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Krylov State Research Center

1894 establishments in the Russian EmpireCompanies based in Saint PetersburgFederal State Unitary Enterprises of RussiaResearch institutes in Saint PetersburgResearch institutes in the Soviet Union
Russian NavyRussian company stubsShipbuilding companies of RussiaShipbuilding companies of the Soviet UnionSoviet Navy

The Krylov State Research Center (Russian: Крыловский государственный научный центр) is a Russian shipbuilding research and development institute, which operates as a federal state-owned unitary enterprise. The institute is named after Aleksey Krylov, the Russian naval designer and mathematician who was one of its first superintendents, and is based in Saint Petersburg.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Krylov State Research Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Krylov State Research Center
Московское шоссе, Saint Petersburg

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N 59.825 ° E 30.360555555556 °
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Московское шоссе, 25

Московское шоссе
196158 Saint Petersburg (округ Гагаринское)
Saint Petersburg, Russia
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Victory Square, Saint Petersburg
Victory Square, Saint Petersburg

Victory Square (Russian: Пло́щадь Побе́ды, Ploschad Pobedy) is a city square in the south of Saint Petersburg, Russia, named after the Soviet victory in the Great Patriotic War. It is located in the very end of Moskovsky Prospekt avenue 8 km from the city's primary Pulkovo Airport – not in the central part of the city, despite this name being common in the former Soviet cities as a central city square. The nearest metro station is Moskovskaya. The thoroughfare with the solemn ensemble of the square is the southern entrance to the city for the automotive traffic from internal Russia with its older and current capital Moscow, after which the avenue, the city district and the next square are named, and for the passengers arriving from the airport. Victory Square is home to the Monument to the Heroic Defenders of Leningrad, which commemorates the victims and survivors of the Siege of Leningrad. The monument, designed by Sergey Speranskiy and Valentin Kamenskiy, and sculpted by Mikhail Anikushin, was erected in 1975 to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the end of the war. It consists of a 48–metre high obelisk, a large circular enclosure, and a subterranean Memorial Hall.In the past, at this location there was a center of a settlement called Srednyaya Rogatka named after a Russian Empire-time security checkpoint (comparable functionality to a city gate) and road crossing. Until 1971, the royal Srednerogatsky Palace was also located here.