1924 - Bolshaya Leningradskaya (there are also Malaya Leningradskaya and Srednyaya Leningradskaya Streets). Name changes were associated with the renaming of St. Petersburg.
On April 14, 1975, Bolshaya Leningradskaya Street was annexed to Mosin Street [1] .
Development
- No. 1 - residential building (1969 [2] )
- No. 3 - residential building (1969 [2] )
- No. 4 - Bath (1898 [3] )
- No. 5 - residential building (1970 [2] )
- No. 6 - residential building (1960 [2] )
- No. 7 - non-residential building (1959 [2] )
- No. 8 - business center (2013). Built on the site of a wooden residential building built in 1870 [2] .
- No. 63 - School No. 434. It consists of two pre-revolutionary buildings - brick and wooden. A two-story wooden house was built in 1905. In 1908, a stone two-story school building was erected next to a wooden school. The school acquired its modern look in 1938, when the two upper floors were built on. Until early 2012, labor lessons were held in a wooden building, and a museum was located on the second floor. Then, after the 434th school moved from here, the complex was abandoned, and fires began to occur [4] . In the fall of 2014, the wooden building was demolished in order to build a three-story concrete and brick building with new classes, two swimming pools, an assembly hall and a school museum. The prosecutor's office considered the project illegal, since it was necessary to recreate a wooden building [5] .
Crossroads
- Voskova street
- Draft Lane
- Builders Embankment
- Perepadskaya Embankment
- Middle Leningradskaya street
- Primorsky highway
- Shop street
- Petrovskaya Embankment
- Flood promenade
- 1st Cross Street
- 2nd Cross Street
Notes
- ↑ Great Toponymic Encyclopedia of St. Petersburg / Ed. A. G. Vladimirovich . - SPb. : LIK , 2013 .-- S. 740. - 1136 p. - 2000 copies. - ISBN 978-5-86038-171-1 .
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 GUION data
- ↑ The year is indicated on the facade of the building
- ↑ Smolny is preparing for the demolition of an old wooden school in Sestroretsk // Gunner . - October 27, 2014
- ↑ The prosecutor's office demands to recreate the Alekseevsky school in Sestroretsk // Gunner . - August 26, 2015