Map of Kotelniki in detail with streets, houses and districts

This term has other meanings, see Kotelniki (meanings).

For the term "Kotelnikovo" see also other meanings.

City of regional subordination
Kotelniki
FlagCoat of arms
55°39′45″ N. w. 37°52′02″ E. village HGYAOCountryRussiaFederal SubjectMoscow RegionCity District KotelnikiHeadZhigalkin Sergey AleksandrovichHistory and geographyFoundedXVII centuryCity of regional subordination since 2004Area14.24[1] km²Center height140 mTime zoneUTC+3:00PopulationPopulation↗50,723[2] people (2021)Digital identifiersPostal code140053-140054-140 055OKATO46444OKTMO46739000001kotelniki.ru Kotelniki

Moscow

Moscow

Kotelniki

Media files on Wikimedia Commons

Kotelniki

- a city (until 2004 - an urban-type settlement[3]) in the Moscow region of Russia.

The city of regional subordination[4] (until 2007 it was in the Lyubertsy district[5]), forms the city district of the same name[6] as the only populated area within it. Population - 50,723[2] people. (2021).

Content

  • 1 Geography
  • 2 History
  • 3 Population
  • 4 Local government 4.1 Authorities
  • 5 Internal division
  • 6 Economics
      6.1 Industry
  • 6.2 Trade
  • 7 Education, culture, sports
  • 8 Healthcare
  • 9 Attractions
  • 10 Transport
      10.1 Metro
  • 10.2 Bus and road transport
  • 10.3 Rail transport
  • 10.4 Media
  • 10.5 Independent media
  • 11 Notes
  • 12 Links
  • Comfort level of the city of Kotelniki - 12.1 out of 20

    Environmental characteristics
    Green areas43
    Reservoirs4
    Absence of serious sources of anthropogenic pollution1
    Visual environment2
    Connectivity of the area
    Ease of movement within the area34.6
    Accessibility of Moscow by public transport5
    Accessibility of Moscow by personal transport5
    Communication with surrounding areas and settlements5
    Conditions for working within the area5
    Social infrastructure
    Kindergartens23.3
    Schools2
    Children's leisure centers3
    Cultural institutions2
    Healthcare2
    Sports and fitness5
    Religious buildings4
    Shopping and entertainment infrastructure5
    Habitat quality
    State of city utilities43.5
    Development of the real estate market5
    Parking3
    Accessibility for the disabled2
    Risks and threats
    Deteriorating transport situation0-2.3
    Underdevelopment of social infrastructure-4
    Deterioration of the environmental situation-3
    Oversaturation of the real estate market-3

    Geography[ | ]

    Located on the southeastern border of Moscow. In addition to Moscow, it also borders with the cities of Dzerzhinsky and Lyubertsy.

    Freight railway station (Yanichkino) on the Lyubertsy - Dzerzhinsky line.

    The urban district of Kotelniki borders:

    • with the Kapotnya district of the SEAD of Moscow (in the west along the Moscow Ring Road),
    • with the Lyublino district of the SEAD of Moscow (in the west along the Moscow Ring Road),
    • with the Vykhino-Zhulebino district of the SEAD of Moscow (in the north along Novoryazanskoye Highway),
    • with the urban district of Lyubertsy, Moscow region (in the northeast along the Novoryazanskoe highway and in the east),
    • with the urban district of Dzerzhinsky (in the south).

    The eastern part of the Kuzminsky and northern Tomilinsky forest parks are located on the territory of the urban district.

    History[ | ]

    Several legends are associated with the name of the city, one of which says that soldiers of Dmitry Donskoy’s troops stopped to rest on the territory of Kotelniki. This happened when they were heading to the Kulikovo field. They cooked kulesh in cauldrons at the camp, and this is where the name of the area came from. The second legend tells that the name Kotelniki came from its relief: there were many lowlands and swamps, which in ancient times were called kettles[7].

    Village Kotelnikovo

    [8] first mentioned in the 17th century.
    At the end of the century, the Church of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God was built in the village, and it became a village. At the beginning of the 18th century, not far from the village, General F.P. Balk-Polev built the Belaya Dacha estate. In the 19th century, the village of Kotelnikovo
    belonged to the princes Golitsyn.
    Sand and stone were mined in the vicinity of the village. In the ESBE, in an article about Moscow, the village is mentioned as Kotelnikova
    9 ]. In 1931, a sand-lime brick production plant was built near the village near a sand quarry. In 1938, the village of Kotelniki was transformed into a workers' settlement. In 1959, a reinforced concrete products plant began operating.

    Since 1996, Kotelniki has been an independent municipal entity within the Lyubertsy district[10]. It included the village of the Belaya Dacha state farm, the village of the Carpet Factory, the village of Silikat (the village of the Lyubertsy silicate plant), the village of Opytnoye Pole and the village of Kotelniki [ source not specified 3620 days

    ].

    In 2004, the urban-type settlement received city status[3]. In 2007, Kotelniki received the status of a city of regional subordination[5].

    In 2022, it became known that 57 buildings in Kotelniki were subject to demolition. Despite the fact that the houses are going to be demolished, at the same time, signs are installed on them about the upcoming major repairs.[11][12]

    A real “cauldron” of new buildings

    Today, Kotelniki is considered one of the fastest growing residential areas in the Moscow region. In the last few years, about 500 thousand square meters of new housing have been built here, and about 600 thousand more are planned to be built by 2022. Currently, housing is being sold in five new residential complexes.

    Residential complex "Kotelnicheskiye Vysotki"

    The name of the residential complex exploits the glory of the high-rise building on Kotelnicheskaya Embankment in Moscow. According to the architects’ plan, the concept of “Kotelnicheskie High-rises” will embody the spirit of the Stalinist Empire style, which is well known to Muscovites.

    The complex forms a separate microdistrict, conveniently located at the intersection of Novoryazanskoye and Dzerzhinskoye highways, a 10-minute walk from the Kotelniki metro station. It will be located on an area of ​​18 hectares, where 4 monolithic brick 17-story residential buildings with underground and surface parking for 400 and 2800 cars, respectively, will be erected. Please note: apartments in the residential complex are sold by developers and the land owner (therefore, there are two sales offices in the construction area). The developer's prices are slightly higher, but they are sold under the DDU, while the land owner's prices are based on an assignment of rights agreement.

    “Kotelnicheskie skyscrapers” are being built on the territory of a car market. Part of it is still active

    Currently, construction has begun on the first two buildings - six and eight sections. Their delivery to the state commission is scheduled for the fourth quarter of 2016. However, half of the apartments in these buildings have already been sold. The residential complex offers 1-, 2- and 3-room apartments with improved layouts. The area of ​​one-room apartments is 41–45 m², two-room apartments are 64–74 m², three-room apartments are from 84 to 93.3 m².

    Apartment prices at the end of September 2015:

    • 1-room apartments - 4–5 million rubles. (97–102 thousand per m2);
    • 2-room apartments - 5.7–7.5 million rubles. (88–98 thousand per m2);
    • 3-room apartments - 6.7–8.2 million rubles. (80–88 thousand per m2).

    Residential complex "Kotelnicheskiye Vysotki" (project)

    Taking into account the quality of the development, the presence of its own infrastructure and the layout of the territory, we can confidently say that today the Kotelnicheskiye Vysotki residential complex is the most promising in the city at an early stage of construction

    Residential complex "Belye Rosy"

    A business class residential area next to the Kuzminsky forest park and 5 minutes from the Kotelniki metro station. It will consist of 8 monolithic brick buildings of variable number of storeys - 16–22 and 15–24. The design and decoration of the entrance groups were developed by the Canadian bureau allSpaces. The design of the facades will imitate trees and sea scenes.

    There are 2 types of housing in the block - apartments and apartments. The apartments are rented unfinished, some of the apartments are ready to renovate and have a built-in kitchen. All residential premises will have high ceilings, spacious kitchens, and two-room apartments will have two bathrooms. A two-level garage with 800 spaces is provided; construction of a kindergarten, playgrounds and sports grounds, and arrangement of recreation areas are planned.

    The cost of housing is higher than the market average, which corresponds to the concept of the quarter. One-room apartments with an area of ​​38 to 79 m² are sold for 5.6–8.7 million rubles, two-room apartments (64–128 m²) for 7.3–12.3 million, three-room apartments (81–162 m²) ) - for 11.3–18 million. The average price per square meter is 130 thousand rubles, the most affordable offer (88 thousand and kopecks) is in the segment of two-room apartments.

    At the moment, the first two buildings have been erected, two more are under construction. Commissioning is scheduled for the end of 2015.

    Residential complex "Orange Park"

    Project of the PIK Group in the microdistrict. Experienced Field, next to Belye Rosy. Monolithic buildings 15–30 floors high. The project provides 19 different layout options for small apartments with one, two or three rooms, as well as studios; larger windows; horizontal wiring of the heating system. The price of housing includes the installation of an air conditioner controlled via Wi-Fi and a 5-year warranty.

    Pre-sale of apartments (housing cooperatives) is open:

    • 1-room apartments – 26–40 m² – 2.9–3.4 million rubles. (100–111 thousand per m2);
    • 2-room apartments – 49–59 m² – 4.4–5.3 million rubles. (90 thousand per m2);
    • 3-room apartments - 65 m² - 5.3–5.6 million rubles. (81–85 thousand per m2).

    Construction has not yet begun; out of 5 buildings, 2 are in the excavation stage. Commissioning is expected in the third quarter of 2022.

    Residential complex "Green Island"

    4 monolithic brick buildings 15–17 floors high on the edge of the Tomilinsky forest park. There is a pond and lakes nearby. The disadvantage is the location and distance from the metro, transport hubs and city infrastructure.

    A budget category complex, with attractive ruble prices for apartments even by “pre-crisis” standards. The 1st stage was commissioned in 2013, the 2nd and 3rd are planned for 2016 and 2017.

    1-, 2- and 3-room apartments are for sale, the cost per square meter is from 75 to 85 thousand rubles.

    Residential complex "Nine"

    A low-rise business-class residential complex, which includes both apartment buildings and townhouses - a total of 9 buildings. Located on Yanichkin Proezd, between the village of Starye Kotelniki and the former territory of the Belaya Dacha state farm. It is the first phase of the new promising microdistrict Belaya Dacha Park, which has not yet begun to be built up.

    In total, the offer includes 162 apartments, more than half of which have already been sold. These are studios, one-, two- and three-room apartments with a ceiling height of more than 3 m. The footage starts from 34 m², the maximum area is 92 m² for apartments and 224 m² for townhouses.

    On the top floors of gallery-type townhouse buildings there are 4-room penthouses with panoramic glazing. The apartments on the first levels have separate exits to private courtyards. The buildings are equipped with elevators going down to the ground floor with storage rooms or to the underground with parking for 160 cars. The entrance groups are equipped with ramps.

    The territory is landscaped with children's playgrounds, recreation areas, pedestrian and bicycle paths. Near each building there are open parking lots with a total capacity of 36 cars.

    All buildings have been handed over, some are already being occupied and property is being registered.

    The cost of apartments varies from 5.7 million rubles for a small one-room apartment with an area of ​​35 m² to 24 million for a 228-meter townhouse. A square meter costs from 106 to 163 thousand rubles.

    Residential complex "Nine" (project)

    Population[ | ]

    Population
    18591926[13]1939[14]1959[15]1970[16]1979[17]1989[18]2000[13]2001[13]2002[19]2003[13]2005[13]
    600↗700↗6591↗13 792↗14 857↗15 855↗17 456↘17 300→17 300↗17 747↘17 700↗18 300
    2006[13]2007[13]2008[13]2009[20]2010[21]2011[13]2012[22]2013[23]2014[24]2015[25]2016[26]2017[27]
    ↗18 700↗19 300↗19 800↗20 364↗32 338↘32 300↗35 081↗37 105↗39 443↗41 308↗43 128↗44 353
    2018[28]2019[29]2020[30]2021[2]
    ↗44 869↗46 763↗49 023↗50 723

    As of January 1, 2022, in terms of population, the city was in 320th place out of 1116[31]cities of the Russian Federation[32].

    Local government[ | ]

    In 2004, the village of Kotelniki was transformed into a city, which in 2007 received the status of a city of regional subordination, and within the framework of local government - the status of an urban district as the only settlement within it[33]. The area of ​​the urban district is 14.24 km²[34].

    Authorities[ | ]

    The authorities of the urban district are:[35]
    The Council of Deputies of the Kotelniki Urban District
    is an elected representative body of local self-government.
    It consists of 20 deputies elected for a period of 5 years. The heads of the Kotelniki urban district
    are elected by the Council of Deputies for a period of 5 years.

    • Bulgakov Andrey Alekseevich
    • from 2022 — Zhigalkin Sergey Alexandrovich[36]

    The administration of the Kotelniki urban district
    is the executive and administrative body of local government.
    Chamber of Control and Accounts of the Kotelniki Urban District

    Economics[ | ]

    More than 900 enterprises and organizations operate in the city[38].

    Industry[ | ]

    The city has a developed production of building materials (Krismar LLC - asphalt and concrete production; Lyuberetsky GOK OJSC - extraction and processing of molding materials; MF Stalkonstruktsiya CJSC - production and installation of metal structures; Unistrom-Trading LLC - concrete products, gypsum and cement[39]), food (Belaya Dacha Trading CJSC - processing of salads and vegetables; light (carpet [39]), electrical (Delsot CJSC - production of heating elements, electric water heaters, boilers, convectors, heaters, fan heaters ) and chemical (JSC "Yara" - production of mineral fertilizers[39]) industry.

    The agro-industrial complex is represented by agro (one of the largest enterprises in the Moscow region for the production and processing of agricultural products), Russian Lawns, Belaya Dacha Flowers.

    Trade[ | ]

    • Torgovy is the second largest in terms of area in Europe after Moscow's Aviapark.
    • Real and Castorama hypermarkets on Novoryazanskoe highway.

    On the territory of the urban district there are many retail trade enterprises, the largest of which are the shopping and entertainment complex Mega Belaya Dacha LLC, Ikea LLC, Auchan LLC, Outlet Village Belaya Dacha, hypermarkets Maxidom LLC, Stockmann LLC ", LLC "Zelgros", LLC "Belaya Dacha Flowers"[38].

    The Avtogarant automobile complex is located on Novoryazanskoye Highway.

    New buildings in Kotelniki, data as of September 2015

    NameDeveloperLocationDescriptionOffer
    Residential complex Kotelnicheskie skyscrapers"BIG Development", GroupMicrodistrict Carpet Monolith-brick, 17 floors, without finishing, ceilings 2.8 m, 1st stage - end of 2016.1-room apartments - 4-5 million rubles. (97-102 thousand per m2), 2-room apartments - 5.7-7.5 million rubles. (88-98 thousand per m2), 3-room apartments - 6.7-8.2 million rubles. (80-88 thousand per m2)
    Residential complex Belye Rosy"StroyComfort"Microdistrict Experienced Field Monolith-brick, 15-24 floors, without finishing, ceilings 2.8/3.6 m, 1st stage - end of 20151-room apartments - 5.6-8.7 million rubles. (110-201 thousand per m2) 2-room apartments - 7.3-12.3 million rubles. (88-123 thousand per m2) 3-room apartments - 11.3-18 million rubles. (111-147 thousand per m2)
    Residential complex Orange ParkGroup "PIK"Microdistrict Experienced Field Monolith, 15-30 floors, unfinished, ceilings 2.8 m, III quarter of 2017.1-room apartments - 2.9-3.4 million rubles. (100-111 thousand per m2), 2-room apartments - 4.4-5.3 million rubles. (90 thousand per m2), 3-room apartments - 5.3-5.6 million rubles. (81-85 thousand per m2)
    Residential complex Green Island"Stroysoyuz"Microdistrict Silicate Monolith-brick, 15-17 floors, without finishing, ceilings 2.75 m, 2016-2017.1-room apartments - 3.7-4.8 million rubles. (75-85 thousand per m2), 2-room apartments - 4.7-5.9 million rubles. (74-80 thousand per m2), 3-room apartments - 6.2-7.5 million rubles. (72-78 thousand per m2)
    Residential complex NineBelaya Dacha Agro LLC, holding company Belaya Dacha OJSCMicrodistrict Belaya Dacha Park Monolith-brick, 3-4 floors, with or without finishing, ceilings 3 m, 2015.1-room apartments - 5.7-7.7 million rubles. (134-163 thousand per m2), 2-room apartments - 8.7-11 million rubles. (129-153 thousand per m2), 3-room apartments - 9.6-16.8 million rubles. (106-140 thousand per m2), 4-room apartments - 12.6-24 million rubles. (106-140 thousand per m2)

    Education, culture, sports[ | ]

    In Kotelniki there are three secondary schools, seven preschool educational institutions, a children's art school named after V.K. Andreev, an industrial and economic technical school, a branch of the Dubna University, the Druzhba sports complex, the FOC sports complex, the Health stadiums (Belaya Dacha), “Builder” (Silicate).

    In the Belaya Dacha estate there is a museum of agro history and the history of vegetable growing in protected soil; at school No. 1 there is a museum of military glory[40].

    In the children's art school named after V.K. Andreev there are two museums: the Museum of Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR, professor of the Vilnius Conservatory, student of Professor A.B. Goldenweiser Valentin Konstantinovich Andreev and the Museum of Rare Musical Instruments

    Attractions[ | ]

    Church of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God in Kotelniki

    • Church of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God (late 1670s - early 1680s). The tented bell tower (1837-1839, architect A. O. Gilardi) is one of the earliest examples of the Russian style.
    • Belaya Dacha estate (Pokrovskoye): a two-story house of the Arshenevskys and two paired outbuildings (late 18th century with later reconstructions) in the classicist style.
    • Monument to fallen soldiers during the Finnish and Great Patriotic Wars
    • Monument to those killed in the evacuation hospital and during demining of the village territory
    • Obelisk of Glory
    • Monument tank "Mother Motherland"
    • Memorial "Cranes"

    An excerpt characterizing Kotelniki

    The hounds were united into one pack, and uncle and Nikolai rode side by side. Natasha, wrapped in scarves, from under which a lively face with sparkling eyes could be seen, galloped up to them, accompanied by Petya and Mikhaila, the hunter who was not far behind her, and the guard who was assigned as her nanny. Petya laughed at something and beat and pulled his horse. Natasha deftly and confidently sat on her black Arab and with a faithful hand, without effort, reined him in. Uncle looked disapprovingly at Petya and Natasha. He did not like to combine self-indulgence with the serious business of hunting. - Hello, uncle, we're on our way! – Petya shouted. “Hello, hello, but don’t run over the dogs,” the uncle said sternly. - Nikolenka, what a lovely dog, Trunila! “he recognized me,” Natasha said about her favorite hound dog. “Trunila, first of all, is not a dog, but a survivor,” thought Nikolai and looked sternly at his sister, trying to make her feel the distance that should have separated them at that moment. Natasha understood this. “Don’t think, uncle, that we will interfere with anyone,” said Natasha. We will remain in our place and not move. “And a good thing, countess,” said the uncle. “Just don’t fall off your horse,” he added: “otherwise it’s pure marching!” – there’s nothing to hold on to. The island of the Otradnensky order was visible about a hundred yards away, and those arriving were approaching it. Rostov, having finally decided with his uncle where to throw the hounds from and showing Natasha a place where she could stand and where nothing could run, set off for a race over the ravine. “Well, nephew, you’re becoming like a seasoned man,” said the uncle: don’t bother ironing (etching). “As necessary,” answered Rostov. - Karai, fuit! - he shouted, responding with this call to his uncle’s words. Karai was an old and ugly, brown-haired male, famous for the fact that he single-handedly took on a seasoned wolf. Everyone took their places. The old count, knowing his son’s hunting ardor, hurried not to be late, and before those who arrived had time to drive up to the place, Ilya Andreich, cheerful, rosy, with trembling cheeks, rode up on his little black ones along the greenery to the hole left for him and, straightening his fur coat and putting on his hunting clothes, shells, climbed onto his smooth, well-fed, quiet and kind, gray-haired Bethlyanka like him. The horses and droshky were sent away. Count Ilya Andreich, although not a hunter by heart, but who firmly knew the hunting laws, rode into the edge of the bushes from which he was standing, took apart the reins, adjusted himself in the saddle and, feeling ready, looked back smiling. Next to him stood his valet, an ancient but overweight rider, Semyon Chekmar. Chekmar kept in his pack three dashing, but also fat, like the owner and the horse - wolfhounds. Two dogs, smart, old, lay down without packs. About a hundred paces further away in the edge of the forest stood another of the Count's stirrups, Mitka, a desperate rider and passionate hunter. The Count, according to his old habit, drank a silver glass of hunting casserole before the hunt, had a snack and washed it down with a half-bottle of his favorite Bordeaux. Ilya Andreich was a little flushed from the wine and the ride; his eyes, covered with moisture, shone especially, and he, wrapped in a fur coat, sitting on the saddle, had the appearance of a child who was going for a walk. Thin, with drawn-in cheeks, Chekmar, having settled down with his affairs, glanced at the master with whom he lived for 30 years in perfect harmony, and, understanding his pleasant mood, waited for a pleasant conversation. Another third person approached cautiously (apparently he had already learned) from behind the forest and stopped behind the count. The face was that of an old man with a gray beard, wearing a woman's hood and a high cap. It was the jester Nastasya Ivanovna. “Well, Nastasya Ivanovna,” the count said in a whisper, winking at him, “just trample the beast, Danilo will give you the task.” “I myself... have a mustache,” said Nastasya Ivanovna. - Shhh! – the count hissed and turned to Semyon. – Have you seen Natalya Ilyinichna? – he asked Semyon. - Where is she? “He and Pyotr Ilyich got up in the weeds from the Zharovs,” answered Semyon, smiling. - They are also ladies, but they have a great desire. - Are you surprised, Semyon, how she drives... huh? - said the count, if only the man was in time! - How not to be surprised? Boldly, deftly. -Where is Nikolasha? Is it above the Lyadovsky top? – the count kept asking in a whisper. - That's right, sir. They already know where to stand. They know how to drive so subtly that sometimes Danila and I are amazed,” said Semyon, knowing how to please the master. - It drives well, huh? And what about the horse, huh? - Paint a picture! Just the other day, a fox was snatched from the Zavarzinsky weeds. They began to jump over, out of delight, passion - the horse is a thousand rubles, but the rider has no price. Look for such a fine fellow! “Search...,” the count repeated, apparently regretting that Semyon’s speech ended so soon. - Search? - he said, turning away the flaps of his fur coat and taking out a snuff box. “The other day, as Mikhail Sidorich came out from mass in full regalia...” Semyon did not finish, hearing the rut clearly heard in the quiet air with the howling of no more than two or three hounds. He bowed his head, listened and silently threatened the master. “They’ve attacked the brood...” he whispered, and they led him straight to Lyadovskaya. The count, having forgotten to wipe the smile from his face, looked ahead along the lintel into the distance and, without sniffing, held the snuffbox in his hand. Following the barking of the dogs, a voice was heard from the wolf, sent into Danila’s bass horn; the pack joined the first three dogs and the voices of the hounds could be heard roaring loudly, with that special howl that served as a sign of the rutting of the wolf. Those arriving no longer squawked, but hooted, and from behind all the voices came Danila’s voice, sometimes bassy, ​​sometimes piercingly thin. Danila’s voice seemed to fill the entire forest, came out from behind the forest and sounded far into the field. After listening in silence for a few seconds, the count and his stirrup became convinced that the hounds had split into two flocks: one large one, roaring especially hotly, began to move away, the other part of the flock rushed along the forest past the count, and in the presence of this flock Danila’s hooting could be heard. Both of these ruts merged, shimmered, but both moved away. Semyon sighed and bent down to straighten the bundle in which the young male was entangled; The count also sighed and, noticing the snuff-box in his hand, opened it and took out a pinch. "Back!" Semyon shouted at the dog, who stepped out beyond the edge. The Count shuddered and dropped his snuffbox. Nastasya Ivanovna got down and began to lift her. The Count and Semyon looked at him. Suddenly, as often happens, the sound of the rut instantly came closer, as if, right there in front of them, there were the barking mouths of dogs and the hooting of Danila. The count looked around and to the right he saw Mitka, who was looking at the count with rolling eyes and, raising his hat, pointed him forward, to the other side. - Take care! - he shouted in such a voice that it was clear that this word had been painfully asking him to come out for a long time. And he galloped, releasing the dogs, towards the count. The Count and Semyon jumped out of the edge of the forest and to their left they saw a wolf, which, softly waddling, quietly jumped up to their left to the very edge at which they were standing. The evil dogs squealed and, breaking away from the pack, rushed towards the wolf past the legs of the horses. The wolf stopped running, awkwardly, like a sick toad, turned his big forehead to the dogs, and also softly waddling, jumped once, twice and, shaking a log (tail), disappeared into the edge of the forest. At that same moment, from the opposite edge of the forest, with a roar similar to crying, one, another, a third hound jumped out in confusion, and the whole pack rushed across the field, through the very place where the wolf had crawled (ran) through. Following the hounds, the hazel bushes parted and Danila’s brown horse, blackened with sweat, appeared. On her long back, in a lump, lolling forward, sat Danila, without a hat, with gray, tousled hair over a red, sweaty face. “Whoop, whoop!” he shouted. When he saw the count, lightning flashed in his eyes. “F...” he shouted, threatening the count with his raised arapnik. -About...the wolf!...hunters! - And as if not deigning the embarrassed, frightened count with further conversation, he, with all the anger he had prepared for the count, hit the sunken wet sides of the brown gelding and rushed after the hounds. The Count, as if punished, stood looking around and trying with a smile to make Semyon regret his situation. But Semyon was no longer there: he, taking a detour through the bushes, jumped the wolf from the abatis. Greyhounds also jumped over the beast from both sides. But the wolf walked through the bushes and not a single hunter intercepted him. Nikolai Rostov, meanwhile, stood in his place, waiting for the beast. By the approach and distance of the rut, by the sounds of the voices of dogs known to him, by the approach, distance and elevation of the voices of those arriving, he felt what was happening on the island. He knew that there were arrived (young) and seasoned (old) wolves on the island; he knew that the hounds had split into two packs, that they were poisoning somewhere, and that something untoward had happened. Every second he waited for the beast to come to his side. He made thousands of different assumptions about how and from which side the animal would run and how it would poison it. Hope gave way to despair. Several times he turned to God with a prayer for the wolf to come out to him; he prayed with that passionate and conscientious feeling with which people pray in moments of great excitement, depending on an insignificant reason. “Well, what does it cost you,” he said to God, “to do this for me! I know that You are great, and that it is a sin to ask You for this; but for the sake of God, make sure that the seasoned one comes out on me, and that Karai, in front of the “uncle” who is looking over there, slams into his throat with a death grip.” A thousand times during these half-hours, with a persistent, intense and restless gaze, Rostov looked around the edge of the forests with two sparse oak trees over an aspen undergrowth, and the ravine with a worn edge, and the uncle’s hat, barely visible from behind a bush to the right. “No, this happiness will not happen,” thought Rostov, but what would it cost? Will not be! I always have misfortune, both in cards and in war, in everything.” Austerlitz and Dolokhov flashed brightly, but quickly changing, in his imagination. “Only once in my life would I hunt down a seasoned wolf, I don’t want to do it again!” he thought, straining his hearing and vision, looking to the left and again to the right and listening to the slightest shades of the sounds of the rut. He looked again to the right and saw something running towards him across the deserted field. “No, this can’t be!” thought Rostov, sighing heavily, like a man sighs when he accomplishes something that has been long awaited by him. The greatest happiness happened - and so simply, without noise, without glitter, without commemoration. Rostov could not believe his eyes and this doubt lasted more than a second. The wolf ran forward and jumped heavily over the pothole that was on his road. It was an old beast, with a gray back and a full, reddish belly. He ran slowly, apparently convinced that no one could see him. Without breathing, Rostov looked back at the dogs. They lay and stood, not seeing the wolf and not understanding anything. Old Karai, turning his head and baring his yellow teeth, angrily looking for a flea, clicked them on his hind thighs. - Hoot! – Rostov said in a whisper, his lips protruding. The dogs, trembling their glands, jumped up, ears pricked. Karai scratched his thigh and stood up, pricking his ears and slightly shaking his tail, on which felts of fur hung. – Let in or not let in? - Nikolai said to himself while the wolf moved towards him, separating from the forest. Suddenly the whole face of the wolf changed; he shuddered, seeing human eyes that he had probably never seen before, fixed on him, and turning his head slightly towards the hunter, he stopped - back or forward? Eh! anyway, forward!... obviously,” he seemed to say to himself, and set off forward, no longer looking back, with a soft, rare, free, but decisive leap. “Whoops!...” Nikolai shouted in a voice that was not his own, and of its own accord his good horse rushed headlong down the hill, jumping over water holes and across the wolf; and the dogs rushed even faster, overtaking her. Nikolai did not hear his cry, did not feel that he was galloping, did not see either the dogs or the place where he was galloping; he saw only the wolf, who, intensifying his run, galloped, without changing direction, along the ravine. The first to appear near the beast was the black-spotted, wide-bottomed Milka and began to approach the beast. Closer, closer... now she came to him. But the wolf glanced slightly sideways at her, and instead of attacking her, as she always did, Milka suddenly raised her tail and began to rest on her front legs. - Whoop! - Nikolai shouted. Red Lyubim jumped out from behind Milka, quickly rushed at the wolf and grabbed him by the hachi (hips of his hind legs), but at that very second he jumped in fear to the other side. The wolf sat down, clicked his teeth and got up again and galloped forward, escorted a yard away by all the dogs that did not approach him. - He will go away! No, It is Immpossible! – Nikolai thought, continuing to scream in a hoarse voice. - Karai! Hoot!...” he shouted, looking with the eyes of the old dog, his only hope. Karai, with all his old strength, stretched out as much as he could, looking at the wolf, galloped heavily away from the beast, across it. But from the speed of the wolf’s leap and the slowness of the dog’s leap, it was clear that Karai’s calculation was wrong. Nikolai could no longer see the forest far ahead of him, which, having reached it, the wolf would probably leave. Dogs and a hunter appeared ahead, galloping almost towards them. There was still hope. Unknown to Nikolai, a dark, young, long male from someone else's pack quickly flew up to the wolf in front and almost knocked him over. The wolf quickly, as could not have been expected from him, stood up and rushed towards the dark dog, snapped his teeth - and the bloody dog, with a torn side, shrieked shrilly and stuck his head into the ground. - Karayushka! Father!.. - Nikolai cried... The old dog, with his tufts dangling on his thighs, thanks to the stop that had taken place, cutting off the wolf’s path, was already five steps away from him. As if sensing danger, the wolf glanced sideways at Karai, hid the log (tail) even further between his legs and increased his gallop. But here - Nikolai only saw that something had happened to Karai - he instantly found himself on the wolf and together with him fell head over heels into the waterhole that was in front of them. The moment when Nikolai saw the dogs swarming with the wolf in the pond, from under which one could see the wolf’s gray fur, his outstretched back leg, and his frightened and choking head with his ears pressed back (Karai was holding him by the throat), the minute when Nikolai saw this was the happiest moment of his life. He had already taken hold of the pommel of the saddle to dismount and stab the wolf, when suddenly the animal’s head poked up from this mass of dogs, then its front legs stood on the edge of the waterhole. The wolf flashed his teeth (Karai was no longer holding him by the throat), jumped out of the pond with his hind legs and, tucking his tail, again separated from the dogs, moved forward. Karai with bristling fur, probably bruised or wounded, had difficulty crawling out of the waterhole.

    Transport[ | ]

    Metro[ | ]

    The main transport in the city is the Kotelniki metro station. On May 4, 2012, by Decree of the Moscow Government No. 194-PP, a decision was made to build the Kotelniki metro station on the Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line. The opening of the station took place on September 21, 2015[43].

    Bus and road transport[ | ]

    The intercity bus station from Vykhino with the routes assigned to it was moved to the city territory.

    The city is connected by regular bus service to Lyubertsy (No. 20, 21, 26, 27), Dzerzhinsky (No. 21, 20, 347, 904), Lytkarin (No. 348), Ramensky (No. 424) and Zhukovsky (No. 424, 441, 478 ). Some of the flights of bus 441 go to Zhukovsky airport[44]. There are also intracity bus routes (No. 474 metro station Kotelniki - microdistrict Silikat), and minibuses, including intracity (No. 1) and suburban (No. 518, 870, 872 to Lyublino metro station, Volzhskaya metro station).

    The city is served by bus routes of the State Unitary Enterprise "Mosgortrans":

    • No. с710 metro station "Alma-Atinskaya" - Belaya Dacha[45] (temporarily not serving Kotelniki due to the reconstruction of the MKAD - Verkhnie Polya street interchange)[46][47];
    • No. 655k Kapotnya - Belaya Dacha[48] (temporarily changed due to the reconstruction of the MKAD - Verkhnie Polya street interchange)[47].

    In addition, two main routes pass near the city:

    • No. m78[49]m. "Orekhovo" - metro station "Vykhino" - a new route of the Magistral route network[50]. The route follows the Moscow Ring Road and does not enter Kotelniki, but makes the Belaya Dacha stop near the Mega Belaya Dacha.
    • No. m79[51] 6th microdistrict Zhulebina - MCC "Dubrovka" (formerly m89), runs along Novoryazanskoye Highway and Volgogradsky Prospekt through the metro stations "Zhulebino", "Kotelniki", "Kuzminki" and "Textilshchiki" and the MCC station "Ugreshskaya" » to the Dubrovka MCC station.

    In the area of ​​the Kotelniki metro station, a free bus leaves from the bus stop to the Globus hypermarket and Outlet Village Belaya Dacha.

    The overpass on Novoyegoryevskoye Highway across Dzerzhinskoye Highway and the railway line connects the Silikat and Belaya Dacha microdistricts.

    Since January 5, the clover interchange of the Moscow Ring Road - Verkhnie Polya Street has been closed for reconstruction[46]. Instead, an interchange with directional exits is being built[52].

    Rail transport[ | ]

    In the city center there is the Yanichkino freight station. The Panki-Dzerzhinskaya railway line runs through the city, dividing it into two parts, now used only for freight traffic to the Moscow Refinery, CHPP-22 and to the Soyuz FCDT in Dzerzhinsky.

    Media[ | ]

    TV channels

    • "Kotelniki-TV"[53]

    Newspapers

    • "Kotelniki Today"[54]

    Independent media[ | ]

    Media platform

    • "Kotelniki info"[55]

    Life and work in Kotelniki

    The social infrastructure of the fast-growing city currently remains largely underdeveloped. The municipal Kotelnikovskaya city clinic has 5 departments:

    • Microdistrict Silikat, 42 - joint services for children and adults;
    • 2nd Pokrovsky proezd, 6 building 2 - joint services for children and adults;
    • Kovrovy microdistrict, 12 - adult department;
    • Kovrovy microdistrict, 26 - children's department;
    • Microdistrict Silikat, 12a - dental department.

    The total capacity of all departments is unknown, but conclusions can be drawn from the capacity of the main department (Silikat microdistrict, no. 42), capable of receiving only 350 patients per shift. Of the 5 departments, only 2 are located in their own two-story buildings, the rest are in the lower floors of residential buildings.

    Many city residents complain about the lack of specialists, equipment, queues and the inability to take some types of tests for free. Many are served in Lyubertsy, where medical facilities are better equipped. Kotelniki does not have its own hospital. There are only 3 teams working at the city ambulance station.

    The situation with schools and kindergartens is no better. There are 3 public schools, 3 budget kindergartens, 3 autonomous and 1 non-state in the city. There are not enough places, children study in schools in 2 and even 3 shifts, and there is a shortage of teachers. Developers are building housing much faster and more readily than social buildings. Many children from Kotelniki found their school and kindergarten in neighboring Lyubertsy.

    Kotelnikovskaya city clinic (Silikat microdistrict, no. 42)

    But finding a job in Kotelniki is not a problem. In addition to the listed large shopping centers, the city has many small, as well as individual shops and service enterprises. There are several large car dealerships and technical centers, warehouse terminals. Industry, as mentioned above, is also developed. Finally, you can find work in Lyubertsy, Dzerzhinsky or Moscow, fortunately all this is located close by.

    Entertainment, traditionally, is also associated with shopping centers. First of all, this applies to the multiplex cinema, bowling alley, indoor skating rink and attractions at MEGA.

    Selgros shopping center next to the Kotelnicheskiye Vysotki residential complex under construction

    The city has several sports and fitness centers, there are 2 stadiums, swimming pools, 2 sports schools, various sections and a football club. You can go for a walk in the Belaya Dacha Usaba Park, Kuzminsky or Tomilinsky forest parks. There is a boat station and a beach on the shore of the former quarry.

    Within the city there are 2 active Orthodox churches.

    Notes[ | ]

    1. Law of the Moscow Region N 160/2004-OZ dated November 25, 2004, as amended as of March 29, 2018 On the status and border of the Kotelniki urban district
    2. 123
      The permanent population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Retrieved April 27, 2022. Archived May 2, 2022.
    3. 12
      Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region No. 122-PG dated June 24, 2004 “On the transformation of the working village of Kotelniki, Lyubertsy district, Moscow region, into the city of Kotelniki, Lyubertsy district, Moscow region”
    4. from the point of view of the administrative-territorial structure
    5. 12
      Law of the Moscow Region dated December 29, 2007 No. 250/2007-OZ “On the transformation of the city of Kotelniki, Lyubertsy district of the Moscow region and amendments to the law of the Moscow region “On the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow region””
    6. from the point of view of the municipal structure
    7. Kotelniki 2022 - map, guide, hotels, attractions Kotelnik (Russia - Moscow region)
    8. People's encyclopedia "My City". Kotelniki
    9. Moscow // Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron: in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - St. Petersburg, 1890-1907.
    10. Resolution of the Head of the Administration of the Moscow Region dated May 31, 1996.
    11. Inc., TV Rain,
      . “Make a major overhaul and leave us alone”: the actor from “Interns” is fighting against renovation in Kotelniki. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
    12. Why was a three-story building in the Moscow region painted black (Russian), Rossiyskaya Gazeta
      (November 30, 2018). Retrieved December 2, 2022.
    13. 123456789
      People's encyclopedia "My City". Kotelniki
    14. All-Union Population Census of 1939. The size of the urban population of the USSR by urban settlements and intra-city areas (unspecified)
      . Retrieved November 30, 2013. Archived November 30, 2013.
    15. All-Union Population Census of 1959. The size of the urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender (Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Access date: September 25, 2013. Archived April 28, 2013.
    16. All-Union Population Census of 1970 The size of the urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender. (Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Access date: September 25, 2013. Archived April 28, 2013.
    17. All-Union Population Census of 1979 The size of the urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender. (Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Access date: September 25, 2013. Archived April 28, 2013.
    18. All-Union population census of 1989. Urban population (undefined)
      . Archived from the original on August 22, 2011.
    19. All-Russian population census 2002. Volume. 1, table 4. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements - regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3 thousand or more (unspecified)
      . Archived from the original on February 3, 2012.
    20. The size of the permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban settlements and regions as of January 1, 2009 (unspecified)
      . Retrieved January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014.
    21. Population census 2010. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, city districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements (Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Access date: February 9, 2013. Archived April 28, 2013.
    22. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 (unspecified)
      . Retrieved May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
    23. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) (undefined)
      . Retrieved November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
    24. Table 33. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 (unspecified)
      . Access date: August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014.
    25. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 (unspecified)
      . Access date: August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015.
    26. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016 (Russian) (October 5, 2018). Retrieved May 15, 2022. Archived May 8, 2022.
    27. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian) (July 31, 2017). Retrieved July 31, 2022. Archived July 31, 2022.
    28. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Retrieved July 25, 2018. Archived July 26, 2022.
    29. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Retrieved July 31, 2019. Archived May 2, 2022.
    30. Estimation of the permanent population of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2022 and on average for 2022 for municipalities (unspecified)
      . Mosoblaststat. Access date: April 20, 2022.
    31. taking into account the cities of Crimea
    32. https://rosstat.gov.ru/storage/mediabank/bul_Chislen_nasel_MO-01-01-2021.rar Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (1.85 Mb, 07/30/2021)
    33. Law of the Moscow Region of November 25, 2004 No. 160/2004-OZ “On the status and boundaries of the Kotelniki urban district”
    34. Initially, in 2004, the Law of the Moscow Region “On the status and boundaries of the Kotelniki urban district” established an area of ​​13.5 km² (1350). Law of 06/05/2009 No. 66/2009-OZ amended: 14.3 km² (1430)
    35. Charter, 2010, Article 25.
    36. On the election of the head of the city district
    37. 12
    38. 12
      Business card of the city // Official website of the city district
    39. 123
      Enterprises and organizations // Official website of the city district
    40. Museums of the city of Kotelniki // official website of the city district
    41. Website of the clinic (Russian) (undefined)
      (inaccessible link). Access date: May 17, 2011. Archived April 14, 2011.
    42. Municipal institution "City Emergency Medical Care Station" // Official website of the city district
    43. Sobyanin opened the Kotelniki metro station to the sounds of an orchestra
      . NTV. Access date: September 21, 2015.
    44. Route No. 441 metro station Kotelniki - Zhukovsky Airport (unspecified)
      .
      mostransavto.ru
      . Date accessed: February 2, 2022.
    45. Ground transport schedule (information on the route) - Unified Transport Portal (unspecified)
      .
      transport.mos.ru
      . Access date: January 25, 2022.
    46. 1 2 Information service of the Stroykompleks portal.
      Traffic is limited in the area of ​​the MKAD-Verkhnie Polya interchange (Russian).
      stroi.mos.ru
      (January 12, 2022). Access date: January 25, 2022.
    47. 1 2
      From January 5, the traffic pattern of routes near Moscow in the area of ​​Kapotnya and Lyublino will change due to the closure of the overpass on the Moscow Ring Road (Russian).
      Ministry of Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Moscow Region
      . Access date: January 25, 2022.
    48. Ground transport schedule (information on the route) - Unified Transport Portal (unspecified)
      .
      transport.mos.ru
      . Access date: January 25, 2022.
    49. Ground transport schedule (information on the route) - Unified Transport Portal (unspecified)
      .
      transport.mos.ru
      . Date accessed: February 2, 2022.
    50. On November 20, we launched the M78 main route from the Vykhino metro station to the Orekhovo metro station (Russian). transport.mos.ru
      . Date accessed: February 2, 2022.
    51. Ground transport schedule (information on the route) - Unified Transport Portal (unspecified)
      .
      transport.mos.ru
      . Access date: January 25, 2022.
    52. Interchange with Verkhnie Polya street (Russian). stroi.mos.ru
      . Date accessed: February 2, 2022.
    53. Kotelniki-TV (unspecified)
      (inaccessible link). Date accessed: September 20, 2022. Archived March 15, 2022.
    54. Kotelniki Today (unspecified)
      (inaccessible link). Access date: October 6, 2022. Archived April 19, 2013.
    55. Kotelniki info

    Secondary housing market

    It is represented mainly by investment apartments in recently built and commissioned residential complexes. This is one of the advantages of Kotelniki - the urban development here is dominated by relatively new houses, and a significant part of them are new buildings from the 2000s, which can be considered without adjusting for wear and tear and a drop in cadastral value.

    There is a lot of fairly new housing on the secondary real estate market in Kotelnikov

    “At the moment, about 1,200 secondary apartments are on display on the Kotelnikov market. Offer prices start from 3.5–4.5 million rubles (one-room apartments in standard five-story buildings, brick and block houses in the Kovrovy microdistrict) to 9.5–10 million rubles (3-room apartments in 17-story monolithic buildings, yesterday's new buildings).

    The structure of the secondary market is as follows: about 45% of apartments are in panel houses (mostly modern, above 5 floors), another 50% are monolithic and monolith-brick (modern houses). Block houses and Stalin buildings are in the minority,” comments Igor Rogulin, general director.

    According to the specialist, the housing stock in Kotelniki has been significantly updated over the past 5–7 years. This circumstance, as well as the construction of a metro in the city, was reflected in prices. If in September 2013 the average price of 1 square meter of secondary housing in Kotelniki was 99 thousand rubles, now, by the end of 2015, it is about 113 thousand rubles.

    Thus, we can say that the city’s secondary real estate is clearly overvalued, so the feasibility of its acquisition seems doubtful, especially considering the good selection of interesting primary offers in the range of 80–100 thousand rubles per square meter.

    If we talk only about Soviet buildings, then these are mainly houses from the 60s and 70s of the last century. Such housing stock is located in three “enclaves” - in the Silikat and Yuzhny microdistricts, Belaya Dacha (between the park and the Kuzminsky forest) and Kovrovy (in the area of ​​the Druzhba stadium). The proposals here are even less adequate.

    So, for a two-room apartment with an area of ​​45.5 m² with a kitchen of 6 m² in a five-story house built in 1970 in the microdistrict. The carpet owner is asking for 4.5 million rubles (99 thousand per square meter). In the neighboring house they want 4.35 million for 40 m² (109 thousand per square meter). And for a 45-meter two-room apartment in a nine-story building built in 1975 in the microdistrict. Silicate already costs 5.2 million (115.5 thousand per square meter).

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