Moscow, Turchaninov lane, 6
Cultural heritage site of regional significance “City estate of N.I. Vidlovsky – A.V. Ivanov, 2nd half of the 19th century, architects A.D. Nikolsky, A.V. Ivanov. Artist V.M. Vasnetsov lived and worked here in 1878-1881. Architect A.V. Ivanov lived and worked in 1898-1917. – Main house, 1873-1875, architects A.D. Nikolsky, A.V. Ivanov”,
Description:
Cultural heritage site of regional significance “City estate of N.I. Vidlovsky – A.V. Ivanov, 2nd half of the 19th century, architects A.D. Nikolsky, A.V. Ivanov. Artist V.M. Vasnetsov lived and worked here in 1878-1881. artist V.M. Vasnetsov lived and worked. In 1898-1917, architect A.V. Ivanov lived and worked. – Main house, 1873-1875, architects A.D. Nikolsky, A.V. Ivanov”, located at the address: Moscow, Turchaninov lane, house 6.
Viktor Mikhailovich Vasnetsov arrived in Moscow in 1878 and settled in the Ostozhenka area in the 3rd Ushakovsky (now Turchaninov) lane, in the house of Istomina. This house (now No. 6 on Turchaninov lane) has survived to this day. Vasnetsov lived here for two years, then moved to Vorontsovskaya street. In the 18th century, Turchaninov Lane was called Konushenny Lane due to its location at the state stable yard, then Turchaninovsky, after the landlord, Lieutenant S. G. Turchaninov. In the late 18th – early 19th centuries, it was called 3rd Ushakovsky, after a later and larger landowner and landlord, Lieutenant General L. F. Ushakov. In 1922, in order to eliminate numbered names, all three Ushakovsky lanes were renamed. 1st Ushakovsky became Korobeynikov, 2nd – Khilkov, and 3rd Ushakovsky again received its early 19th century name, but this time in the form of Turchaninov.
The subject of protection was approved by order No. 68 dated November 11, 2011 of the Moscow Department of Cultural Heritage.
Completed works:
– repair work (2022)