Named after the 1873 frigate Svetlana, this historical street is the longest in the city and contains numerous memorial buildings.
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Named after the 1873 frigate Svetlana, this historical street is the longest in the city and contains numerous memorial buildings.
At one time, Vladisvostok was one of the strongest coastal fortresses in the world, and the concrete structures used to fortify the city can still be seen at the base of mountains, along local roads and in the seaside.
This town center is the location of the famous Railroad Terminal and contains Aleutskaya Street, one of the city's oldest streets.
This beautiful train station building looks more like a palace for the tsars than a railroad terminal.
This impressive building has always housed the Post and Telegraph Office since its 1897-1899 inception.
Designed by a naval engineer who fought in the Russian-Japapanese War of 1904-1905, this building used to house the Siberian Flotilla.
This outstanding Russian naval commander and oceanographer, who contibuted to the development of Russian shipbuilding, is honored by this monument in Lugovaya Square.
One of several memorial buildings on quiet Pushkinskaya Street, this museum is characteristic of the architecture of the 1930-1940 Soviet period.