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Crocus City Mall: 2002 Crocus Group 180 62,000 30,000 Afimall City: 2001 AFI Development 400 320,000 114,213 [4] Atrium shopping mall: 2002 Altoon + Porter Architects 150 103,500 40,500 Aviapark: 2014 Amma Development 333 390,000 230,000 Evropeisky Shopping Center: 2006 Kievskaya ploshchad, CJSC 336 180,000 63,000 GUM: 1893
Like every other large city, Moscow has many hotels rated from 2 to 5 stars. Several large hotel chains are present in Moscow, including Sheraton, Marriott and Radisson. [1] In order to deal with high prices, numerous other options are available on the market, including hostels [2] and short-term apartment rental. [3]
Savoy Hotel, Moscow; Sovietsky Hotel; Swissôtel Krasnye Holmy; T. The Carlton Moscow This page was last edited on 26 March 2024, at 08:51 (UTC). Text is ...
The Rossiya Hotel (Russian: Гостиница «Россия», romanized: Gostinitsa "Rossiya") was a hotel in Moscow and was the largest hotel in the world from 1967 to 1980. [1] Until its closure in 2006, it remained the second largest hotel in Europe , with 3,182 rooms. [ 2 ]
The nine Moscow rail terminals are located within a kilometer or two outside of the Garden Ring. Below they are listed clockwise, along with a sample of destinations served by each one, starting with the three stations at Komsomolskaya Square :
GUM (Russian: ГУМ) [a] is a shopping center in Moscow, Russia. It was also the main department store in many cities of the former Soviet Union; similarly named stores operated in some Soviet republics and in post-Soviet states. The most famous GUM is the large store facing Red Square in the Kitai-gorod area – itself traditionally a mall of ...
The Moscow International Business Center (MIBC), [a] also known as Moscow-City, [b] is an under-construction commercial development in Moscow, the capital of Russia.The project occupies an area of 60 hectares, [2] and is located just east of the Third Ring Road at the western edge of the Presnensky District in the Central Administrative Okrug.
Kitay-gorod, developing as a trading area, was known as a business area of Moscow. Its three main streets—Varvarka, Ilyinka, and Nikolskaya—are lined with banks, shops, and storehouses like the historicistic shopping mall GUM which confines Kitay-gorod towards Red Square.