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Krasnoyarsk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Krasnoyarsk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Krasnoyarsk
Skyline of Krasnoyarsk
Official flag of Krasnoyarsk
Official seal of Krasnoyarsk
Flag Seal
Location of Krasnoyarsk and Krai in Russia
Location of Krasnoyarsk and Krai in Russia
Coordinates: 56°04′N 92°45′E
Krai Krasnoyarsk
Mayor Pyotr Pimashkov
Area  
 - City 172 km²
 - Land 172 km²
 - Water 0 km²
Elevation +135..+300 m
Population  
 - City (2005) 917,200
 - Density 5,300/km²
Website: Municipality website

Krasnoyarsk (Russian: Красноя́рск) is the administrative center of Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia, and the third largest city in Siberia, having a population of 909,341 as of the 2002 Census. It lies on the Yenisei River and is an important station on the Trans-Siberian railway.

Contents

[edit] Geography

Krasnoyarsk on the Yenisei River
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Krasnoyarsk on the Yenisei River

Krasnoyarsk is located at 56°01′N 93°04′E. The total area of the city including suburbs and the river is 172 square kilometres. January's average temperature is −20°C, July—+18°C. The minimum temperature ever recorded was —56°C, and the maximum was—+36°C.

The city straddles the Yenisei River, which flows from west to east through town. Due to the hydroelectric power station 32 km upstream, the Yenisei never freezes in winter and never exceeds 14°C in summer through the city. Its water level near the city center is 136 meters from sea level. There are several islands in the river, the largest of which are Tatyshev and Otdyha Isles, which are used mainly for recreation.

To the south and west, Krasnoyarsk is surrounded by forested hills averaging 410 m in height above river level. Further south are the gigantic rock cliffs of the Stolby Nature Reserve rising from the surrounding hills. The western hills form the Gremyachinskaya Griva crest, starting from the Nikolayevskaya Sopka hill (notable for its ski jumping tracks) and extending westwards up to the Sobakina River. The terrain north of town is rather plain, with forests to the northwest and agricultural fields to the north and east.

[edit] Geological Features

The most prominent hills in the Krasnoyarsk area are:

  • Nikolayevskaya Sopka
  • Karaulnaya Gora
  • Chornaya Sopka
  • Drokinskaya
Ostriches in the Krasnoyarsk zoo
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Ostriches in the Krasnoyarsk zoo

The major rivers located in the Krasnoyarsk area are:

  • Mana
  • Bazaikha
  • Kacha
  • Yesaulovka
  • Beryozovka
  • Karaulnaya
  • Slizneva River
  • Listvennaya River
  • Zarechnaya Listvyanka
  • Minzhul
  • Sobakina (Pionerskaya)
  • Krutenkaya
  • Laletina

Due to the specifics of the relief there are few natural lakes exist in the Krasnoyarsk neighborhood.

Krasnoyarsk railway station on the trans-Siberian railway with an antique train on the platform
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Krasnoyarsk railway station on the trans-Siberian railway with an antique train on the platform

The nearby towns are (with distances from Krasnoyarsk and directions):

[edit] Urban structure

Krasnoyarsk is divided into seven administrative districts:

  • Kirovsky
  • Leninsky
  • Oktyabrsky
  • Sovetsky
  • Sverdlovsky
  • Tsentralny
  • Zheleznodorozhny

[edit] Demographics

The population count dynamic by years:

1897 26,600 1962 465,000 1982 833,000 2000 875,500
1923 60,400 1967 576,000 1986 885,000 2001 875,900
1926 72,200 1970 648,000 1989 912,600 2002 909,341
1939 190,000 1973 707,000 1992 925,000 2005 917,200
1956 328,000 1976 758,000 1996 871,100    
1959 412,000 1979 796,300 1998 875,300    
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View of central Krasnoyarsk (2003)
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View of central Krasnoyarsk (2003)

Population count by districts (2002 census):

  • Kirovsky: 117,156
  • Leninsky: 146,943
  • Oktyabrsky: 138,521
  • Sovetsky: 231,696
  • Sverdlovsky: 130,518
  • Tsentralny: 54,503
  • Zheleznodorozhny: 90,004

The population of Krasnoyarsk includes a number of peoples, the most numerous are Russians, Ukrainians, Tatars, Germans and Belarusians. Of the late years the number of Tajiks, Uzbeks and other Central Asian and Caucasian peoples has extensively grown because of the vast, often illegal immigration in search for work.

Another multitudinous immigrants are Chinese who, in opposite to other foreign workers, are employed in much more lucrative areas and often doing co-operative business with local companies. Many [Chinese are busy in trading at bazaars, there even exists a special large Chinese bazaar named Sodruzhestvo (Russian for fellowship) and the Chinese Trading Town (Russian: Китайский торговый город) or colloquially Kitai-gorod situated at Strelka.

[edit] History

The city was founded in July of 1628 as a Russian border fort. The group of service class people led by the Cossack Andrey Dubenskoy arrived to the confluence of the Kacha River with the Yenisei River and constructed fortifications intended to protect the frontier from attacks of native peoples who lived along Yenisei and its tributaries. In the letter to Tsar the Cossacks reported:

...The town of trunks (log buildings) we have constructed and around the place of fort, we the servants of ye lord, have embedded posts and fastened them with double bindings and the place of fort have strengthened mightily...

The fort have been named "Krasny Yar" (Кра́сный Яр) after the local Turkic name of the place it was built by: "Kyzyl Dzhar", meaning "Red Cliff" or "Krasny Yar" in old Russian. The name "Krasnoyarsk" was given later when the village of Krasnyy Yar has received the town status.

An ancient house
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An ancient house

The intensive growth of Krasnoyarsk began with the arrival of the Moscow Postroad (the road M53 nowadays) in 1735 to 1741 which connected the nearby towns of Achinsk and Kansk with Krasnoyarsk and with the rest of Russia. The growth was later spurred on by the discovery of gold and by the arrival of the railroad in 1895.

In the 19th century Krasnoyarsk was the center of the Siberian Cossack movement. In 1822 it had gained the status of town and had become the capital of the Yenisei Guberniya. In the end of the 19th century Krasnoyarsk had several manufacturing facilities, railroad workshops and an engine-house.

Krasnoyarsk city hall
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Krasnoyarsk city hall

In Imperial Russia Krasnoyarsk was the one of the places to which political exiles were banished. For example, eight Decembrists were deported from St. Petersburg to Krasnoyarsk after the failure of the revolt.

After the Russian Revolution of 1917 during the periods of centralized planning (Pyatiletkas) numerous large plants and factories were constructed in Krasnoyarsk: Sibtyazhmash, the dock yard, the paper factory, the hydroelectric power station (now the fifth largest in the world and the second in Russia), the river port.

New-classicism (stalin period) house in the centre
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New-classicism (stalin period) house in the centre
It's contemporary, a standard wooden house of that period, on the outskirts of the city
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It's contemporary, a standard wooden house of that period, on the outskirts of the city

In 1934 the second largest Russian region, Krasnoyarsk Krai, was formed. Krasnoyarsk was established as the administrative center.

During the epoch of Stalinism, Krasnoyarsk was a major center of the Gulag system. The most important labor camp was the Kraslag or Krasnoyarskiy ITL (1938-ca.1960) with the two units located in Kansk and Reshyoty. In Krasnoyarsk itself the Yeniseylag or Yeniseiskiy ITL labor camp existed during World War II (~ 1940-41).

During World War II dozens of factories were evacuated from Ukraine and western Russia to Krasnoyarsk and nearby towns, stimulating the industrial growth of the city. After the war additional large plants were constructed: the aluminum plant, the metallurgic plant, the plant of base metals and many others.

In the late 1970s, the Soviet Union began constructing a phased array radar station at Abalakova, near Krasnoyarsk, which allegedly violated the ABM Treaty. Beginning in 1983, the United States demanded its removal, until the Soviet Union admitted the radar station was a violation in 1989. Equipment was slowly removed from the site and by 1992 it was officially declared to be dismantled. The equipment from the site was likely relocated to a new site near Komsomolsk-na-Amure.[1]

After the collapse of the Soviet Union and beginning of the privatization many large plants and factories, such as the Krasnoyarsk Aluminum Plant, became owned by allegedly criminal authorities and oligarchs while others were declared bankrupt. The economic transition resulted in a dramatic raise in unemployment and numerous strikes.

The best known financial scandal of the second half of 1990's had happened when ownership of the Krasnoyarsk Aluminum Plant by a known Krasnoyarsk businessman Anatoliy Bykov had been cancelled after accusation him of the murder of this partner Vilor Struganov. The murder eventually turned out to be fictional.

The Krasnoyarsk plants ownership problems continue through the early 21st century since nearly all of them are owned either by monopolistic financial groups or by oligarchs and Russian commercial practices continue to evolve.

Since the election of Pyotr Pimashkov as the mayor of Krasnoyarsk in 1996 the look of the city began to slowly improve: old historical buildings were restored, asphalt walkways have been replaced with paving-stone, and numerous squares with fountains have been constructed. Now the major part of the city bears only a few traces of its pragmatic Soviet look.

[edit] Coat of arms

Coat of Arms (1804)
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Coat of Arms (1804)
Coat of Arms (1851)
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Coat of Arms (1851)

The first version of the Krasnoyarsk coat of arms was approved on March 12, 1804. The coat of arms was divided horizontally into two parts, the upper part contained the coat of arms of the Tomsk Guberniya, the lower part had the picture of the Krasny Yar cliff on the silver background.

A riveised coat of arms, approved on November 23, 1851, had the golden figure of a lion placed on the red heraldic shield with a spade in the right fore paw and a sickle in the left fore paw, both made of the same metal. The shield was topped with the golden crown of the Russian Empire.

The current coat of arms (see above) approved on November 28, 2004 contains the same red shield with the slightly changed figure of the lion topped with the golden five-tower status crown of a federal subject center.

In 2005, the 16 meters tall pillar with the bronze statue of the Krasnoyarsk heraldic lion upon its top was erected at the Krasnoyarsk Railway Station square.

[edit] Architecture

An ancient house
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An ancient house

There is a number of historical buildings in Krasnoyarsk, the oldest of them is the Intercession Cathedral (Покровский собор, 1785 to 1795, restored in 1977 to 1978). Other locally significant samples of Russian Orthodox architecture are the Annunciation Cathedral (Благовещенский собор, 1802-12), the St. Trinity Cathedral (Свято-Троицкий собор, 1802-12), John the Baptist Church (Церковь Иоанна Предтечи, 1899, former episcopal residence), and the new Michael the Archangel Church (Церковь Архистратига Михаила, 1998 to 2003).

On the top of the Karaulnaya hill, originally a pagan shrine, later occupied by the Krasnoyarsk fort watchtower, the St. Paraskeba Chapel (Часовня Параскевы Пятницы, 1804, rebuilt in 1854 to 1855) still stands. The chapel, displayed on the 10-ruble note, is one of iconic images of the city. The chapel was abandoned and fell into disrepair during the Soviet era and only when the Perestroyka came it had been regained by the Yenisei bishopric.

The incomplete tower built in the 1980s
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The incomplete tower built in the 1980s

Another unofficial symbol of Krasnoyarsk is the incomplete 24 storey tower located at Strelka. Construction of the tower had been started just before Perestroyka and then frozen due to the administrative crisis. The outline of the tower is clearly seen from many places in the city.

Krasnoyarsk Railway Bridge across the Yenisei (1893-96).
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Krasnoyarsk Railway Bridge across the Yenisei (1893-96).

A bridge near Krasnoyarsk carries the Trans-Siberian Railway across the Yenisei. This structure, one of the longest at the time, was constructed between 1893 and 1896 to an award-winning design by Lavr Proskuryakov. When approved for the inscription on the World Heritage List in 2003, the bridge was described by the UNESCO as "an early representation of a typical parabolic polygonal truss bridge in Russia" which became "a testing ground for the application of engineering theories and the development of new innovative solutions, which had numerous successors" ([2]).

Among other notable buildings are the mansions of the merchant Nikolay Gadalov (beginning of the 20th century), the Roman-Catholic Transfiguration Chapel (Преображенский собор, 1911, also known as the Krasnoyarsk Organ Hall), the Krasnoyarsk Krai Museum stylized as an Ancient Egyptian temple, the Krasnoyarsk Cultural/Historical Center and the triumphal arch at the Spit (2003), the regional administration building flanked with two towers known as the "Donkey Ears".

There is a number of 2-storey wooden houses in the city built mostly in the middle of the 20th century as temporary habitations. Many urbanized villages located inside the city keep the remnants of the traditional Russian village architecture: wooden houses with backyards, many somewhat dilapidated now but still inhabited.

[edit] Culture

The Organ Hall of the Krasnoyarsk Krai Philarmonic Society
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The Organ Hall of the Krasnoyarsk Krai Philarmonic Society

Krasnoyarsk is the hometown of many famous people, some of whom are well-known throughout the world. The most prominent culture figures are the world-famous historic painter Vasily Surikov, the classic writer Viktor Astafiev, the world-class opera singers Pyotr Slovtsov, musician Alexander Porochine and Dmitri Hvorostovsky. The other honourable artists are the painters Andrey Pozdeev, Valeriy Kudrinskiy and Toivo Rännel, sculptors Boris Musat and Yuriy Zlotya, writers Roman Solntsev and Nikolay Gayduk.

There is a number of local holidays celebrated annually in Krasnoyarsk. The most significant holiday is the Day of the City celebrated in June, usually with the carnival. Other holidays and cultural events are: the Mana Festival (Манский фестиваль) usually held on last weekend of June with the traditional bard contest, the International Museum Biennale traditionally held in the Krasnoyarsk Cultural/Historical Center, the avant-garde Museum Night festival dedicated to the International Museum Day (May 18), the Jazz on Yenisey festival, the Stolbist Day held many times a year celebrating the traditions of mountain climbing in the Stolby national reserve, the Bikers' Rally.

Krasnoyarsk has a number of local television companies and the highly-developed telecommunications, many districts of the city have LAN-based broadband Internet access.

[edit] Education

Next to Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk is a very prominent scientific and educational center of Siberia, with over 30 higher education facilities, many of which are the branches of the Russian Academy of Science, and about 200 high schools. The most notable higher education institutes are:

  • Krasnoyarsk State University (Russian abbreviation is KGU), founded in 1963 as a division of Novosibirsk State University, became standalone university in 1969
  • Krasnoyarsk State Technical University (Russian abbreviation is KGTU), founded in 1956
  • Krasnoyarsk State Pedagogical University (Russian abbreviation is KGPU), founded in 1932
  • Siberian State Technological University (Russian abbreviation is SibGTU), the oldest in the city, founded in 1930 as the Siberian Institute of Forest
  • Siberian State Aerospace University (Russian abbreviation is SibGAU), founded in 1960
  • Krasnoyarsk State Medical Academy (Russian abbreviation is KrasGMA), founded in 1942
  • Sukachev Institute of Forest, founded in 1944

Like Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk has a special city district called Akademgorodok (Academic Town in Russian) where several educational institutes are located. Krasnoyarsk's Institute of Biophysics is known for a 1973-1985 experiment on ecological isolation of human beings (the "Bios Experiment").

[edit] Metro

The planned metro network
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The planned metro network

An underground network (three lines) has been in planning and construction phases in Krasnoyarsk for decades. The first three stations have not been opened yet, but several construction sites around the city are visible. There is no fixed date for opening of the system.

[edit] Tourism

The Egyptian Revival Regional Studies Museum
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The Egyptian Revival Regional Studies Museum

The most popular place of attraction for tourists visiting Krasnoyarsk is the huge national nature reserve Stolby (Pillars in Russian) or the Rock Pillars. Stolby covers an area of 470 km² (181 mile²) with numerous giant granite rocks formations up to 100 meters high, many of very extraordinary shapes. Stolby is also a major rock climbing location, many local climbers intentionally do not use any belaying equipment and call their extreme sport "stolbizm", which is known around the world as solo climbing.

Other popular showplaces include the Krasnoyarsk Hydroelectric Power Station dam, the Karaulnaya Gora hill with the Paraskeva Pyatnitsa Chapel, museums, theaters, etc.

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:


Coat of arms of Krasnoyarsk Krai Cities and towns in Krasnoyarsk Krai Flag of Russia
Administrative center: Krasnoyarsk

Achinsk | Artyomovsk | Bogotol | Borodino | Divnogorsk | Ilansky | Kodinsk | Kansk | Lesosibirsk | Minusinsk | Nazarovo | Norilsk | Sharypovo | Sosnovoborsk | Uyar | Uzhur | Yeniseysk | Zaozyorny | Zelenogorsk | Zheleznogorsk

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