http://www.irkutskstreets.narod.ru
        At the corner of  Proletarskaya and Karl Marx
streets was the
Chapel savior. It was laid August
30, 1866.
On the same day, four years later, it was
solemnly consecrated to the memory of preserving
the lives of Emperor Alexander II on April 4, 1866.
The chapel was installed on the plans and drawings
of Lieutenant N. Porokhov, iconostasis, icons and
other accessories were made out of St. Petersburg.
The building cost the city about 45 500 rubles. In
20-ies of the century it was dismantled, still later
there was a monument to Vladimir Lenin from
granite.
            The next house is the cinema "Art", before the
revolution "Decadence", owned by industrialist
Yagdzhoglu.
      At the crossroads of Karl Marx and Lenin
streets the renovated monument to Lenin stands.
Few of
residents  know that this place previously
was occupied by the building of Evangelical
Reformed Church. First Lutheran Church in
Irkutsk was wooden. It was built in 1826 on the
corner of the Spasskaya and Savinskaya streets
near the office of Russian-American Company.
Since then, they began to call the street
Spassko-Luteranskaya. In a fire in 1879 the
wooden building of the Lutheran church burned
down. They r
esumed the construction in the mid
80-ies 1 century, but already in the stone. The
work was completed in October 1885, the author
of the project was the architect G. Rosen.
The
church was closed in 1919, later it was occupied
by a student teacher's college dorm. Its library,
which was in two large cabinets in the gallery, on
the order of the Director of the Institute  was sent
to the scrap. The church was completely
dismantled in 1952 before the opening of the
monument to Vladimir Lenin (September 1952).
      On the opposite side of the street Sukhebaatar is
a former hotel "Central Deco that was built in
1870-1873. In the early 1930's  two floors were
completed. Since 1931 there is the East Siberian
(Irkutsk) Geological Survey, later it was known as the
industrial association "Irkutskgeologiya.
       The entire block between the streets of Marat
and Lenin took the building of the former branch of
the Russian-Asian Bank, built in 1910-1912,
designed by the architect VI Kolanowski. Today it is
a hospital.
       The quarter between Chekhov and Volodarskiy
streets is occupied by a residential complex of railway
workers, it was  built in 1935. Until 1922 the
Annunciation Church and small houses were here.
Outside of the Annunciation street (now it is named
after the Petrograd Bolshevik Volodarskiy) was built
in 1783-1785 years the stone Annunciation Church. In
it began its ministry deacon and then priest, a
prominent missionary and social activist Innocent
Benjamin, who in the end of life became the
Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna. During a
major fire June 24, 1879 a large church bell melted
and on the ground it formed a block of copper
weighing about a thousand pounds.
       On the opposite corner of Lenin is a building of
the Baikal State University of Economics and Law.
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