"Larechnaya" Moscow, which we lost
Yes, stalls and tents-it was convenient. You get out of the subway, and you have a choice of hundreds of products: socks, thread, cords, tobacco, drink, eat — whatever your heart desires. And always these small, but incredibly functional buildings were part of the appearance of the capital. Around them, consumer life was boiling and, of course, the official and commercial "mafia" was maturing.
And when an entire conglomerate literally fell overnight, a wave of public outrage over Sobyanin's lawlessness swept the Internet. The meme "Night of the Long Buckets" appeared, and the mayor was accused of putting thousands of people out of work.
Now that the tents are gone, we can say a belated "goodbye" to them and go a little deeper into the" stall " history of Moscow. Je suis larek, as they say. Let's hope that what appears (or does not appear at all, who knows) on the site of the stalls will be hundreds of times cooler.
Vegetable tent in the possession of No. 2 on Nikitsky Boulevard, 1955.
Autokiosk, 1920s.
Tents of the International Red Stadium.
1930s, metro station "Palace of Soviets" (metro station "Kropotkinskaya").
Autumn 1947.
1925. A kiosk advertising "Nowhere but in Mosselprom".
Market at the Kitaygorodskaya Wall, 1920s.
Tobacco stall on Rozhdestvenka Street, 1957.
1920s, beer tent on the OST.
the 1980s.
1979, beer stall on Trubnaya Street.
1928, Tishinskaya Square.
At the entrance to the Sokolniki Park, 1947.
Corner of 25 Oktyabrya Street (Nikolskaya Street) and Dzerzhinskiy Square (now Lubyanskaya).
The market at the Kitaygorodskaya Wall, 1930-1934.
The Pepsi tent in November 1989.
June 1969.
The market in the photo by Karl Majdans, 1959.
Fruit tent, 1969.
Fair in Luzhniki, 1984. In these stalls, exactly at the time presented, they sold numbered models of collectible cars of Saratov production. Also, I remember, they sold a miniature composition "Tsar-bell" there.
the 1960s.
The shoeshine man and his tent, 1980s.
On the left — winter in Moscow in 1959, on the right-a tent near the metro station "Tsvetnoy Bulvar" in 1947.
On the left — one of the famous shots of Cartier-Bresson from the series "People of Russia", on the right-a stall from 1925.
The GUM stall (1920-1925) and the flower stand on Pushkin Square (1930).
Keywords: City | Moscow | Russian Federation | History | Retro | Kiosk | Stalls