2nd Tverskaya-Yamskaya street - a street in the Central Administrative District of Moscow on the territory of the Tver District . The street starts from Armory Lane . The numbering of the houses goes from Armory Lane.
| 2nd Tverskaya-Yamskaya street | |
|---|---|
The second Tverskaya-Yamskaya street from the side of the 1st Tversky-Yamsky lane | |
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | TsAO |
| Area | Tverskoy |
| Length | 0.95 km |
| Underground | |
| Postcode | 125047 |
| Phone numbers | +7 (495) |
Content
- 1 Origin of the name
- 2 History
- 3 Buildings
- 4 Famous residents
- 5 notes
Name Origin
The name of the XVI century is given according to the Tver Yamskaya settlement , which appeared here under Ivan the Terrible and remained almost until the end of the XIX century . A number of streets and lanes are also named after Tverskaya Yamskaya Sloboda, differing by serial numbers: 1st Tverskaya-Yamskaya Street , 3rd Tverskaya-Yamskaya Street , 4th Tverskaya-Yamskaya Street , 1st Tverskaya-Yamskaya Lane , 2- th Tverskaya-Yamskaya lane .
History
Living in the Tver pit settlement, occupying a large space on both sides of the Tver road, the coachmen provided transportation of mail , passengers and goods, first along the Moscow- Tver highway , then Moscow -St . Petersburg . The Sloboda retained its character until the second half of the 19th century , but after the end of the Yamskaya race and the construction of the Smolensky (now Belorussky ) station in 1870, the active development of the Tversky-Yamsky streets began.
Buildings and Structures
- No. 8/9, p. 1 - office building (1999, architects N. Biryukov, A. Vorontsov , N. Bunkina) [1] .
- No. 18 - The Museum of Russian Harmonica A. Mirek .
- No. 38, architectural monument (newly identified object) - Residential building of Saharotrest (1931, architect O. A. Stapran );
- No. 52, architectural monument (regional) - Moscow Compound of the Transfiguration of Valaam Monastery :
- the main building with the church of Saints Sergius and Herman of Valaam miracle workers and the chapel of the Holy Prince Alexander Nevsky (1900-1901, architect A. I. Roop );
- along Alexander Nevsky Lane : cell building (1913, architect A. I. Roop ).
Famous residents
- In the house No. 54, as of June 2009, the Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov lives. Here, until the beginning of the 1990s, the future first president of Russia Boris Yeltsin and some other leaders of the CPSU lived [2] .
Notes
- ↑ Malinin N.S. Architecture of Moscow. 1989-2009: A Travel Guide. - M .: Ulei, 2009 .-- S. 62 .-- 400 p. - ISBN 978-5-91529-017-3 .
- ↑ Kasyanov’s apartment is bigger than Fradkov’s house // KP.RU