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Liteyny Avenue: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 59°56′27″N 30°20′54″E / 59.9408°N 30.3483°E / 59.9408; 30.3483
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* No. 24 — {{ill|Muruzi House|ru|Дом Мурузи}} with [[Apartment Museum of Joseph Brodsky|Joseph Brodsky apartment]].
* No. 24 — {{ill|Muruzi House|ru|Дом Мурузи}} with [[Apartment Museum of Joseph Brodsky|Joseph Brodsky apartment]].
* No. 36 — [[Nikolay Nekrasov|Nekrasov]] Museum.
* No. 36 — [[Nikolay Nekrasov|Nekrasov]] Museum.
* No. 37 — Department of Crown Domain (Dom depatamenta udelov), 1840s, Harold Bosse.
* No. 37 — Department of Crown Domain ('Dom departamenta udelov'), 1840s, [[Harald Julius von Bosse|Harold Bosse]].{{sfn|Shvidkovsky|2007|p=339}}
* No. 42 — former [[Zinaida Yusupova]] mansion, currently [[St. Petersburg Institute of International Trade, Economics and Law]].
* No. 42 — former [[Zinaida Yusupova]] mansion, currently [[St. Petersburg Institute of International Trade, Economics and Law]].
* No. 56 — Mariinsky Hospital (built by [[Giacomo Quarenghi]]).
* No. 56 — Mariinsky Hospital (built by [[Giacomo Quarenghi]]).

Revision as of 18:56, 8 February 2020

59°56′27″N 30°20′54″E / 59.9408°N 30.3483°E / 59.9408; 30.3483

Liteyny Avenue in
St. Petersburg

Liteyny Avenue (Template:Lang-ru, Liteyny Prospekt) is a wide avenue in the Central District of Saint Petersburg, Russia. The avenue runs from Liteyny Bridge to Nevsky Avenue.[1]

The avenue originated in 1738 when the forest was cleared to make a trail from Nevsky Prospekt to a foundry (est. 1711) at the banks of Neva River. The Russian word "liteyny" means "metal casting" as an adjective, hence the street name.

Soon after the October Revolution, the avenue was named Prospekt Volodarskogo after the Russian revolutionary V. Volodarsky. In 1944, the historic name was restored.

Notable Locations

Footnotes

  1. ^ "One-hour Walk: Liteyny Avenue" (in Russian). Vedomosti SPb. 2015-01-21. Retrieved 2020-02-08.
  2. ^ Zinovieff 2003, p. 233.
  3. ^ Shvidkovsky 2007, p. 339.

References