Sivtsev Vrazhek is a radial lane in the Central Administrative Okrug of Moscow; it forms the boundary between Arbat and Khamovniki municipal districts. The lane begins at a T-junction with Gogolevsky Boulevard and runs west, roughly parallel to Arbat Street (north) and Prechistenka Street (south), ending at a T-junction with Denezhny Lane, one block short of the Garden Ring. The name of the lane, literally Sivka [ru] stream gully, refers to a historical stream now locked in an underground sewer[1] and is only one of two Vrazheks in present-day Moscow (the other being Kozhevnichesky Vrazhek west of Novospassky Bridge).
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SivtsevVrazhek is a radial lane in the Central Administrative Okrug of Moscow; it forms the boundary between Arbat and Khamovniki municipal districts...
Its irregular boundaries correspond roughly to Znamenka Street and SivtsevVrazhekLane in the south and Povarskaya Street in the north. Main radial streets...
with Arbat District follows Znamenka Street, Gogolevsky Boulevard, SivtsevVrazhek and Borodinsky Bridge. The district contains Pushkin Museum, Cathedral...
childhood, which coincided with the war, passed in the Arbat District on SivtsevVrazhekLane. The son, who grew up practically on the street among juvenile delinquents...
memorial plaque honoring him was inaugurated on the wall of house at SivtsevVrazhekLane in Moscow, where Ogarkov lived from 1976 to 1994. In February 2018...
Osorgin's best known works are his novels Сивцев Вражек (1928; SivtsevVrazhek is a small lane in Moscow) translated as Quiet Street and Повесть о сестре...
them were indeed disoriented. Khan-Magomedov 2007:45-47 No. 15/25, SivtsevVrazhekLane, completed 1932. Title architect was Dmitry Lebedev. Some sources...