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Tverskaya Street
Tverskaya Street is one of the central streets of Moscow. It is one of the longest and busiest streets in the city.
The traffic is very heavy in Tverskaya Street. There are so many buses, trolley-busses and cars. There are three metro stations in or near Tverskaya Street. The first is not far from the Red Square and the Kremlin, the second is at Mayakovskaya Square and the third is at the end of the street near the Belorusski railway station.
Tverskaya Street is one of the most beautiful streets in Moscow. There are a lot of fine buildings in it. And you will find some of the best shops and stores in the city there.
The building of the Moscow City Government is in Tverskaya Street. At the opposite side of the street there is a wonderful little square with a monument to Prince Yuri Dolgoruky in it. Farther on, in Pushkin Square, there is a monument to Pushkin — an outstanding Russian poet. This is one of the finest monuments in Moscow.
Named in the XIX century together with Spasopeskovskaya square after the Church of the Transfiguration of the Saviour on the Sands, built around 1711 (depicted in the painting by V. D. Polenov "Moscow courtyard"). Sands — the name of the area based on the nature of the soil.
The name was derived from the Church of the Saviour on the Sands, which still exists today, built in 1706-1711[1] (the full name is the Church of the Transfiguration of the Lord, on the Sands, on the Arbat). The "Sands" in the name reflect the nature of the local soil. Under the Soviet regime, the Church premises were used for many years for the workshops of Soyuzmultfilm, thanks to which it was preserved — dolls for puppet cartoons were made there. It was there that Cheburashka, his faithful friend crocodile Gena and many other cartoon characters were "born", without which our culture is already unthinkable. In Moscow, there was also another Church of the Transfiguration of the Lord, on Peski (10A Bolshoy Karetny pereulok), built in 1657 and destroyed in the 1930s.