Online camera Krasnoyarsk. Krylova Street, Ivan Yarygin Street
Krylov Street is located in the Leninsky District of Krasnoyarsk.
It was named in honor of Ivan Andreevich Krylov (1769-1844), Russian poet and fable writer, by the decision of the executive committee of Krasnoyarsk city council #193 of 17.04.1951.
Krylov street from the main avenue on the right bank stretches in the direction of the Yenisei for three blocks.
At the beginning of the street is a four-story "Stalinist" built in 1939. This is the first multi-storey building in the area. It started the construction of the so-called "stone" neighborhood.
At the end of the street, at the intersection with Koltsev alley, is a 5-story apartment building #10 - "guest house".
The main development on Krylova Street, as well as on most of the adjacent streets, is represented by two-story brick houses. At the beginning of 2018, a single-floor, 14-story panel house was commissioned here, where 1-, 2-room apartments are designed.
Residential neighborhoods formed by Krylova, Tekstilshchikov, Pesochnaya, Parkhomenko and Yartsevsky Lane form one of the few neighborhoods in Krasnoyarsk that have a special flavor and comfort. The neighborhoods retain the energy of the Soviet city and traditions of good neighborly relations.
Cossack settlement Ladeiki was located in the vicinity of Krylov Street and nearby streets. The settlement was founded a few years after the foundation of the Krasnoyarsk burg to protect its eastern borders. Cossack customs and traditions were carefully preserved here, including such combat fun as taking the snow-town, depicted on a canvas by V.I. Surikov. And it was in Ladeyki this game was used for the longest time, until the twenties of the last century.
The Ledeiki settlement is also known in archaeology as a place where monuments from all previous periods of history, from the Stone Age to the Middle Ages, have been found.