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Voykovsky District

Districts of MoscowNaming controversiesNorthern Administrative OkrugPages with non-numeric formatnum argumentsUse mdy dates from May 2015
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Voykovsky District (Russian: Во́йковский райо́н) is an administrative district (raion), one of the sixteen in Northern Administrative Okrug of the federal city of Moscow, Russia. It is located 10 km northwest of the Moscow city center. The area of the district is 6.6 square kilometres (2.5 sq mi) As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 64,933.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Voykovsky District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Voykovsky District
Ленинградское шоссе, Moscow Voykovsky District

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 55.816666666667 ° E 37.5 °
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Ленинградское шоссе 8 к2
125171 Moscow, Voykovsky District
Moscow, Russia
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Sokol (settlement, Moscow)
Sokol (settlement, Moscow)

Sokol (Russian: Сокол) also known as "artists' settlement" (Russian: посёлок художников)) is the first cooperative residential settlement in Moscow, founded in 1923. It is located in the Northern Administrative Okrug, not far from the later built Sokol metro station. The settlement "Sokol" became one of the embodiments of the garden city concept. Since 1979, the settlement has been under state protection as a monument to urban development of the first years of Soviet power. Since 1989, the settlement "Sokol" has been self-governing. The architects of the settlement "Sokol" implemented the concept of the "garden city", which was popular in the early 20th century. The idea of ​​a settlement that would combine the best features of the city and the village was put forward by the British Ebenezer Howard in 1898. As early as 1903, a project appeared to build a similar garden city on Khodynka Field in Moscow. This project was being developed for some time, but the events of 1914-1917 prevented its implementation. The urban development plans of the 1920s - "New Moscow" by Alexey Shchusev and "Greater Moscow" by Sergei Shestako - also widely used the idea of ​​a "garden city". The outskirts and suburbs of Moscow were supposed to be built up with settlements consisting of low-rise buildings, which were to have their own libraries, clubs, sports and children's playgrounds and kindergartens.