The social city of the Chkalov plant is a residential microdistrict in the Dzerzhinsky district of Novosibirsk , built in 1930-1940.
| Sotsgorod plant named after Chkalov | |
|---|---|
| City | Novosibirsk |
| The administrative district of the city | Dzerzhinsky |
Content
History
The construction of the social city began at the same time as the construction of a mining equipment plant, subsequently redesigned into an aircraft factory . The construction of the residential village was led by A.F. Tabatchikov. Residential buildings were designed by K. E. Osipov and A. V. Baransky. General guidance on the design and "design" of residential buildings was carried out by K. E. Osipov and B. A. Bitkin .
On Republican Street in 1932, houses No. 1, No. 3, No. 5, No. 7 and No. 9 were erected and in 1936 - No. 11.
In 1932, houses No. 49 and No. 49a were built on Knitted Street.
The following buildings were built on Aircraft Builders Street from 1933 to 1941: No. 2a (1933), No. 2 and No. 3 (1936), No. 6 and No. 6a (1937), No. 4 (1938), No. 5 and No. 7 (1940) No. 8 (1941).
In 1938, 4 stores were opened on the territory of the social city: meat, dairy, cotton sales and mechanical trade.
Initially, it was planned to build a theater in the social city. In honor of the future cultural institution, the street was named Teatralnaya. But instead of the theater, a Kalinin club was built (the modern Children's House named after Kalinin), which opened in 1945.
Architectural Style
Many buildings of the social city were built in the style of the Stalinist Empire . In the construction of houses number 1, number 3 on the street. Republican and No. 49, No. 49a on the street Knitted used typical projects of Novosibsotsstroy, based on the projects of the Ernst May brigade [1] [2] .
Notes
- ↑ Lamin V.A. Encyclopedia. Novosibirsk - Novosibirsk: Novosibirsk Book Publishing House, 2003. - S. 817. - 1071 p. - ISBN 5-7620-0968-8 .
- ↑ Maranin I. Yu. , Oseev K.A. Novosibirsk: Five disappeared cities. Book II. The city of red sun. - Novosibirsk: Svinin and sons, 2017 .-- S. 256-260. - ISBN 978-5-98502-175-2