Eastern and Central Europe (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(Ben Green) #1
MOSCOW 133

Melnikov House
Built in the 1920s by
Constructivist architect
Konstantin Melnikov,
who lived here until his
death in 1974, this unusual
cylin drical house is now
dwarfed by the apart ments
on ulitsa Arbat w

Pre-Revolution apartments,
designed for wealthy
Muscovites, are decorated
with fanciful turrets and
sculptures of knights.

. Skryabin House-Museum
This apartment has been
preserved as it was between
1912 and 1915 when experi-
mental composer Aleksandr
Skryabin (1872–1915) lived
here. The furniture in the
rooms is Style Moderne and the
lighting is dim, since Skryabin
disliked direct light.


Pushkin
Museum of
Fine Arts

Herzen House-Museum
was the home of
the radical writer
Aleksandr Herzen
from 1843 to 1846.

The Vakhtangov Theatre was
established here in 1921 by Yevgeniy
Vakhtangov, one of Moscow’s lead-
ing theatre directors. The current
theatre building dates from 1947.

Spasopeskovskiy
Pereulok
On one side of this
lane is the 18th-
century Church of the
Saviour on the Sands.
It overlooks a secluded
square and garden,
a reminder that the
Arbat was at that time
a genteel suburb.

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Arbat Square

KEY
Suggested route

BOLSHOY NIKOLOPESKOVSKIY

PEREULOK

ULITSA ARBAT

KALOSHIN PEREULOK

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STAR SIGHTS

. Pushkin
House-Museum
. Skryabin
House-Museum

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