Okhotny Ryad Shopping Mall (MOSCOW, RUSSIA)
At shopping center Okhotny Ryad in Moscow
under Manezhnaya Square
in September 2011
МОСКВА ТЦ ОХОТНЫЙ РЯД. MOSCOW, OKHOTNY RYAD SHOPPING CENTER.
Обзор торгового центра Охотный ряд
Overview of the shopping center Okhotny Ryad
Okhotny Ryad Shopping Center em Moscou (Охотный Ряд)
Video para o Blog Monna Sávya feito em Moscou(Russia)
Okhotny Ryad Shopping Center em Moscou (Охотный Ряд)
Video feito para o Blog Monna Savya
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Where to go in Moscow TsUM shopping
Where to go in Moscow TsUM shopping
Hi Guys! My name is Daria and I live in Moscow. And if you have no idea where to go in Moscow I will show you my favorite places in this never sleeps city.
In this video you will see Tsum and a small square in front of the shop.
TsUM is one of the most fashionable and trendy places in the city and the largest fashion department store in Eastern Europe.
Another magic place in Moscow is the Children’s world
and
Best Place in Moscow. Red Square
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4K Russia | Moscow center walking tour | Mokhovaya - Okhotny Ryad - Theater Passage
00:35 Lenin's Library
02:17 Mokhovaya street
07:07 Okhotny Ryad
09:27 Theatre square
10:43 The Bolshoi Theatre
12:24 Theatrical passage
Mokhovaya (1961-1990 - part of Marx Avenue) - a street in the center of Moscow. The street originates from the Borovitskaya tower of the Kremlin, goes north, Tverskaya, Bolshaya Nikitskaya and Vozdvizhenka streets leave from it on the left. Ends at Manege Square. Continuation is Okhotny Ryad street. House numbers are from the Borovitskaya tower.
It was named in the XVIII century by the former Mokhovaya Square at the Trinity Gate of the Kremlin, to which it adjoined [1]. According to other sources - the name of the XVII century. In the old days, there was a shopping mall where they sold dry moss for filling up cracks in wooden houses, so the street was also called Mokhovoy. Moss playground was located on the site of the current building Manege
In 1961, the street was included in the avenue of Marx, along with Theater Passage, Okhotny Ryad and Moiseevskaya squares. In 1990, the street returned its historical name.
Okhotny Ryad Street (formerly Okhotnoryadskaya Square, 1933-1955 [source not specified 573 days] - Okhotny Ryad Square [1], 1961-1990 - part of Marx Avenue) - a street in the Central Administrative District of Moscow. It runs from Manezhnaya Square to Theater Square, lies between Georgievsky Lane and Nikolskaya Street parallel to them. House numbers are from Manezhnaya Square.
The name of the XVII century, is given according to one of the Moscow trade rows, in which it was allowed to trade game brought by hunters near Moscow.
Okhotny Ryad occupied a very modest place in the existing and becoming traditional by the 17th century device of the great Moscow bargaining. It traded in “game and live birds, domestic and singing” (V. I. Dahl). In the 17th century, Okhotny Ryad was located on the site of the current building of the Historical Museum. In the middle of the XVIII century, all food rows (Kharcheva, Obzhorny, Okhotny) were transferred beyond Neglinka - from the modern Manezhnaya Square to Theater Square, next to the Paraskeva Pyatnitsa Church.
After the fire of 1812, stone one-storey commercial premises with dozens of bird slaughterhouses are being built on the site of burnt wooden shops. The premises of the Okhotny Ryad itself were opposite the Noble Assembly, but over time the whole Zanegllin bargaining began to be called Okhotny Ryad.
In the second half of the 19 - early 20 centuries, the Okhotny Ryad began to symbolize the abundance, hospitality and satiety of Moscow, entering into Russian proverbs. However, due to the participation of shopkeepers in attacks on intellectuals and Jews, the image of a hunter as a reactionary and pogromist has developed.
In 1883, a cast-iron chapel of St. Alexander Nevsky was built on Moiseyevskaya Square in memory of the fallen in the Russian-Turkish war of 1877-1878. Demolished in early November 1922, the chapel became the first Moscow religious building destroyed by the Soviet regime.
In the 1920s, shops began to be demolished in Okhotny Ryad, in the 1930s trade was transferred to Tsvetnoy Boulevard, which marked the beginning of the Central Market. In 1928 the church of Paraskeva Fridays was demolished, a little later - the chambers of Golitsyn standing next to it. In 1935, Okhotny Ryad Street appeared on the site of the Okhotnoryadsky Square as a result of urban transformations. Also under it was the first metro line in the Soviet Union and the station of the same name appeared.
Theater Passage (1961-1990 - part of Marx Avenue) - a street in the Central Administrative District of Moscow. Passes from Theater Square to Lubyanka Square. House numbers are from Theater Square. The streets of Teatralny passage cross: on the left: Petrovka, Neglinnaya street, Rozhdestvenka; right: Tretyakov passage.
The name of the 19 century, is given in connection with the proximity to the Bolshoi and Maly theaters, a convenient route to which this street was.
The Neglinnaya River blocked the entrance to the Bolshoi and Maly theaters from the Lubyanka. The path opened in 1819 after the river was enclosed in a pipe. Since they didn’t go to the theater, but traveled, over time, somewhere in 1830, the entrance to the theaters was not called a street, but a passage.
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The original language on this channel is Russian. All translations into other languages are made through Google Translator. We apologize if the translation was not correct. We will be glad if you can provide a more improved version of the translation, be sure to write about it in the comments.
Outside Okhotnyi Ryad Shopping Center in Moscow, Russia. 09.06.2014
Moscow Supermarket 모스크바 수퍼마켓- Travel to Moscow Russia
#MoscowSupermarket #모스크바수퍼마켓 #MoscowRussia
Moscow Supermarket 모스크바 수퍼마켓- Travel to Moscow Russia
'14 08 18 莫斯科 獵人商行購物中心 Okhotny Ryad Shopping Centre
Walking street in moscow:Red square okhotny ryad.охотный ряд красной площади
Moscow Okhotny Ryad Shopping Center モスクワのアホートヌイリャトショッピングセンター
ロシア・モスクワの赤の広場の横、マネージ広場の地下に広がるアホートヌイリャトショッピングセンターの内部の動画です。
吹き抜けの天井に描かれた絵が名物です。
Red Square Glitz: Shopping spree time machine in Moscow's GUM
RT heads to a legendary shopping mall that was built by the tsars, hated by Stalin and is now place the capital's fashion lovers just cannot do without. If you still have not bought your Christmas presents, there is one place in Moscow where you can do it in true style. Just opposite the Kremlin and Lenin's Mausoleum, there is Russia's largest department store, dating back to the days of the tsars. Size, glamour and lavish architecture -- what else would you expect from a shopping center that stands in Red Square? Taking up the entire eastern side of Red Square, it is known as GUM, which is short for Main Department Store. The site where it stands has for centuries been a bustling trading quarter. When the building opened in 1893, its steel framework and glass roof were on the cutting edge of technology. With its mix of steel and glass, GUM resembles the 19th-century train stations of Paris and London, while its traditional Russian-style decorations make it look more like a medieval palace than a shopping mall. The building oozes wealth and luxury: marble, granite and limestone are everywhere. The three-story complex has three levels for a true shop-till-you-drop experience. At the end of the 19th century, it was the largest shopping center in Europe. Before the 1917 Revolution, it contained a staggering 1,200 stores. After the Revolution, vibrant trading dwindled, and in 1928 GUM was closed and turned into offices. The opulent building, however, continued to be an eyesore for the Soviet authorities, deemed to be an unsuitable neighbor for the Kremlin and Lenin's tomb. Plan after plan was developed to hide GUM behind a wall to separate it from Red Square or to tear it down altogether to make room for some of Stalin's grand construction projects. They all proved too expensive and complicated. After Stalin's death in 1953, the newly revamped center quickly reopened, becoming one of the few Soviet stores not plagued by regular shortages of consumer goods. Queues of shoppers often extended all the way across Red Square. Nowadays, crowds gather here for a different reason -- you can hardly find a place more central to skate in Moscow. After the fall of the Soviet Union, GUM reinvented itself as a home for exclusive boutiques, offering pricey designer shopping. A mix of Imperial, Soviet and post-Soviet chic, it has become a cult institution. So it is definitely worth window shopping -- even if you cannot flash the cash.
Najlepsa pijaca na svetu - Izmaylovo Kremlin u Moskvi! MOJA PUTOVANJA
Izmailovo je glavna i ujedno najlepsa pijaca u Moskvi, po mom misljenju - i sire, u kojoj mozete naci najpovoljnije suvenire, babuske, bunde, antikvitete... Odvojite slobodno jedan dan u Moskvi da posetite ovu pijacu, buduci da se pored samog prodajnog dela nalazi i ovaj carobni gradic - u kom se nalazi i maticar - pa cete tako prisustvovati i pravoj Ruskoj svadbi ali i muzej vodke - koji ne smete da propustite. I ne propustite neki od pultova sa hranom, buduci da je hrana preukusna. Ulaz je naravno - besplatan.
Russia Moscow Street Walk (City view) - Travel to Moscow Russia
#RussiaMoscow #MoscowCityview
Russia Moscow Street Walk (City view) - Travel to Moscow Russia
Boilermeker. Okhotny Ryad.
Screens
Moscow Russia 4K, Walking Tour.
Moscow, on the Moskva River in western Russia, is the nation’s cosmopolitan capital. In its historic core is the Kremlin, a complex that’s home to the president and tsarist treasures in the Armoury. Outside its walls is Red Square, Russia's symbolic center. It's home to Lenin’s Mausoleum, the State Historical Museum's comprehensive collection and St. Basil’s Cathedral, known for its colorful, onion-shaped domes.
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Shopping in Moscow
Shopping in Moscow