All about car tuning

An interesting route around the Ploshchad Vosstaniya metro station. Vosstaniya Square: description and history History and general information


A grandiose stele “To the Hero City of Leningrad” rises above one of the largest city squares. This 36-meter obelisk was erected in May 1965. The monument is crowned with the “Golden Star of the Hero” and involuntarily reminds every citizen and tourist of the dramatic history of the city during the Great Patriotic War.

    pl. Uprisings


Nikolaevsky Station building (named after railway) was built in 1847-1851 according to the design of the architect Konstantin Ton and is the “twin” of the Leningradsky railway station in Moscow, which he built. The station was not renovated until 1868, but due to the significantly increased passenger traffic, it was decided to urgently reconstruct it. So, a two-story outbuilding was built here to receive luggage, and the right wing of the building was connected to the royal chambers.

Already in 1912, the authorities announced a competition for the design of a new building for the Nikolaevsky station, but the architects were faced with a difficult task. The difficulty of the restructuring was that the new station could only be expanded towards the tracks, since by that time Znamenskaya Square had already been formed. However, the architect Vladimir Shchuko figured out how to do the right thing, which helped him win the competition. Soon, construction began on the arrival building, which was to become the left wing of the new building, without disturbing the harmony of the ensemble of Znamenskaya Square.

In 1923, in connection with the renaming of the Nikolaevskaya Railway to Oktyabrskaya, the station received the same name, but in 1930 it was renamed again, calling it Moskovsky, as we know it to this day.

    pl. Uprisings


The building, built in the 1930s, formerly housed the St. Nicholas Edinoverie Church. During the years of persecution of religion, the temple was closed and partially rebuilt. Today, the Museum of the Arctic and Antarctic is located here, telling St. Petersburg residents about the exploits of travelers, exploration of the most remote corners of the planet and their strange inhabitants.

    st. Marata, 24


You won’t find this street on the city map, but it still exists, although it is hidden from the eyes of the uninitiated behind two doors leading to the art center “Pushkinskaya, 10”. For all those who are close to the romantic lyrics of the legendary The Beatles, this place will become a real mecca of the Fab Four in St. Petersburg. The walls of the building are decorated with a yellow submarine, bas-reliefs of the band members, as well as various elements and details, one way or another connected with the work of the group, which won the hearts of millions of listeners around the world.

    art center “Pushkinskaya, 10”, Pushkinskaya st., 10 (entrance from Ligovsky pr., 53)

House from a Russian fairy tale

On the quiet Kolokolnaya Street, running parallel to Nevsky Prospekt, there is a house from a Russian fairy tale. Its facade attracts attention with its bright majolica decor and amazing decoration with many details. Flowers, leaves, kokoshniks on the facade, decoration of balconies - you can look at all this for a long time, especially if you are lucky enough to get into the courtyard. In the courtyard of the house there is a whole ensemble with a turret, tiled flies and beautiful details. The house was built by architect Nikonov in 1900. At the beginning of 2012, the building was restored after a fire, and today it has acquired an even more vibrant and fabulous appearance.

    Kolokolnaya st., 11


The Bread Museum has a unique collection of more than 14,000 exhibits that show the life and lifestyle of our ancestors through the ingenious invention of man - bread. The exhibition shows the history of the creation of bread, the development of bread baking in St. Petersburg from its foundation to the present. The museum displays various samples of baked goods, tools, utensils, baking dishes, a collection of samovars, signs of commercial establishments, paintings, objects of applied art, documents and a collection of books on cooking. A small shop with a Russian oven and all the necessary equipment for baking and selling bread has been recreated.

    Ligovsky Ave., 73

"Muzeros"




The museum claims to be the largest in Russia. The exhibition tells visitors about the development and evolution of sexual relations from pagan times to the present day. The special pride of the collection is a copy of the 18th century dining chair for the pleasures of Empress Catherine the Great. The museum does not forget about the modern achievements of the sex industry: 3D multimedia and interactive attractions await their visitors. The exhibition is constantly replenished by the city residents themselves.

The space is open 24 hours a day. Excursions and master classes are offered.

    st. Sedova, 11, shopping center "Evrika"


The first book center of the famous St. Petersburg chain, opened in 2005. Concerts, master classes, meetings with writers and other interesting events began to be held here for the first time (and are still being held). Then the “Park of Culture and Reading” appeared on Nevsky, but for many bookworms “Bukvoed” on Vosstaniya remains the most favorite. There is a cafe hidden among the book halls. The store provides access to books to thirsty bibliophiles 24 hours a day.

    Ligovsky Ave., 10


On Wednesdays, Russian auteur films are shown for free in a small hall, and on Fridays they stage European and Hollywood classics. Regulars are advised to arrive early to reserve a seat. comfortable places, and after the screening stay to discuss the film in a close circle of cinema lovers.

    Liteiny pr., 58


The amazing exhibits of the exhibition (micro-crafts by master V. Aniskin) are so small that poppy seeds and hair cuts serve as podiums for them. Spectators look at the creations exclusively under the lenses of microscopes, which are built into exhibition forms and equipped with an autonomous LED lighting source.

    Nevsky pr., 81


This is not just a cafe, but a real street courtyard under the roof of one of the houses in St. Petersburg. Sitting at the table, you can watch the dim light from the windows, listen to the water gurgling in the drainpipes or the yard cats meowing at each other. The picture is complemented by numerous power lines over the chiffonier roofs, antique furniture with various antique utensils, and musical instruments placed throughout the hall. And right there there was a shabby black piano, the sounds of which can be heard every Thursday. Any St. Petersburg resident, entering the “Music of the Roofs” cafe, will plunge into an atmosphere of nostalgia, and every foreign guest will be able to truly experience the “music of the roofs” of St. Petersburg.

    st. 1st Sovetskaya, 12

Hotel "Oktyabrskaya"



“Oktyabrskaya” (or in the old manner “Znamenskaya”) on the station square is considered to be the oldest hotel Northern capital. No wonder, because for the first time its doors opened to guests in 1851. "Oktyabrskaya" does not consist of one building at all, but of two - the first stands exactly on the square opposite the Moskovsky Station, the facade of the second faces Ligovsky Prospekt. The design of both buildings was carried out by the architect Alexander Gemilian.

Already in the first years of its existence, the hotel managed not only to accommodate a lot of guests, but also to change a good dozen owners. This happened for the reason that in those days there were quite strict rules for the operation of taverns and hotels. Therefore, until 1887, almost complete redevelopment took place here several times.

The history of the hotel was not influenced in the best way by revolutionary events - all the property was described, and the Oktyabrskaya itself was transferred to the department of the Nikolaev Railway. So, in the 20s, an old hotel with a long history was turned into the City Hostel of the Proletariat, where street children were taken from all over the city. By the way, in those days “Oktyabrskaya”, turned into a “hostel”, was simply called GOP, and its inhabitants, accordingly, were called gopniks. Thus, the word “Gopnik” enriched the Russian language not without the participation of the old hotel.

    Vosstaniya Square

Church of Our Lady of Lourdes


The Roman Catholic Church in Kovensky Lane was built in 1903-1909 for the needs of the French Catholic community according to the design of architects Leonty Benois and Marian Peretyatkovich.

The appearance of the new Catholic church was extremely ascetic, strict and gothically gloomy. The architecture of the building uses Romanesque style motifs, as evidenced by the towers, asymmetry of forms and the portal in the idea of ​​an arch, which is located in the center of the main facade.

After the October Revolution and the events of the civil war, all Catholic churches in Petrograd and its suburbs were closed, but the French church continued its work and remained one of the few operating Catholic churches cities. When the Soviet authorities broke off diplomatic relations with France in 1941, and the rector of the church, Father Florent, was expelled from the country, services in the church stopped, but were resumed fairly soon.

To this day, the temple is active; divine services and organ evenings are regularly held here.

    Kovensky lane, 7, lit. A

Ovsyannikovsky Square. Garden named after N. G. Chernyshevsky



In the second half XIX century On his own initiative and with his own money, merchant Stepan Ovsyannikov creates a park for public use. To create the project, he attracts the architect Nikolai Grebenok. This place was not chosen entirely by chance. Firstly, the abandoned wasteland had been confusing the eyes of the townspeople for many years, and secondly, the merchant himself lived in a house whose main facade still faces a picturesque square, and therefore could not help but be concerned with creating a green area where they could walk his children and grandchildren.

That square, built in the 19th century, had the shape of a polygonal figure with seven straight sides, with fountains built on round platforms. The square itself was decorated with trees and shrubs of various species, and its territory was enclosed by an iron fence on a stone foundation. There were three entrances to the garden: from Mytninskaya Street, 4th Sovetskaya Street and Malookhtinsky Avenue.

When Ovsyannikov dies, at the behest of Emperor Alexander II, the square is named in his honor, and the layout of the square changes several times: the entrance from Mytninskaya Street is removed, the number and direction of paths are changed, fountains are removed and created again.

The square received its modern name - the Garden named after Nikolai Chernyshevsky in 1952: it was here on May 19, 1864 that the civil execution of Nikolai Chernyshevsky, a Russian revolutionary, writer and scientist, took place. Despite such a good reason and the passage of time, native St. Petersburg residents still continue to call this green paradise the Ovsyannikovsky Garden.

    Mytninskaya st., 10; Bakunina Ave., 9; 3rd Sovetskaya st., 21


The monument to Alexander Pushkin on Pushkinskaya Street was opened on August 7, 1884 on the initiative of the city public administration. The creators of the monument were sculptor Alexander Opekushin and architect Nikolai Benois. The figure of the writer stands on a pedestal made of black marble, on each side of which lines from “The Bronze Horseman” are engraved in gold.

There is an interesting urban legend according to which before the war they wanted to move the monument to another place. Workers and equipment arrived and intended to go to the monument, but the children playing in the garden surrounded the workers and began shouting, waving their arms: “This is our Pushkin.” Confused workers called one of the Leningrad officials, who remained silent for a long time, and then agreed to leave the monument in its historical place.

    Pushkinskaya street

Square on Vosstaniya Square

We will meet another green island in the middle of Nevsky Prospect on Vosstaniya Square at the intersection of Nevsky and Ligovsky Prospekts. For the first time my official name received the area in 1849. Then it was called the Square to the Znamensky Bridge. A bridge across the Ligovsky Canal led to the church in the name of the Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem. The church was built in 1804 according to the design of the architect F.I. Demertsova. It was popularly known as Znamenskaya, or “Znamenye”, according to one of the aisles. It was also called Pavlovskaya, after the name of the famous scientist, Nobel Prize winner Ivan Petrovich Pavlov. He was its zealous parishioner, and according to one legend, he even got married in it. In 1940, after Pavlov's death, the church was demolished. Now in its place stands the ground pavilion of the Ploshchad Vosstaniya metro station.

In 1857, the name of the square was edited, giving it a modern sound. Now it began to be called Znamenskaya.

On May 23, 1909, an equestrian monument to Alexander III was unveiled on Znamenskaya Square - a rare example of satire in monumental sculpture: the overweight figure of the king with the heavy gaze of a secret alcoholic, as his contemporaries believed, perhaps not without reason, on a well-fed, corpulent beast, as if nailed to a coffin-shaped pedestal. Almost immediately a scandal broke out. The loyal part of St. Petersburg society demanded that the statue, shameful for the monarchy, be immediately removed. The democratic public, on the contrary, welcomed a work of such accusatory power. The City Duma got involved in the dispute. And only the author of the monument, Paolo Trubetskoy, an Italian subject who was brought up far from the “all-seeing eye” and “all-hearing ears,” remained unperturbed and joked: “I’m not involved in politics, I just depicted one animal on another.” In the salons they told an anecdote about one Georgian prince who exclaimed, looking at the monument: “I know that Sasa is a zopa, but why bother emphasizing the Church like that?” It must be said that the monument really evokes mixed feelings. If you believe folklore, many St. Petersburg residents felt ordinary awkwardness towards him. There is an anecdote about a visiting Englishman who asked his St. Petersburg friend to show him a new monument, “what Trubetskoy did.” “And so, brothers, I felt offended,” the Petersburger later said, “that I took him to Falconet’s Peter the Great.” - “So what about the Englishman?” - “Nothing, he praised.”

Monument to Alexander III on Znamenskaya Square

However, there is a legend trying to explain the current situation. As if the monument to Alexander III, which seemed so crude in the architectural environment of St. Petersburg, was actually intended to be installed in the Urals, “on the border of Asia and Europe,” high in the mountains. It was supposed to be viewed from the windows of a train moving along the Trans-Siberian Railway. This would provide an opportunity to look at the monument differently. The figures of the horse and rider would not seem so massive and clumsy.

Paolo Trubetskoy came to Russia in 1897 to teach at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture and immediately took part in a competition to design a monument to the tsar who had died several years earlier. Having won the competition, the sculptor began work. He made 14 versions of the monument, but none of them satisfied the official commission. Legend has it that as soon as she heard Maria Feodorovna, the widow of the late emperor, approaching one of the projects, she joyfully exclaimed: “The spitting image of Sashenka!” - The members of the high jury, looking at each other and shrugging their shoulders in surprise, finally decided on this option.

The monument was subjected to unprecedented ostracism in February 1917. As soon as they called him back then: “Scarecrow”, “Chest of Drawers”, “Cattle on Cattle”, “Fool on a Hippopotamus”, “Bear on an Elephant”. They developed sophistication in ditties, poems and songs.

The old fashion for the so-called pyramid riddles was revived, the answers to which brought incredible delight to the street crowd. Several versions of these wonderful riddles have been preserved in folklore:

On the square there is a chest of drawers,

There's a hippopotamus on the dresser,

There's a freak on the hippopotamus,

There is a cap on the back.

What kind of fool is this daddy?

On the square there is a chest of drawers,

There's a hippopotamus on the dresser,

An idiot on a hippopotamus

The idiot is wearing a hat

There's a cross on the hat

Who will say the word -

Togo is under arrest.

The fate of the monument turned out to be sad. In 1937, the monument was removed from the square, by that time it was no longer Znamenskaya, but the Uprising. The reason is traditional, he allegedly interfered with tram traffic along Nevsky Prospekt. For a long time, the monument was kept behind a cast-iron grill in the courtyard of the Russian Museum. According to the apt expression of folklore, he became the “Prisoner of the Russian Museum.” During the siege of Leningrad, he almost died from a shell. By this time, a belief had formed in Leningrad: the well-being of the city, its honor and dignity were protected by three horsemen: Peter I - on Decembrist Square, Nicholas I - on St. Isaac's Square and Alexander III - on Vosstaniya Square. And the fact that one of them was forced to leave his historical place was considered by Leningraders as a sign of trouble.

It is no coincidence that one of the first victories of the democratic public in post-Soviet St. Petersburg is considered to be the liberation of the monument to Alexander III from behind bars of the Russian Museum. Voice: “Freedom for the prisoner of the Russian Museum!” - was heard. The monument was taken out of prison, but was installed not in its historical place, but in front of the entrance to the Marble Palace. In the courtyard, on a low pedestal, until recently occupied by the notorious “Lenin armored car.” They said it was temporary. What was meant by this is unknown. Historical place The monument to Alexander III in front of the Moskovsky railway station is occupied.

Meanwhile, the life of the former Znamenskaya Square, by that time renamed Vosstaniya Square, continued. In 1952, on the site of the removed monument, a ground square was laid out, in the middle of which a foundation stone was installed for the future monument to V.I. Lenin.

Monument to Alexander III at the Marble Palace

However, over time, plans changed. The foundation stone was removed, and in 1985, for the 40th anniversary of the Victory of the Soviet people in the Great Patriotic War, an obelisk to the “Hero City of Leningrad” was erected in the center of the park on Vosstaniya Square, designed by A.I. Alymov and V.M. Ivanova.

The multi-ton granite monolith, processed in the shape of an army bayonet, immediately attracted the attention of urban folklore. It is perhaps difficult to find a monument in the city that has earned so many negative definitions. The softest of them: “Border Pillar”, “Stone Nail”, “Screwdriver”, “Chisel”, “Reamer”, “Spindle”, “Fork”, “Pin”, “Nail”, “Skewer”, “Pipette” , “A parachutist’s nightmare.” But even among this not very flattering series there are also harsher ones: “A bayonet in the throat of Nevsky Prospekt.”

There was talk of moving the obelisk to Courage Square. It seemed to many that there, near the world-famous Piskarevsky Memorial Cemetery, on the square, the very name of which is dedicated to the memory of Leningraders who defended their city from the fascist invasion, the obelisk would acquire its true meaning.

The debate about what should be on the square - a monument to Alexander III or an obelisk to the hero city of Leningrad - continues to this day. Sometimes it seems that the square itself is included in the dispute. And in fact, it turned out that the obelisk has an unexpected optical effect. The shadow of the star crowning the stele, according to urban folklore, at a certain time and under certain lighting forms the clear outline of a double-headed Russian eagle on the asphalt of Nevsky Prospekt.

From the book Moscow and Muscovites author

From the book All about Moscow (collection) author Gilyarovsky Vladimir Alekseevich

Naryshkinsky Square Naryshkinsky Square, this best of Moscow's boulevards, was formed in the middle of the last century. Now it is located between two passages of Strastnoy Boulevard, internal and external. Previously, there was only one passage, internal, and where the park was, it was large

From the book Nevsky Prospekt. House by house author Kirikova Lyudmila Alexandrovna

From the book Streets of the Petrograd Side. Houses and people author Privalov Valentin Dmitrievich

Georgy Tovstonogov, square In 2010, the green area near house No. 4 on Petrovskaya Embankment was named after G. A. Tovstonogov, artistic director of the Bolshoi Drama Theater. September 28, 2010 in front of the house designed by sculptor I. B. Korneev and architect

From the book Moscow Akuninskaya author Besedina Maria Borisovna

Square in Bryusov Lane In order not to interrupt the excursion, along the way we will examine several places that also fit into its theme, albeit indirectly. Nevertheless, I will be pleased if what someone sees along the way reminds them of episodes from their favorite books. Turn off from Mokhovaya

From the book Moscow and Muscovites author Gilyarovsky Vladimir Alekseevich

Naryshkinsky Square Naryshkinsky Square, this best of Moscow's boulevards, was formed in the middle of the last century. Now it is located between two passages of Strastnoy Boulevard, internal and external. Previously, there was only one passage, internal, and where the park was, it was large

author

Petrovsky Square on Senate Square At the beginning of the 20th century, next to the Alexander Garden, in the center of a huge desert space known as Senate Square, a square called Petrovsky appeared. The square was laid out around the monument to Peter the Great, which was

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Square in front of the Kazan Cathedral In 1737, by decree of Empress Anna Ioannovna, the Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary was built especially for the icon of the Kazan Mother of God on the “Nevskaya Prespektiva”; it was then popularly nicknamed Kazan. She stood closer to the sidewalk, approximately where

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Square on Lomonosov Square In the story about Catherine Square, we already talked about the grandiose ensemble of the Alexandrinsky Theater conceived by Karl Rossi. The implementation of the project involved the organization of a huge space from Nevsky Prospekt to the Fontanka embankment,

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Square on Pushkinskaya Street In the 1730s, the territory along the right side of Nevsky Prospekt behind the Fontanka was given over to employees of the Palace Department for settlement. Gradually, settlements of cooks, blacksmiths, candle makers, and stirrups formed here. The memory of them is still

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Square on Arts Square To continue the story about the gardens and squares that have developed on the streets and squares located parallel to Nevsky Prospect, let’s return to Gostiny Dvor, go to the opposite, even side of the avenue and walk along Mikhailovskaya Street to

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Exchange Square Near the port, behind the modern Exchange building, there was the so-called Exchange Square. In the spring, with the arrival of foreign ships in the port, a brisk trade in exotic overseas wonders unfolded in Birzhevoy Square - talking parrots,

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Rumyantsevsky Square Traditionally, the western border of the Spit of Vasilyevsky Island is considered to be the Kadet Line. As we already know, in 1818, at the suggestion of the architect Karl Rossi, the monument to Field Marshal P.A. was moved here, to Vasilievsky Island, from the Champ de Mars.

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Square on Turgenev Square In 1886–1887, in front of the western facade of the Church of the Intercession, designed by architect N.L. Benoit creates a public garden. In the 1920s, around the Church of the Intercession there was a bustling flea market with all the characteristic signs of the St. Petersburg criminal world and

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Kalinkinsky Square Sadovaya Street ends at the very mouth of the Fontanka, at the Staro-Kalinkin Bridge, where the river, bifurcating into two branches, flows into the Neva. In the second half of the 18th century, here, at the entrance to the Staro-Kalinkin Bridge, along the Great Peterhof Road, a

From the book Legends of St. Petersburg gardens and parks author Sindalovsky Naum Alexandrovich

Square on Moskovskaya Square Under these conditions, there could be no talk of any garden and park construction. Only in Soviet times, when, due to the proximity of the borders, capitalist Finland seemed at that time aggressively dangerous in the fevered imagination of the leaders

Z Namenskaya Square is one of the most famous in St. Petersburg.
Now in the center of the square there is a stele in the form of a bayonet, but this was not always the case. The area has changed a lot appearance compared to imperial times (and the only one on Nevsky Prospekt) and has changed compared to Soviet times.

The square was popularly called Znamenskaya after the chapel of the Church of the Sign, consecrated in 1765. Holy Mother of God. In 1794 - 1804, according to the design of the architect F. I. Demertsov, the church was rebuilt in stone. In 1809, a cast-iron fence and two chapels appeared (both were rebuilt by P. A. Chepyzhnikov during the renovation of 1863-1865). From the name of the church (“Znamenskaya”), Znamenskaya Square and Znamenskaya Street (now Vosstaniya Square and Street) got their names. The bridge over the Ligovsky Canal, located on Nevsky Prospekt, was also called Znamensky.

I feel sorry for the church. Many great people attended it, including Academician Pavlov.

My maternal great-grandmother got married in this demolished church...

This is a document and below is herself... Although the seal is not very similar to the original. Maybe there was another Znamenskaya?

Previously, on the square there was a monument to the Trans-Siberian Railway in the form of the equestrian Emperor Alexander III.

In Soviet times, the monument stood with the inscription "SCARECROW". And then it was demolished and now it stands behind the backyard in the courtyard of the Marble Palace) and then the Church of the Sign itself.

There are interesting folk poems about the monument.

“There’s a chest of drawers, there’s a hippopotamus on the chest of drawers, there’s a hat on the hippopotamus, what kind of fool is this daddy?!”

Ilyich was supposed to appear on the square. Lenins and St. Petersburg are tightly connected. It was not for nothing that the city was Leningrad. They sculpted so many monuments that the political bird had nowhere to spoil.

With the advent of people's power, the square received the name "Uprising Square". And Lenin in the center would be its classic socialist conclusion. The name obliged, where else if not there...

There was even a stone laid on the square with the inscription: (You’ll go straight...) “A monument to Lenin will be built here. Laid down on the day of the celebration of the 250th anniversary of Leningrad." But, fortunately, it didn’t work out.

The fact that the 250th anniversary of Leningrad was celebrated four years later still surprises contemporaries. But this reason is banal and respectful - Stalin died in 1953, there was no time for celebrations. They mourned for four years. In addition, Khrushchev did not like Leningrad (all Soviet leaders were distinguished by this). They did not expect anything good from the intelligentsia and culture. But this is not the main reason why the monument to the leader was never erected.

According to some estimates, at that time (1957) in Leningrad there were only seven monuments and busts of Lenin in the open air, mainly on the territory of factories. But then, at least one Ilyich a year appeared in our city.

This is the remains of the Znamenskaya Church. Now this is the metro lobby. You can come in and pray...

Of course, Vosstaniya Square is a serious place, not a backyard near a factory warehouse; you can’t erect a monument here from the corner.

There is a legend that there was a competition. And the work of the sculptor Anikushin, the main and most “star” Leningrad sculptor of that time, won. But the authorities could not install the monument correctly. He did not get up according to all the canons of socialist feng shui. All the time he turned backwards towards something... or sideways towards some urban dominant. No matter how you install Lenin, your ass doesn’t lead to communism and doesn’t paint bright prospects, but the matter is political. If you put your outstretched hand towards Nevsky, what about the passengers leaving the Moskovsky station? Foreign guests will go out to the city of the world revolution and the first thing they will see is Ilyich’s backside. Politically incorrect!

They lasted until 1965, and then the order arrived to erect a monument to the hero city of Leningrad in connection with the twentieth anniversary of the Victory Day, and it was decided to build an obelisk on Vosstaniya Square that would look the same from all sides."

True, this obelisk to the “Hero City of Leningrad” was finished only twenty years later, already in independent Russia. As Rosembaum wrote, they stuck a bayonet into the heart of the city... as they say, it’s a beautiful phrase, but if you’re serious about an architectural solution, then it’s a matter of taste and color. For example, I like it. There is not enough vertical space in our city.

Vosstaniya Square is located in the central area of ​​Old Palmyra. It is one of the symbols of the city and is included in the historical cultural capital countries. Vosstaniya Square is not a simple name. Her story is unique and interesting.

Up until the capital was moved back to Moscow, Vosstaniya Square had a completely different name - Znamenskaya. It is located at the junction of Nevsky Prospekt, its only turn, and Ligovsky Prospekt. What is the reason for this name of the square? The thing is that in the first third of the last century there was a church of the same name here. And finally the name “Znamenskaya” was assigned to it in the year the construction of the station, called “Nikolaevsky”, began. In 1917, it was here that the bloody, violent events of the last two Russian revolutions unfolded. The famous February manifestos were proclaimed here, and heavy battles and skirmishes took place here. And so next year the square will be renamed in a modern way. In the mid-20th century, the Ploshchad Vosstaniya metro station was opened on the square. The station belongs to the 1st metro line. Inside it is decorated with bronze sculptures that reflect the terrible events of the February and

Vosstaniya Square has its own long history, dating back to the time of Elizabeth. During her reign, the Znamenskaya Church was founded here, a project that was carried out by Demertsov. It is worth noting that the church was rebuilt more than once. The square itself was formed only in the second quarter of the 19th century, when the main ensemble of the square was laid out according to Efimov’s design. This was connected, first of all, with the construction of the second Petersburg (Vosstaniya Square)-Moscow railway in the country. The famous architect Ton built it here, but then, as mentioned above, it was called Nikolaevsky. A little later, according to Gemlian’s designs, the Znamenskaya Hotel, better known as “Oktyabrskaya”, will be erected, as well as the famous clergy house designed by engineer Sokolov. In the spring of 1909, a monument to Alexander the Liberator will be solemnly opened on the square; after 28 years, the monument will be transported first to the Russian Museum, and then installed in Marble Palace. During the Great Patriotic War, military installations were built on the square - it was a kind of springboard for all soldiers and commanders.

And already in 1945, the winners were greeted in a big way at the restored Moscow railway station. In the early 1980s, an obelisk was erected in honor of the 40th anniversary of the Great Victory. Monuments of this type were built in all hero cities by order of the Communist Party. is a symbol of the square.

Vosstaniya Square in St. Petersburg is not easy a nice place, this is more than the elegance of monuments. This is a historical square! The place where Lenin spoke was also visited by Alexander II. This is the place where the fate of the country was decided in 1917. And it must be stored and protected. It's not that difficult after all!