Tverskaya

Tverskaya is a diverse area of the city, incorporating the theatre district, the upmarket Kuznetsky Most and Petrovka streets, the    energetic Tverskaya Ulitsa and the literary legacy of the sleepy backstreets. Glitterati and literati meet in this area of brash neon and serene onion domes.

The dominant feature is arguably the world’s most famous ballet and opera house, the Bolshoi Theatre – an evening at which is de rigueur. For dining after a performance, you’re surrounded by the restaurants and bars in Teatralnaya Square or along Ulitsa Petrovka.

Upmarket shops and restaurants line both Kuznetsky Most and Petrovka. The well-known Condé Nast and Arkady Novikov venture Vogue Café sits prominently on the intersection, ideal for people-watching, while cosy Biskvit close by provides a less intrusive alternative.

TsUM, Petrovsky Passage (a mini-version of GUM) and the pedestrianized streets of Kamergergsky, Kuznetsky Most and Stolenshnikov make this one of the best shopping areas of the capital.

Tverskaya Ulitsa is Moscow’s main northern arterial thoroughfare, which runs from the Kremlin and eventually to St Petersburg via Tver. It starts between the grey Soviet Duma building, where Parliament now sits, and the luxurious and stylistically eclectic Hotel National, with its great views of the Kremlin and Red Square from the upper floors. Worthy of note is Moscow’s most famous delicatessen, the   former Soviet Gastronom No. 1 but now called by its original pre-revolutionary name of Yeliseev’s Food Hall.

Pushkinskaya Square has become a rallying-point for demonstrations. The lights of the Shangri-La Casino and the numerous neon advertising billboards give this a feel of a Muscovite Piccadilly Circus. Café Pushkin serves arguably the best Russian cuisine in town but perhaps more widely known to Russians is the location of the first McDonald’s to open in Russia.

The square is also part of an eccentric 20-metre-wide tree-lined park, which runs sandwiched between two carriageways along the Boulevard Ring for 8km. Walk down the Tverskoi Bulvar section, which used to be the favourite promenade for Moscow’s nobility and you’ll find the ITAR-TASS news agency – an ugly square building with good photographic exhibitions in the windows. Alexander Pushkin and Natalia Goncharova were married at the Church of the Grand Ascension opposite, where there is a small cupola shrine commemorating them. Nearby Gorky’s House is a fine example of Art Nouveau architecture.

Off the main drag there are quiet and charming backstreets and, despite the destruction wrought by Stalin, some old pre-revolutionary buildings and houses remain. It’s a pleasant area to explore on foot and one can imagine treading the same streets as such luminaries as Chekhov, Stanislavski and Tolstoy.


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