Shchelykovo accent. State Memorial and Natural Museum-Reserve A

Also, “eaters” could live here - poor people who barely had enough to eat. Since the 14th century, this area belonged to the boyar Rodion Nestorovich and his descendants, the Tushins. At the end of the reign of Ivan IV, the property was bought by the clerk E.I. Blagovo. The village was deserted by that time.

In 1608, False Dmitry II set up camp in these parts. Among his associates was the new owner of the wasteland, Andrey Palitsyn. Soon he went over to the side of the authorities, became governor in Murom, and in 1622 sold Podelki to the deacon M.F. Danilov. Under him, a village with the same name and the manor church of the Intercession appeared on the site of the wasteland. Holy Mother of God(the exact date of construction is unknown).

In 1664 Pokrovskoye was bought by the owner of the neighboring Ivankov R.M. Streshnev. Since then, the estate belongs to the Streshnev family.

From the estate to the palace and park ensemble: an architectural and historical cheat sheet

The new owner practically did not rebuild the village: he put up a "boyar yard" and several outbuildings. In 1685, he ordered to dig ponds in the upper reaches of the Chernushka River (now mostly enclosed in a pipe) and breed fish in them.

After the death of Ivan Rodionovich, the grandson of the first owner from the Streshnev family, his sons divided his inheritance. Pokrovskoye passed to General-in-chief Pyotr Streshnev. Under him, the estate was expanded and transformed: in the 1750s, the church was rebuilt in the Baroque style, in 1766 a stone manor house in the Elizabethan Baroque style was erected with a suite of ten front rooms and a collection of paintings from more than 130 paintings.

The joy of Peter Ivanovich was the only surviving daughter, Elizabeth. He spoiled her so much that he raised a petty tyrant. And yet he did not let his daughter marry Fedor Glebov, a widower with a child. Elizaveta Streshneva married Glebov only a year after her father's death. And when the male line of the Streshnevs was cut short in 1803, she obtained from Alexander I the right to bear the surname of the Glebov-Streshnevs with their descendants.

A verst from the estate, on the banks of the Khimki River, F.I. Glebov built a two-story bathroom house "Elizavetino" as a gift to his wife. It was a real miracle of architecture, but in 1942 the building was destroyed by a German bomb.

Guide to Architectural Styles

In 1799, Fedor Ivanovich died, and the estate remained on the shoulders of Streshneva. Elizaveta Petrovna ruled imperiously and despotically. Instead of the old house in 1803-1806, a new three-storey building was built in the Empire style. A garden with ponds adjoined it, 6 greenhouses appeared. The house had a good library and modern technical innovations such as a telescope and a microscope.

Nice blue, "the color of sugar paper", living room in a large house, decorated a l'antique in the Pompeian style, with beautiful white wood furniture of the late 18th century. Then you walk through the garden with endless straight roads, bordered by hundred-year-old trees, you walk for a long time to the Bath House, the entrance to which is guarded by a small marble Cupid. The house stands over a gigantic cliff, overgrown with dense forest, which seems to be small shrubs stretching into the distance. This charming toy was built by the husband of Elizaveta Petrovna Streshneva as a surprise for his wife. The house is full of fine English engravings, good old copies of family portraits. And at every step, in every room, it seems as if the shadows of those who lived here are wandering. In the red small living room one can see the inscription: “On July 16, 1775, Empress Catherine the Great deigned to visit Elizavetino and have tea with her owner, Elizaveta Petrovna Glebova-Streshneva.

At the beginning of the 19th century, on the opposite side of the road from Vsekhsvyatsky to Tushino (modern Volokolamskoye Highway), a settlement of 22 elite dachas appeared on the opposite side of the estate. They were expensive, and there was a barrier at the entrance to the village. In 1807, N.M. lived here. Karamzin. Here, in 1856, to the dacha of the court doctor A.E. Bersa was often visited by L.N. Tolstoy. Here he first met the Bersov's twelve-year-old daughter Sonechka, who became his wife 6 years later. Tolstoy stayed in a guest room on the ground floor, while the children lived on the second floor with a nanny and servants.

After the death of Elizabeth Glebova-Streshneva in 1838, the estate passed to Colonel E.P. Glebov-Streshnev, and then to his niece Evgenia Fedorovna Brevern, who married Prince M.V. Shakhovsky. Due to the suppression of the male line of the Glebov-Streshnevs, she received the triple surname Shakhovskaya-Glebova-Streshneva. And Pokrovskoe-Streshnevo began to be called Pokrovskoe-Glebovo.

Evgenia Fedorovna Shakhovskaya-Glebova-Streshneva became the last owner of the estate. She decided to turn it into a kind of fairy-tale medieval castle.

How to Read Facades: A Cheat Sheet on Architectural Elements

In 1880, according to the project of A.I. Rezanov and K.V. Tersky, an ensemble of lordly services in the form of a horseshoe was built here. On the front sides of the manor house, 2 outbuildings were built in the form of stylized castle turrets, and the house was built on with a battlemented wooden tower, painted like a brick.

Many guests came to the estate, especially in summer. Evgenia Fedorovna was rich: she had a villa in Italy, a yacht in the Mediterranean Sea and a railway carriage for trips to the south. But most of the time she spent in the family estate.

Shakhovskaya-Glebova-Streshneva divided the estate into 3 zones:
1) the surroundings of the house with a regular park and greenhouses and paths in Elizavetino - for the personal use of the family and specially invited guests.
2) "Carlsbad", that is, the area above Khimka and behind the Ivankovskaya road. Here you could walk on tickets, fish in the river, go boating. The borders of "Carlsbad" were highlighted with a sheared spruce fence.
3) The eastern part of the park from the road to Nikolskoye to the border with the lands of the village of Vsekhsvyatsky and with Koptevsky settlements. Here it was possible to collect mushrooms and walk on the grass with tickets.

But for a long time, Pokrovskoye remained a popular summer cottage.

At the beginning of the 20th century, dachas were rented at prices ranging from 100 to 2,000 rubles per season, and they were so popular that in the summer of 1908 a bus was launched between Pokrovsky and Petrovsky-Razumovsky.

After the revolution, the estate, together with the dachas, turned into a sanatorium of the Central Committee, and then passed into the jurisdiction of the rest home of textile workers. In 1925, a museum was set up in the main house, where the atmosphere of the former manor was recreated. But in 1928 it was closed and ruined. In 1933, the estate housed a recreation center for military pilots, and since 1970 the building has been under the jurisdiction of the Civil Aviation Research Institute.

Now the entire Pokrovskoye-Glebovo-Streshnevo area has been declared a protected area. The manor estate is being restored, although it looks abandoned.

They say that...... Arriving in Pokrovskoye, Elizabeth ordered to arrange a bathhouse in the neighboring village and complained that there was no master's house there. This is how Elizabeth appeared.
... in the autumn of 1943, the atomic nucleus laboratory moved from Pyzhevsky Lane to Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo, and already on December 25, 1946, the first nuclear reactor in Europe was launched here.

Pokrovskoe-Streshnevo in photographs of different years:

The Pokrovskoye-Glebovo-Streshnevo estate is located on the site of the wasteland of Podyolka, which was first mentioned in the cadastral books of 1585. At that time, it was owned by Elizar Ivanovich Blagovo, prominent figure second half of the XVI century. The wasteland most likely owes its name to the spruce forests that prevailed in this area. At the beginning of the 17th century, A.F. became the owner of the wasteland. Palitsyn, who joined False Dmitry II, but then went over to the side of the legitimate authorities. In 1622, he sold the wasteland to the clerk Mikhail Feofilatievich Danilov, who was building a village here. In 1629, a stone "newly arrived Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos, and in the aisles of the Miracle of the Archangel Michael and Alexei the Wonderworker" was erected in the village. Since that time, the history of the village of Pokrovskoye begins. According to the census book of 1646, there are 8 peasant households in it (according to other sources, at first the Church of the Intercession was wooden, the stone church was built later, in 1646). After the death of clerk Danilov, the estate was owned by F.K. Elizarov. In 1664 he sold Pokrovskoe-Podelki to Rodion Matveyevich Streshnev. At this time, there were already 220 households in the village. The Streshnevs owned the estate for 250 years. This clan was not noble until 1626, when Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov married Evdokia Lukyanovna Streshneva. From this marriage there were 10 children, including the future Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich.

Since then, the family has advanced and occupied a prominent place in the court hierarchy. One of the owners of Pokrovsky, Elizaveta Petrovna Streshneva, married Fyodor Ivanovich Glebov and in 1803 obtained permission for her family to be called a double surname: Streshnevs-Glebovs. After that, the village of Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo received another name - Pokrovskoye-Glebovo. At the beginning of the 19th century, "houses for summer housing with all their accessories" were rented out in the vicinity of Pokrovsky. Dachas in Pokrovsky have always been considered fashionable and very expensive. In 1807, N.M. Karamzin lived here, who worked on the "History of the Russian State". In 1856, Pokrovskoe-Streshnevo was visited by L. N. Tolstoy, who visited Lyubov Bers there.

Subsequently, he married one of her daughters - Sofya Andreevna. Intercession Church is the oldest building in the area. Built at the beginning of the 17th century, it was rebuilt many times, reflecting the dominant architectural trends different times. In the middle of the 18th century, it was given magnificent features of the Baroque style and a refectory was added. And since 1822, the temple stood, rebuilt in the Empire style. In 1896 it acquired eclectic forms. The bell tower was built in the 1770s. The church fence with the main entrance and corner towers was built in late XVIII in. After the revolution of 1917, a museum was organized in the estate. In the 1930s, the museum and the church were closed, the bell tower of the church was partially destroyed. Divine services in the Church of the Intercession were resumed in 1994.

An object cultural heritage federal significance.

When you drive along the Volokolamsk highway towards the region, you always pay attention to an unusual complex of buildings on the right in front of the water canal. It seems that behind the red-brick wall there is a beautiful noble estate. True, the view from the side of the highway does not look like the usual look of an old Russian estate, rather some kind of Russian-Gothic style. This is Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo - a former noble estate near Moscow with a park. The estate includes a manor house in the style of classicism, a patrimonial church of the 17th century and buildings in the pseudo-Russian style.

1. The Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos was built in 1629. The Pokrovskoye estate was later named after the name of the church. It belonged to the noble Streshnev family, who were relatives of the Romanov dynasty. Evdokia Streshneva was the wife of Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov, the mother of Alexei Mikhailovich the Quietest. Since that time, the estate began to be called Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo.


View of the wall and the church from Volokolamsk highway

2. Latest Information about the state of the estate reported that the Higher School of Economics had abandoned the noble estate in the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo park. Let me remind you that at the end of 2012 the estate was transferred to the balance of the HSE. Restoration work to restore the architectural monument did not begin, the building was destroyed, access to visitors was prohibited. Perhaps now, after the estate was withdrawn to the state treasury, restoration work will begin in it, after which noble estate open for visiting.

3. So we decided to see what condition the estate is in now.

4. After all, there are not so many monuments of federal significance left in Moscow, while their number is steadily decreasing. So far, the fate of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate is sad. The monument is under state protection, but the state of the estate is getting worse every year.

5. Only the gates to the temple were open...

6. The church is protected by the state as an architectural monument and is an integral part of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate complex. It was built at the beginning of the 17th century by deacon M.F. Danilov. In 1750, the owner of the estate P.I. Streshnev organized the restructuring of the church, as a result of which it acquired the features of the Baroque style. However, the planned configuration of the building remained the same. About ten years later, a three-tiered bell tower was completed. After that, the church practically did not change. appearance before late XIX century, only in 1894 the church was expanded.


View of the temple from the South

7. Distinctive feature of the temple was the absence of an altar ledge on the eastern facade.

8. Mosaic frescoes of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker (left) and the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul (right) were made by craftsmen from Belarus in 2006.


Mosaic fresco of the Blessed Virgin on the western façade

9. Despite repeated reconstructions, the Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos is of significant historical and architectural value as one of the few examples in Moscow and its immediate environs of a patrimonial church of the first third of the 17th century, which has an unconventional compositional solution.

10. On the territory of the temple, everything is ready for Easter.

11. On manor house can only be viewed through the main gate or from the side of the park. Access to the territory is guarded by an intractable watchman, and in addition, some kind of preparatory work. I had to be satisfied with the external inspection.

12. At the beginning of the 19th century, the estate received a new name: Glebovo-Streshnevo, or Pokrovskoye-Glebovo. This is due to the double surname of the new owner of the estate, Elizaveta Streshneva-Glebova. The last owner of the estate was Evgenia Fedorovna Shakhovskaya-Glebova-Streshneva. She decided to turn the family estate into a kind of medieval castle. In 1880, according to the project of architects A.I. Rezanov and K.V. Tersky, an original ensemble of lordly services was built here, planned in the form of a horseshoe. Outbuildings were added to the end sides of the manor house, some of them in the form of stylized castle turrets, and a superstructure was made over the old house in the form of a battlemented wooden tower painted like brick.

13. So it turns out that the manor house significantly changed its appearance over time, depending on the taste and preferences of the owners.


Manor Pokrovskoe-Streshnevo. 1766 Front of the main house. Photo from the book: N.Ya. Tikhomirov / Architecture of estates near Moscow, M.-Gos. Ed. literature on construction and architecture.


Facade of a house on a postcard from the 1920s. A photo http://oiru.archeologia.ru/history25.htm

15. But if we mentally discard the later extensions and superstructures, we will see the still preserved features of an ordinary two-story "lordly" house near Moscow, late 18th - early 19th centuries.


Photo from the Internet

16. In 1889-1890, according to the project of architects F.N. Kolbe and A.P. Popov, a powerful stone fence with red brick towers in the pseudo-Russian style was erected around the estate.

17. In the post-revolutionary period, the estate, together with the dachas, passed into state ownership and was turned into a sanatorium of the Central Committee, and then passed into the jurisdiction of the rest home of textile workers. In 1925, a museum was organized on the estate, which was soon ruined and completely destroyed. In 1933, a rest home for military pilots was arranged in the estate, in war time there was a hospital, since 1970 there was a research institute of civil aviation.

18. In the 80s, when the estate belonged to Aeroflot, restoration work began and the estate was returned to its original appearance of the beginning of the 19th century. The corner tower of the fence and the arched part of the wall with the front gate were restored. In the spring of 1992, a fire broke out in the palace, destroying the attic floor and seriously damaging the state rooms on the second floor. The restoration of the palace began, already in the mid-90s the volume of the main house was restored and interior finishing work began, but was interrupted. Since then, the palace has been virtually abandoned. In 2003, the Aeroflot company sold the palace to private hands, in 2012, by court order, it was returned to the state and transferred to operational management. high school economy.

19. We managed to shoot the park facade of the house in more or less detail.

20. This facade has a shallow straight balcony with columns (loggia) and decorations on the walls and at the windows.

33. And now the estate is again in the hands of the state ...

34. Outside the gates of the old manor - the urban landscape of the XXI century.

35. Pretty big park Pokrovskoe-Streshnevo certainly deserves a longer walk.

36. At the Volokolamskoye highway overpass, above the railway tracks, there is a platform and the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo station. In 1901, the Moscow-Vindava (now Riga) Railway, and a railway platform was opened in front of the estate.

37. In 1908, the architect Brzhozovsky, the author of the Moscow-Vindava railway project, built the station building with a wooden passenger pavilion, made in the northern modern style. The stone building of the station has been preserved on the slope from the side of Krasnogorsk proezds, and the wooden pavilion burned down in 1984.

38. This is how these buildings looked at the very beginning. Will there be a revival?


The building of the station Pokrovskoe-Streshnevo. Beginning of XX century. A photo

Sad news about the fate of the long-suffering estate Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo has recently become known. According to the information disseminated by the activists of the Archnadzor movement, the old greenhouses of the late 18th-early 19th century were engulfed in fire, as a result of which a significant part of the building, which is an object of cultural heritage of federal significance, was damaged.

Among the possible versions of what happened, users of social networks highlight bonfires that could have been lit on the territory of the object by vandals or persons without a fixed place of residence, and deliberate destruction - the territory of the estate and the park is a “tidbit” for developers, according to some Muscovites. Official version what happened has not yet been announced.
Recall that the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate has been in actual desolation for several decades. In the early 90s of the last century, restoration work began here, which was interrupted at the beginning of the 2000s. Then the owner of the estate changed several times, as a result of which, in 2016, the estate became the property of the Moscow Government. Representatives of the competent authorities regularly raised the issue of restoring the estate by a respectable investor. However, the incident that happened can make a negative contribution to the search for a new owner.

In March of this year, I shot the interiors of the main house and views of the greenhouse. I suggest you take a look at the last abandoned estate in Moscow.

The central part of the main house with a wooden front floor with a mezzanine was built in the late 18th - early 19th century, before 1805. The inventory of the interiors dates back to 1805.

2. The central part of the northwestern facade of the manor house.

Photos before 1910. The main house of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate from the side of the park.

3. Main house. Plan of the second floor.

The main staircase is located in the central volume, remade during the restructuring of the house, but retaining a bypass gallery with two pairs of columns and a ceiling. On the other side of the living room, in a dark passage room, there should have been a staircase to the mezzanine (probably to the first floor), but no traces of it were found. Adjacent to the entrance is the front bedroom with a large window on the northern end of the house. It was dismembered by front columns. In the upper part of the back wall of the bedroom, two round windows were made: one of them illuminates the entrance, and the other opens into the room adjacent to it. According to the literature, the bedroom had gray wallpaper with a floral border.

4. The main staircase in the main house of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate.

Huge, almost square triple windows on the sides of the terrace and loggia emphasize the country character of the house. At the same time, the enlarged scale of these parts of the facade enhances the monumentality of the solution of the central volume. It is contrasted by completely neutral, ordinary facades of the side parts of the house. They were perceived as a transition to the equally laconic, but smaller in articulation architecture of two-story outbuildings.

The internal layout of the main floor with an enfilade along the park facade is somewhat more traditional, but here too leading role the center plays, where the two most significant rooms are located on the main axis. Thanks to the double framing of the façade, the line of enfilade openings running along the windows in the side rooms, as is customary in classicism, comes out in the central White Hall on its transverse axis. Such an intersection of the main axes of the house could give rise to an overly monumental centric solution of the hall, but its space is determined by the elongated octagon of the colonnade carrying the solemn entablature.

7. Tritons adorn the front staircase.

The remaining premises of the front floor have repeatedly changed their purpose and design. In the 1920s, in the southwestern corner of the house, a thin, undoubtedly original, picturesque plafond of a large dining room was still preserved, and next to the living room and loggia - a late bedroom, completely covered with tulle and lace. Wooden internal stairs occupied three corners of the house, except for the dining room. The lower floor is symmetrical front staircase there was another living room with a couple of columns in the back.

9. Ground floor of the main house.


10. Triton.


11.


13.

Fragmentary parquet has been preserved. Corner stoves during the restructuring of the house were converted into fireplaces. Semicircular niches under the windows overlooking the terrace are very unusual.

15. Blue living room in the manor house.

16. Plafond in the Blue living room.

17. Fireplace in the Blue Living Room.

Through an opening in the depths opposite the windows, the hall is connected with the second axial room of the living room, which opens onto the loggia of the front facade. It is slightly lower than the hall. An elegant Corinthian columnar rotunda with a high arch above the entablature is inscribed in the square of its plan. It was also decorated with finely ornamented type-setting parquets and semicircular window niches. In the later period, the stoves were also converted into fireplaces, and the walls were painted dark blue with borders and silhouettes stylizing ancient Greek black-figure vase painting.

19. Capital of a column in the Blue Drawing Room.

24. Fireplace in the White Hall.

25. White hall with access to the terrace.

27. Fireplace in the White Hall.

28. View of the park.

29. Park facade.

Photos before 1910. The main house of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate. Northwest facade.

Rezanov's project involved a complete restructuring and even reorientation of the house. He placed the main entrance at the southern end. A brick fence, turning away from the highway line, adjoined the walls of the house on the sides of the entrance. The entrance with a magnificent portal looked like a turret, protruding in front of a semicircular volume and topped with a crown (the Streshnev family trait was the desire to perpetuate the memory of their relationship with the royal house).

A lot of inscriptions on the walls, most likely a quest was held here.

Little people.

Inscriptions, poems, quotes.

It is better not to leave the room.

When I was at the house, the security guard was waiting for the film crew. They must have filmed something like this.

Let's get some air.

Photos before 1910. Side view of the northwestern facade of the house in the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate.

And through let's go through the park to the greenhouse.

The last surviving sculpture in the manor park.

This is old postcard with a photograph of Eremin of the 30s of the last century. I have one in my collection.

Photos before 1930. Statues in the park of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate.

The greenhouse is the only building besides the main house old manor, which has been preserved since the 18th - early 19th centuries. At the beginning of the 20th century, the building was adapted for a restaurant, as a result it was greatly distorted. And later it was almost destroyed.

In our time, the original appearance of the Orangerie has been recreated. The composition of the building is an enlarged center and symmetrically elongated wings of the greenhouse. This architectural solution is typical for front garden greenhouses of the 18th - early 19th centuries. A vivid example of such a composition is the greenhouses in the estates of Kuskovo and Kuzminki. The facade of the building is oriented to the south.

Rounded domed ledge of the central volume - winter garden- Surrounded by a wooden Tuscan colonnade, recreated in stone.

48. Inside the greenhouse.

49. Greenhouse. The room of the central rotunda.

I took these photos in March 2017, in August there was a fire again, only the central part survived. The Ministry of Emergency Situations in the media designated it as a Soviet building, but we know that this is an object of cultural heritage of federal significance - a greenhouse of the late 18th-early 19th century of the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo estate.

What will happen to the last abandoned Moscow estate?

The Pokrovskoye-Glebovo forest park is one of the most beautiful green spaces in Moscow, located on the territory of a former estate. Here, in the north-west of the Russian capital, the village of Podelki was located in the Middle Ages, and in 1629 a magnificent church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos was built. By the name of the church, the constructed Pokrovskoye estate later became known. It belonged to the noble Streshnev family, who were relatives of the Romanov dynasty. Evdokia Streshneva was the wife of Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov, the mother of Alexei Mikhailovich the Quietest. Since that time, the estate began to be called Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo.

At the beginning of the 19th century, it received a new name: Glebovo-Streshnevo, or Pokrovskoye-Glebovo. This is due to the peculiarity of the double surname of the new owner of the estate, Elizaveta Streshneva-Glebova. From the end of XIX - beginning of XX centuries. near the estate, one after another, small residential dachas began to appear. At one time they lived here famous people of that era: historian N.M. Karamzin - the author of the immortal volumes "History of the Russian State", doctor A.E. Bers, whose daughter met her future husband L.N. Tolstoy in Pokrovsky. Another wealthy philanthropist, a doctor by profession, S.P. Botkin allocated large funds for the reconstruction of the Church of the Intercession.

In the post-revolutionary period, the estate, together with the dachas, passed into state ownership and was turned into a sanatorium of the Central Committee, and then passed into the jurisdiction of the textile workers' rest home. In 1925, a museum was organized on the estate, which was soon ruined and completely destroyed.

Currently, the green area around the former estate is divided into two main parts. The forest park was divided by the Volokolamsk highway and the ring railway. The southern part of the plantation, located near the Schukinskaya metro station, is the most well-groomed. It is called the Pokrovskoye-Streshnevo park. The northern part is the Pokrovskoye-Glebovo park. In the forest park, in addition to birch, pine, ash, maple, elm and oak familiar to Russia, larches, majestic cedars and decorative willows grow, leaning over the banks of overgrown ponds in summer. Especially attractive is the linden alley, fragrant with its unique aroma.

A favorite vacation spot for Muscovites is the beach area of ​​the park. On the bank of the Khimki River there is a spring bearing symbolic name"The Swan Princess". It is recognized as the only environmentally friendly spring within Moscow, whose water not only quenches thirst in a dry summer, but also has healing properties. Now the Pokrovskoye-Glebovo-Streshnevo area, in accordance with the architectural plan of the capital, has been declared a protected area. An active restoration of the manor's estate is underway, the temple is being restored. In addition, thousands of people come here to breathe in the fresh park air, take a break from the hustle and bustle of the dusty metropolis. After all, this, at times, is not enough for a person for true and genuine happiness!

How to get from the subway:

You can get to the park Pokroveskoe-Streshnevo-Glebovo in the following way: from Art. metro station "Voykovskaya" by trolleybus number 6 or 43 to the stop "Cinema and concert hall "Swan", then walk 5 minutes.