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Nevsky Prospect
If in Europe all roads lead to Rome, then in St.
Petesburg all roads lead to Nevsky Prospekt. This 4.5
kilometer long avenue is the heart of St. Petersburg,
teeming with life from early morning until late at
night. Everything can be found on Nevsky - the best
hotels, tons of restaurants and cafes, several movie
theaters, shops, banks, theaters, and concert halls.
Nevsky combines and compresses all of St. Petersburg
onto one street; here one can see all the brilliance
and all the squalor of the city. Newly renovated
buildings stand next to decrepit and gutted ones;
young currency speculators and peddlers of kitschy
souvenirs share street space with beggars and
musicians. Nevsky is the main cruising ground of
mafiosi in their expensive wheels, irate nationalists
and communist demonstrators, hare krishnas, leaflet
pushers, and anyone else who thrives on attention.
Nevsky is also one of Petersburg's most beautiful
streets, a fact that amidst all the hubbub often gets
overlooked. There are only three buildings that were
built this century: the Aeroflot building (house 7),
the Zinger Sewing Company building (now Dom Knigi,
house 28) and house 14 upon which is written
"Citizens! During shelling this side of the street is
more dangerous," a reminder of the Seige. Three
bridges span Nevsky: Politseisky Bridge over the
Moika River, Kazansky Bridge over Kanal Griboyedova,
and Anichkov Bridge with its four horse statues over
the Fontanka. Nevsky is home to architectural gems
like Kazansky Cathedral, Ploshchad Ostrovskogo (with
the huge monument to Catherine the Great and the
Alexander Theater), and the palaces of Stroganov
(house 17), Anichkov (house 39) and Beloselsky-
Belozersky (house 41).
Most of all, Nevsky is where it's at. Ever since it
was first laid in 1710 it has been Petersburg's
backbone, as much a symbol of the city as the Bronze
Horseman and the Peter and Paul Fortress. A walk from
the Admiralty to Ploshchad Vosstaniya takes about an
hour, plus of course time spent looking in shops,
sitting in cafes and being harassed by souvenir
peddlers and munchkin pickpockets.
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