Sovetskaya Street - a street in the historical center of Dmitrov ( Moscow region ) from the intersection with Kooperativny Lane and Shkolnaya Street to the intersection with Zagorskaya Street and Sovetskaya Square .
Content
History
Before the revolution of 1917, it did not stand out, being the northern part of Moskovskaya Street .
Until the beginning of the 21st century, Sovetskaya Square (the old name is Verkhnyaya Torgovaya) was open for traffic and through it from Sovetskaya Street it was possible to get to Professionalnaya Street. Sovetskaya Street was part of the federal highway A-104 Moscow - Dubna , intensive traffic was carried along it, including vehicles passing through the city in transit.
In 2001 , at the beginning of a city improvement campaign related to the 850th anniversary of Dmitrov ( 2004 ), Sovetskaya Square, on the initiative of local authorities and, initially, without coordination with central authorities, was made exclusively pedestrian. Transit traffic was redirected to the bypass road west of the city. Subsequently, this road was officially accepted as part of the A-104, instead of the site transferred to the city. [one]
Now, to get from Sovetskaya Street to Professionalnaya Street, you need to go around the central part of the city along the streets of Zagorskaya, Minin and Semenyuk.
Transport
The street is the most important transport artery of the city, along which the vast majority of the routes of Dmitrov's public transport: buses and minibuses . On the street there is a stop "City Council".
Noteworthy buildings and structures
On Sovetskaya street are located:
- House and hotel of the merchant Sukhodayev (Sovetskaya St., 2 and 4). Built in 1872 and is now occupied by the administration of the Dmitrovsky district .
- Church of the Savior of the Miraculous Image [2] (Sovetskaya St., 12). Built in 1767 - 1773 at the expense of baroque parishioners. To date, completely rebuilt and occupied by the services of the district administration.
- Cinema "Planet" (Sovetskaya St., 3).
- The building of the store "Birch" and the restaurant "Volgusha" (Sovetskaya St., 3a).
Notes
- ↑ Dmitry Pushkar, A city without “roofs” (inaccessible link) // Moscow News, No. 31 for 2005 (08.08.2005)
- ↑ Church card on the site “Temples of Russia”