- Sparrow Hills
Sparrow Hills ( _ru. Воробьёвы го́ры, in
1935 –1999 : Lenin Hills, _ru. Ле́нинские го́ры) is ahill on the right bank of theMoscow River and one of highest points inMoscow with an altitude up to 220 m (60–70 m above theriver level).The observation platform, which gives a good panoramic view of the city, is situated on a steep bank 85 m above the river (200 m above the sea level). The
Luzhniki Stadium (formerly, the Lenin Stadium), where the opening and closing ceremony for the1980 Summer Olympics took place, is right below across theMoskva River . Next to it is the beautifulNovodevichy Convent , with itsNaryshkin Baroque towers.Not far from the observation platform is the famous
Luzhniki Metro Bridge (known to Muscovites as "Metromost"). The two-level Metro-Bridge traverses the river to link Komsomolsky Prospekt with Vernadsky Prospekt. It serves two urban transport systems: motor vehicles and theMoscow Metro (subway). The glass-walled subway station "Vorobyovy Gory " (translates as "Sparrows' Hills") is located at the lower level of the bridge.The hills, immortalized by many Russian poets and writers, are thought to have been named after the village Vorobyovo which was acquired by Grand Duchess
Sophia Vitovtovna (Vitovt 's only daughter) from the priest Vorobey ("Sparrow") in 1451.Alexander I of Russia wished to build theCathedral of Christ the Saviour there; his successor had construction works suspended and the cathedral was eventually erected in the proximity ofthe Kremlin . Nowadays the main landmarks of the hills are theMoscow State University (formerly the tallest building in Europe) and theTrinity Church (1811).External links
* [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=moscow&ll=55.711519,37.549982&spn=0.010178,0.042572&t=k&om=1 Satellite picture by Google maps]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.