Independence Street (Ivano-Frankivsk)

Independence Street
Between intersections of Franka and Lepkoho
Native nameВулиця Незалежності (Ukrainian)
Former name(s)Tysmenytsia Road
Sapieha Street
Soviet Street
Length2,600 m (8,500 ft)
Addresses4 Business-Center "Kyiv"
11 Hausvald Building
27A Regional Music-Drama Theater
48 Prykarpattransgaz
LocationCentral and Eastern Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine
west endViche Maidan
Halych Street
Major
junctions
18
east endTysmenytsia Street
Bystrytsia of Nadvirna

Independence Street (Ukrainian: Вулиця Незалежності, vulytsia Nezalezhnosti) is considered the central street of Ivano-Frankivsk. It runs from west to east and passes the original city's center 250–300 meters south from it. Starting at the west side of the Viche Maidan what is known as the Halych Street Independence Street makes its way along the old Tysmenytsia road east to Bystrytsia river, passing which it changes its name to Tysmenytsia Street running through the city's suburbs towards the city of Tysmenytsia.

Brief history

[edit]
Leon Sapieha

The street is not the oldest in the city and was formed after the demolition of the city's fortifications at the end of the 18th century. The street began to gain its importance with establishment of railroad through the city around the 1860s, which was passing the old Stanislawow on the north-eastern side running from the north to the south-east. Until 1869 the street, unknown whether officially or not, was simply referred to as Tysmenytsia Road. On July 1, 1869, at the 300 Anniversary of the Union of Lublin the street was officially renamed into Leon Sapieha Street (Ulica Sapiezinskogo) after Leon Sapieha, a Polish parliamentarian. That name the street carried almost until the Soviet invasion in 1939. It was during that time that Independence Street was becoming the central street of the city. With the establishment of the West Ukrainian People's Republic in the region (1918–1922), the name of the street changed to Shevchenko Street (1919–1922) after Taras Shevchenko. With the establishment of the Soviet regime and until 1993 with the displacing the city's Lenin monument the street was called Soviet.

Architectural monuments

[edit]
  • monument of Ivan Franko
  • Regional Music-Drama Theater
  • architectural ensemble of stometrivka
  • Gartenberg's Passage (shopping mall "Malva")
  • Hausvald Building
  • others

Cultural sights

[edit]
  • The city's youth library
  • Cinema theater "Kosmos" (former historical Jewish cemetery)
  • The city's children puppet theater
  • others

List of intersecting streets

[edit]
  • Halych Street
  • Levko Bachynsky Street
  • Dmytro Vitovsky Street
  • Markian Shashkevych Street
  • Ivan Vahylevych Street
  • Sich Riflemen Street
  • Ivan Franko Street
  • Bohdan Lepky Street
  • Stepan Bandera Street
  • Mariyka Pidhiryanka Street
  • Dashevych Street
  • Roman Shukhevych Street
  • Shota Rustaveli Street
  • Railway Street
  • Anton Chekhov Street
  • Khryplyn Street
  • Truskavets Street
  • Crimea Street
  • Traktor Street
  • Uhornyky Street
  • Mykytyntsi Street
  • Mykytyntsi Lane
  • Volodymyr Ivasyuk Street
  • others

References

[edit]
[edit]