Moscow. Walking along the Boulevard Ring. Part 1. November 2018. [4K]
No skyscrapers. No fuss. But a huge number of monuments of history and architecture.
Today we will walk with you along the Boulevard Ring, one of the oldest central transport rings in Moscow.
We promise - every step of this journey will be imbued with the breath of history.
This is the first part of the walk.
Enjoy watching!
00:04 Patriarshy Bridge - The Patriarchal Bridge leads from the Cathedral of Christ the Savior to the artificial island Baltschug.
00:15 - In the distance you can see the monument to Peter the Great.
00:25 - Profitable House Pertsovoy, a monument of historical architecture and nice look building.
01:00 - Christ the Savior Cathedral. What you see is a restored building in the 1990s. The historic church (built in 1837) was blown up by the Communists on December 5, 1931.
04:15 - Kropotkinskaya metro station
06:25 - Moscow Museum of Modern Art (one of the branches).
09:06 - Chess Museum
12:30 - The second monument to the writer Gogol (1951 installation). Many contemporaries considered this monument to be less reliable and badly conveying the character of the writer. Moscow has kept both the original and the new monuments.
15:00 - Arbatskaya metro station and Khudozhestvenny theatre.
15:10 - Arbat street
18:10 - Gogol house
18:50 - The first monument to the writer Gogol (1909 installation).
19:46 - The memorial plate on the building on the left says: here, from 1936 to 1953, the Arctic explorer George Ushakov lived.
20:10- Museum of Oriental Art
23:30 - Rotunda fountain Natalia and Alexander
23:35 - Nikitskie Vorota Square
24:25 - TASS building a monument of historical architecture
25:30 - Monument to scientist Clemet Timiryazev
30:35 - Monument to the great Russian poet Sergey Esenin
33:35 - Pushkin Theater
40:35 - Monument to Alexander Pushkin
46:55 - Moscow City Parlament
54:15 - Trubnaya metro station enter and the monument to soldiers of law and order, who died in the line of duty
Moscow. Walking along the Boulevard Ring. Part 2. November 2018. [4K]
The Boulevard Ring is one of the most interesting historical routes in Moscow. At every step, you will be greeted by a monument or a house in which a famous writer, scientist or politician lived.
Enjoy the beautiful view of quiet streets in the center of a huge metropolis!
5:18 - Kazanskaya church and Rozhdestvensky Monastery
6:39 - Uspenskaya church
9:15 - Monument to Nadezhda Krupskay, wife and ally of Vladimir Lenin
12:39 - Monument to Vladimir Shukhov, the famous architect and engineer
15:15 - Chistye Prudy metro station
16:45 - Monument to Alexander Griboedov, great Russian playwright, diplomat and composer
20:33 Monument to Abay Kunanbaev, them famous Kazakhstan writer
21:53 - Chustye Prudy (Clean Ponds)
22:30 - Sovremennik Theater
37:30 - Monument to Rasul Gamzatov
39:18 - Museum of border troops
Moscow Boulevard Ring 4/4
4K Russia | Garden Ring road (Sadovaya-Kudrinskaya - Novinsky Boulevard) walking tour | Moscow 2019
Route
4k walk, a documentary slow tv travel channel features a series of 4k video walks in Moscow City. This walk is along Garden ring (Sadovaya - Kudrinskaya - Novinsky Boulevard) . Watch Moscow City 4k !!!
The Garden Ring, also known as the B Ring (Russian: Садо́вое кольцо́, кольцо́ Б; transliteration: Sadovoye Koltso), is a circular ring road avenue around central Moscow, its course corresponding to what used to be the city ramparts surrounding Zemlyanoy Gorod in the 17th century.
The Ring consists of seventeen individually named streets and fifteen squares. It has a circumference of sixteen kilometres. At its narrowest point, Krymsky Bridge, the Ring has six lanes. After finishing the reconstruction, all sections of the Ring will have not more than 10 lanes. In 2018, more than 50 % of sections of the Garden Ring are reconstructed, including Zubovskaya square, which was the widest section, there were about 18 lanes before. The Ring emerged in the 1820s, replacing fortifications, in the form of ramparts, that were no longer of military value.
Garden Ring is a direct descendant of the Skorodom (Скородом, literally Quick Building) and Earth Rampart (Земляной Вал, Zemlyanoy Val) fortifications, erected in the reign of Feodor I of Russia after a disastrous raid by Ğazı II Giray (1591). Although Boris Godunov, de facto regent of Russia, prevented Crimean Tatars from taking the city north of Moskva River, he anticipated future raids and arranged construction of another defence ring.
When the Time of troubles ended, instead of rebuilding Skorodom, Mikhail Romanov government replaced it with a new, taller rampart known as Zemlyanoy Val (Земляной Вал, Earth Rampart), completed in 1630-1638. Its name survives in present-day Zemlyanoy Val Street (former Chkalov Street) in the south-eastern segment of Garden Ring.
1935 Joseph Stalin's master plan of Moscow provided for expansion of Garden Ring to at least 30-40 meter width, and demolition of buildings set at the ends of Garden Ring boulevards to create wide open squares. Grand Stalinist buildings, envisioned on all the ring, were initially planned only for major squares like Kursky Rail Terminal Square and Triumphalnaya Square. However, one end-of-boulevard block survives, precisely on Triumphalnaya Square, atop the six-lane tunnel. The same plan required removal of tram tracks in line with Moscow Metro construction. In fact, removal of tram tracks proceeded well in advance of subway construction; by 1938, tram remained only in southern and south-eastern segments of the Ring (this segment was closed in 1961).
Stalinist construction proceeded after World War II, notably the three skyscrapers (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia, Kudrinskaya Square and Red Gates Square buildings of 1947-1954). However, no part of the Ring was completely rebuilt in Stalinist style (or any other style). Any street of the Ring is a mixture of different style and sizes, from single-story 1820s mansions to recently built shopping malls and the 162-meter Swissotel in Red Hills (2005).
From the 1990s till 2010, the city government has proposed conversion of the Garden Ring to a one-way street, completely separated from radial street traffic. The public and professionals equally reject the idea of a one-way, 18-lane street.
Since 2010, with the arrival of the new city government, these plans were canceled. In 2016 a new reconstruction began. Trolleybus traffic was eliminated, they were replaced by diesel buses. It is planned to narrow down all section of the Ring to not more than 10 lanes, to expand the sidewalks and to take off all the wires.
All videos with walks in the city of Moscow and the cities of the Moscow region, you can see at the playlist
All videos of the city of Moscow with views from the car window, you can see at the playlist
The original language on this channel is Russian. All translations into other languages are made through Google Translator. We apologize if the translation was not correct. We will be glad if you can provide a more improved version of the translation, be sure to write about it in the comments.
Moscow Russia - City Trip
Short movie from our trip to Moscow.
Moscow is situated on the banks of the Moskva River, which flows for just over 500 km through the East European Plain in central Russia. 49 bridges span the river and its canals within the city's limits. Elevation of Moscow in VVC, where situated head Moscow weather station, is 156 m (512 ft). The highest point is Teplostanskaya highland at 255 m (837 ft). The width of Moscow city (not limiting MKAD) from west to east is 39.7 km (24.7 mi), and the length from north to south is 51.7 km (32.1 mi).
Moscow's road system is centered roughly around the Kremlin at the heart of the city. From there, roads generally radiate outwards to intersect with a sequence of circular roads (rings).
The first and innermost major ring, Bulvarnoye Koltso (Boulevard Ring), was built at the former location of the sixteenth century city wall around that used to be called Bely Gorod (White Town). The Bulvarnoye Koltso is technically not a ring; it does not form a complete circle, but instead a horseshoe-like arc that goes from the Cathedral of Christ the Savior to the Yauza River. In addition, the Boulevard Ring changes street names numerous times throughout its journey across the city.
The second primary ring, located outside the bell end Boulevard Ring, is the Sadovoye Koltso (Garden Ring). Like the Boulevard Ring, the Garden Ring follows the path of a sixteenth century wall that used to encompass part of the city. The third ring, the Third Transport Ring, was completed in 2003 as a high-speed freeway.
The Fourth Transport Ring, another freeway, is under construction to further reduce traffic congestion. The outermost ring within Moscow is the Moscow Automobile Ring Road (often called the MKAD from the Russian Московская Кольцевая Автомобильная Дорога), which forms the approximate boundary of the city.
Moscow serves as the reference point for the timezone used in most of western Russia, including Saint Petersburg. During winter the areas operate in what is referred to as Moscow Standard Time (MSK, МСК) which is 3 hours ahead of UTC, or UTC+3. During the summer, Moscow Time shifts forward an additional hour ahead of Moscow Standard Time to become Moscow Summer Time (MSD), making it UTC+4.
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Moscow Boulevard Ring 1/4
4K Russia | Moscow New year 2020 | Tverskoy boulevard walking tour
Tverskoy Boulevard is a boulevard in the Central Administrative District of Moscow, the oldest and longest on the Boulevard Ring. Passes from Nikitsky Gate Square to Pushkin Square.
It was named in 1796 along Tverskaya Street, to which it adjoins. Originally it was simply called Boulevard, as it was the only one in Moscow.
The boulevard was designed in the Projected Plan of Moscow in 1775. Despite the fact that the wall of the White City was demolished on this site in 1782, the boulevard was laid only in the summer of 1796. Its device was led by architect S. Karin. Initially, birches were planted on the boulevard, and after they did not take root, linden trees. Soon the boulevard became the place for walks and meetings of the Moscow nobility. The driveways of the boulevard are built up with noble mansions in the classicist style.
In the autumn of 1812, during a fire, houses on both sides of the boulevard were badly damaged, and a camp of French soldiers was set up on the boulevard itself, which cut down almost all the trees for fuel. After a short time, the boulevard was rebuilt and built arbors, bridges and fountains.
In 1880, a monument to A.S. Pushkin was erected at the end of the boulevard. In the 1880s. Konka line was laid along the boulevard, replaced by a tram in 1911. At the end of the 19th century, apartment buildings in the eclectic and modernist style appeared on the boulevard.
In October 1917, battles between armed groups of the Bolsheviks and cadets took place on the boulevard, as a result of which a house burned down at the beginning of the boulevard. In its place in 1923 a monument was erected to K. A. Timiryazev. In the 1920s, book bazaars were held on the boulevard.
In 1946, according to the project of architect V.I. Dolganov, the boulevard was redesigned and landscaped. Flower beds have been arranged and new trees planted. A cast-iron fence was installed (architect G.I. Lutsky). In 1949, tram tracks were removed from the boulevard and a trolleybus was launched. In 1950, a monument to Pushkin was moved to Pushkin Square. In 1976, on the odd side, a whole block of buildings was demolished (nos. 29–35), on the site of which a square was destroyed. In 1995, a monument to S. A. Yesenin was erected on the boulevard.
The original language on this channel is Russian. All translations into other languages are made through Google Translator. We apologize if the translation was not correct. We will be glad if you can provide a more improved version of the translation, be sure to write about it in the comments.
Moscow Boulevard Ring 2/4
Moscow Life in 2019 Part 4 Boulevard Ring Petrovsky Blvd
Warmest hugs from Moscow my dear friends!
In this video you will know:
Which Moscow subway station is one of the most popular among photographers
And of course we will proceed with revealing Moscow Boulevard Ring as one of the most romantic routes in the historical center of Moscow
We wont forget about Times and Epochs International historical reconstruction fest, which was held in Moscow 7-16 of June 2019
#Moscow
#TravelRussia
#VisitMoscow
Around of all Moscow Boulevard Ring on bicycle tracks
Our route on Google-map:
Boulevard Ring of Moscow on bikeline September 2015
Прогулка по Бульварному кольцу с ребенком 5-ти лет. 19 сентября 2015
Moscow drive 4K | Boulevard Ring’s lights at the night in Christmas from the car window
Driving at the night by car on the following streets:
The route by car is on the following streets:
01:23 Nikitsky Gate Square
01:35 Tverskoy Boulevard
02:37 Moscow Art Theater them. Gorky
04:10 Passion Boulevard
05:30 Petrovsky Boulevard
06:35 Christmas Boulevard
08:06 Sretensky Boulevard
09:45 Chistoprudny Boulevard
11:39 Pokrovsky Boulevard
13:35 Yauza Boulevard
16:24 Pokrovsky Boulevard
18:04 Chistoprudny Boulevard
21:00 Sretensky Boulevard
21:49 Christmas Boulevard
23:04 Myasnitskaya Street
25:22 Lubyanka Square
All videos night driving on Moscow see in this playlist
The Boulevard Ring (Russian: Бульва́рное кольцо́; transliteration: Bulvarnoye Koltso) is Moscow's second centremost ring road (the first is formed by the Central Squares of Moscow running along the former walls of Kitai-gorod). Boulevards form a semicircular chain along the western, northern and eastern sides of the historical White City of Moscow; in the south the incomplete ring is terminated by the embankments of Moskva River.
The first of the boulevards, Tverskoy Boulevard, emerged in 1796 but the whole ring was developed in 1820s, after the disastrous 1812 fire. The Ring replaced the medieval walls of the White Cityin the 1820s. The wall itself was razed in 1760, and despite the royal decrees to keep the site clear, the area was soon built over with private and state property. The Fire of Moscow destroyed many of those buildings, allowing the city planners to replace them with wide green boulevards.
In the 20th century, the width of the Boulevard Ring was expanded, as the formerly paved areas along the Pokrovsky Boulevard and Strastnoy Boulevard were planted with trees. Plans to complete the ring through Zamoskvorechye never materialized, however. These plans to properly terminate the ring through Yakimanka and Zamoskvorechye districts, proposed in 1935, periodically resurface in city planners' discussions.
The original language on this channel is Russian. All translations into other languages are made through Google Translator. We apologize if the translation was not correct. We will be glad if you can provide a more improved version of the translation, be sure to write about it in the comments.
Moscow Boulevard Ring Bonus: Novokuznetskaya metro station
Moscow Out: Boulevards
RT culture presenter Martyn Andrews explores Moscow's beautiful green boulevards in a quest to understand why the Russian capital is one of the most misunderstood cities in the world. On the program this week, we look at the history behind the quaint inner ring road and the connection with the old White City. We also look at various summer activities, current restoration programs and meet various expats and Muscovites. Summer in the city has never felt so good!
Moscow Out on Facebook:
Tsvetnoy Boulevard - Moscow's circus central
Translated as colored or colorful, Tsvetnoy Boulevard is a beloved place for Russian children. Learn why with RT, as we explore the street's unusual history.
MOSCOW'S BOULEVARD RING - NIKITSKY BOULEVARD (Part 2 out of 10)
The famous Moscow's Boulevard Ring starts nearby Christ the Savior Temple and after more than 9 km terminates by the embankments of Moscow River.
This monument of landscape art is a favorite place of rest and walks of Muscovites.
Boulevard ring has 10 separated boulevards. Stay tuned - this movie is only 2 out of 10 short movies about each of 10 beautiful boulevards!
Today we are walking down the beutifuf Niikitsky boulevard. Let's go!
MOSCOW'S BOULEVARD RING
(Part 2 out of 10)
1.Gogolevsky Boulevard WATCH NOW!
2. Nikitsky Boulevard WATCH NOW!
3. Tverskoy Boulevard COMING SOON!
4. Strastnoy Boulevard COMING SOON!
5. Petrovsky Boulevard COMING SOON!
6. Rozhdestvensky Boulevard COMING SOON!
7. Sretensky Boulevard COMING SOON!
8. Chistoprudny Boulevard COMING SOON!
9. Pokrovsky Boulevard COMING SOON!
10. Yauzsky Boulevard COMING SOON!
????????♂️ Walking Streets: Moscow, Russia, from Red Square to Belorussky Station along Tverskaya
???? Evening walk from Red Square to Belorussky Train Station along Tverskaya Street.
???? Tverskaya Street (Russian: Тверская улица, IPA: [tvʲɪrˈskajə ˈulʲɪt͡sə]), known between 1935 and 1990 as Gorky Street (Russian: улица Горького), is the main radial street in Moscow. The street runs Northwest from the central Manege Square in the direction of Saint Petersburg and terminates at the Garden Ring, giving the name to Tverskoy District. The route continues further as First Tverskaya-Yamskaya Street, Leningradsky Avenue and Leningradskoye Highway.
00:00 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Okhotnyy ryad metro station
00:52 ➡️ The Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Moscow
01:59 ➡️ Yermolova Theater
02:33 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Nikitskiy Pereulok
03:36 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Gazetnyy Pereulok
05:52 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Bryusov Pereulok
07:02 ➡️ Moscow City Hall
10:03 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Malyy Gnezdnikovskiy Pereulok
11:32 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Bolshoy Gnezdnikovskiy pereulok
13:27 ➡️ Novopushkinsky Square
???? Pushkinskaya Square or Pushkin Square (Russian: Пу́шкинская пло́щадь) in the Tverskoy District of central Moscow. It was historically known as Strastnaya Square, and renamed for Alexander Pushkin in 1937.
It is located at the junction of the Boulevard Ring (Tverskoy Boulevard to the southwest and Strastnoy Boulevard to the northeast) and Tverskaya Street, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) northwest of the Kremlin. It is not only one of the busiest city squares in Moscow, but also one of the busiest in the world.
The former Strastnaya Square name originates from the Passion Monastery (Russian: Страстной монастырь, Strastnoy Monastery), which was demolished in the 1930s.
At the center of the square is a famous statue of Pushkin, funded by public subscription and unveiled by Ivan Turgenev and Fyodor Dostoyevsky in 1880. In 1950, Joseph Stalin had the statue moved to the other side of the Tverskaya Street, where the Monastery of Christ's Passions had formerly stood. In 5 December 1965, Glasnost Meeting, the first spontaneous public political demonstration in the Soviet Union after the Second World War, happened here.
15:03 ➡️ Tverskaya St, 19
15:46 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Palashevskiy Malyy Pereulok
16:43 ➡️ Museum of modern history of Russia
???? State museum for social, political, economic & cultural history of Russia over the past 150 years.
18:14 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Mamonovskiy Pereulok
19:45 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Blagoveshchenskiy Pereulok
22:34 ➡️ Mayakovsky Square
23:19 ➡️ Mayakovsky Monument
???? During the 1950s and 1960s, Mayakovsky Square in Moscow played an important role as a gathering place for unofficial poetry readings, and subsequently for expressing cultural and political dissent in the post-Stalin era.
25:18 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Ulitsa Gasheka
27:25 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Ulitsa Yuliusa Fuchika
28:48 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Vasil'yevskaya Ulitsa
34:20 ➡️ Tverskaya Street, Bolshaya Gruzinskaya ulitsa
34:32 ➡️ Tverskaya Zastava
34:47 ➡️ Belorussky Station
#Moscow #Russia #walking #streets #hiking #pov #city
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2013_0216 Ride across Moscow: dive inside the Garden Ring and arriving to the Boulevard ring
Едем по Москве. Четырёхминутный отрезок дороги от Самотёчной эстакады до Неглинки, где стоим на светофоре для въезда на Рождественский бульвар.
Walk around Moscow, yards and streets. Russia.
The streets of Moscow, the distance from tourist routes
TVERSKOY BOULEVARD
Tverskoy Boulevard was the first boulevard in Moscow and the logest one. It is a part of the Boulevard Ring and at the end of the Nikitsky Boulevard, at the crossing with Nikitsky Street, ends at the Pushkin Square and Tverskaya Street. Immediately after it was laid out this picturesque boulevard became a favourite place for high society people to take their walks. It became a green club for the Moscow aristocracy because of a great number of lime trees on the boulevard.