Détails de l'endroit
Détails de l'endroit
Berezhkovskaya embankment
The residents of the settlement had their own church of the Tikhvin Mother of God, it stood on the place where house No. 2 is now located. This area began to be actively built up quite late — at the end of the 19th century, several large enterprises and warehouses of the Kiev Railway appeared here.
During the Soviet period, Berezhkovskaya Embankment was dressed in granite, a tram was launched along its entire length to Vorobyovy Gory (which were then called Leninskiye Gory), and the roadway was expanded. In the 1960s, the embankment underwent less positive transformations — the ancient church was demolished, as well as all traces of the former settlement here.
Arkady Strugatsky lived on Berezhkovskaya Embankment, in house No. 14, for a long time. While admiring its industrial landscape, he created a significant part of his works. By the way, an important role in these landscapes is played by the Frunzenskaya CHPP built in the 1930s (now TPP-12).
The residents of the settlement had their own church of the Tikhvin Mother of God, it stood on the place where house No. 2 is now located. This area began to be actively built up quite late — at the end of the 19th century, several large enterprises and warehouses of the Kiev Railway appeared here.
During the Soviet period, Berezhkovskaya Embankment was dressed in granite, a tram was launched along its entire length to Vorobyovy Gory (which were then called Leninskiye Gory), and the roadway was expanded. In the 1960s, the embankment underwent less positive transformations — the ancient church was demolished, as well as all traces of the former settlement here.
Arkady Strugatsky lived on Berezhkovskaya Embankment, in house No. 14, for a long time. While admiring its industrial landscape, he created a significant part of his works. By the way, an important role in these landscapes is played by the Frunzenskaya CHPP built in the 1930s (now TPP-12).
The residents of the settlement had their own church of the Tikhvin Mother of God, it stood on the place where house No. 2 is now located. This area began to be actively built up quite late — at the end of the 19th century, several large enterprises and warehouses of the Kiev Railway appeared here.
During the Soviet period, Berezhkovskaya Embankment was dressed in granite, a tram was launched along its entire length to Vorobyovy Gory (which were then called Leninskiye Gory), and the roadway was expanded. In the 1960s, the embankment underwent less positive transformations — the ancient church was demolished, as well as all traces of the former settlement here.
Arkady Strugatsky lived on Berezhkovskaya Embankment, in house No. 14, for a long time. While admiring its industrial landscape, he created a significant part of his works. By the way, an important role in these landscapes is played by the Frunzenskaya CHPP built in the 1930s (now TPP-12).
Adresse
nab. Berezhkovskaya
La Source
https://kudago.com/msk/place/berezhkovskaya-naberezhnaya/