Le raïon de Kholodnohirsky (en ukrainien : Холодногірський район) est un raïon (district) urbain de Kharkiv, la capitale de l'oblast de Kharkiv.
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Kholodnohirskyi District is an urban district of the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine, named after a neighborhood in the city Kholodna Hora.
The district appeared sometime around 1930 when Ivano-Lysohirskyi District was renamed into Leninskyi District. In 2016 it was renamed into Kholodnohirskyi to comply with decommunization laws.
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On 21 January 2021, a fire broke out at an unregistered nursing home in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The fire killed 15 people and injured 11 others. Nine people were rescued and sent to the hospital.
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Kholodna Hora is a station on the Kharkiv Metro's Kholodnohirsko–Zavodska Line. The station is the western terminus of the line and was opened on 23 August 1975. It is located under the Poltavsky Shlyakh, in the middle of the Kholodna Hora residential district in the western part of Kharkiv.
Until 8 October 1995, the station and the street on which it is located were known as Vulytsia Sverdlova. Also, a bas-relief portrait of communist leader Yakov Sverdlov was located on the station, later removed. Two relief composite architectural items, which depicted communist scenes from the Velikiy Oktiabr and the Triumph of the Revolution, are still located on the station.
The station is put low underground, and is a pillar-trispan with many white marble columns. The floor of the station has been finished off with red granite. It was designed by V.A Spivachyk; engineered by P.A. Bochikashvili and N.D. Ivanova; and decorated by V.I. Lenchin, P.P Yurchenko, and I.P. Yastrebov.
The Kholodna Hora station has two vestibules that are directly connected to the station and two exits, which have pedestrian cross tunnels under the Poltavskyi Shliakh. The large amount of passenger traffic on the station is accounted for by the many bus routes passing nearby, the buses carrying passengers to the neighboring towns and villages.
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The Baron Bergenheim Ceramic and Terracotta Factory, known since 1891 as the Society for the Production of Fireproof Bricks and Pottery of Baron E. E. Bergenheim, was a former industrial enterprise and recently recognized cultural heritage site located in the Zalopan district of central Kharkiv, Ukraine. It was founded in 1876 by engineer and Baron of the Grand Duchy of Finland, Edward Ferdinand Bergenheim, son of Archbishop Edward Bergenheim, head of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland. The present-day factory buildings, recently listed as immovable cultural heritage sites of Ukraine, were constructed in 1890 based on the designs of the factory's owner himself. On Mala Panasivska Street stands the factory's income-generating apartment building, likely constructed in 1912.
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Kharkiv railway station is a railway station in Kharkiv, the second largest city in Ukraine.
Situation
Il englobe des territoires dans le nord-ouest de la ville de Kharkiv.
Historique
Il a été nommé de sa proximité du village de Kholodna Hora, il avait porté le nom de raïon Lénine mais abandonné le 2 février 2016 avec la dé-soviétisation des noms.
Lieux d’intérêt
Deux théâtres, et deux cinémas, des bibliothèques, neuf parcs et places, la gare de Kharkiv, la Cathédrale diocésaine de l'Annonciation à Kharkiv, le Marché central de Kharkiv.
Liens internes
Subdivisions administratives de Kharkiv.
Références
Portail de l’Ukraine