Grachevsky Park in Khovrino: a recreation area with an unusual history. Estate "Grachevka" Park Grachevka history

Khovrino is not the richest district of Moscow in terms of attractions, except that the famous Khovrinsk hospital immediately comes to mind - a place of pilgrimage for informals and just people who like to play stalkers) But there is at least one more attraction in this area that cannot be ignored and to which In fact, I went - this is the ancient Grachevka estate.

Coming out of the Rechnoy Vokzal metro station, you need to turn right and walk or drive to Klinskaya Street. The estate itself has today turned into the Moscow Regional Hospital for Rehabilitation Treatment.

It’s good that all historical sites should be free to visit by people interested in architecture, history and simply who love such places, but in Russia everything is different, most of such places, especially in Moscow, are given over to the care of the state. services and there are embassies and other places closed to public entry. This is how things are with this estate-hospital, at the entrance there is security who asks who is going where and why? But apparently there is less strict control here than in other places and my answer was that I from the organization of state architecture completely satisfied them and they let me through.

Patients were walking around the estate; occasionally they glanced sideways at me; apparently it’s not often that a person with a camera invades this peace and quiet) Some lady even threw at me in the back, “As soon as they let him in...”. But I have a question for her: how were they allowed in, but other people were forbidden to look at such beauty? Works of art, including architectural ones, I repeat once again, should be open to everyone!

This is a view of the estate from Klinskaya Street, but from the other side it’s even more interesting, I’ll go there again, but for now I’m starting to look at the facial appearance. There are enough statues in the decoration of the house, for example 4 women do not let the balcony fall.

An elegant spire on a dome.

Turning to history, one can trace that the estate dates back to the 15th century, during which time it has seen a lot...I will especially remember the year 1812, which did not pass by this place and Khovrino was plundered and burned by the French army.
In 1895, after the death of the “wild master” Panov, the estate was acquired by the 1st guild merchant Mitrofan Semenovich Grachev. He once again redesigned and rebuilt the estate. In 1900, on the site of a burned house designed by the outstanding architect L.A. Kekushev built a magnificent palace, the prototype of which was the famous gambling house in Monte Carlo. There were legends that the owner of Khovrin won a fortune in cards. The newly rebuilt estate has since been called Grachevka.

I managed to get inside.

The inside is certainly beautiful, but the presence of a hospital in this place affects it.

The ceilings are beautifully framed.

There is an antique wardrobe right at the entrance.

With no less antique books.

You can go to the top, but I no longer neglected hospitality; after all, this is a closed institution.

M.S. Grachev died in 1899. The owner of the estate until the revolution was his widow Varvara Nikolaevna. In 1918, the Grachevs were expelled from the estate, and the workers' faculty of the Petrovsky Agricultural Academy (the future TSHA) was located in the palace and services. In 1947, the territory of the Grachevka estate and the adjacent park with an area of ​​32.0 hectares were transferred to the Moscow Regional Clinic of Physical Treatment Methods.

Now let's move on to the most interesting thing - the view of the estate from Zelenogradskaya Street.

On this side the architecture is more varied and interesting; the façade is decorated with numerous sculptures.

The only thing that spoils the impression of the “Monte Charles” estate is the laundry hanging in the windows.

Not many estates can do without a lion)

Or a jug.

Or women) In this case, from ancient times.



Several other buildings have been preserved on the territory of the estate, which have been successfully converted into household use. needs and departments of the hospital.

Several photographs of the estate from previous years have survived. This is what this place looked like in 1901.

There is a small photo selection between 1973 and 1975. It is clear that at this time the estate was desolate. An ideal place to shoot a horror movie.

And finally, greetings from childhood)

Brief historical background

Owners of the estate:
beginning of the 15th century - Grigory Khovra
Second half of the 16th - first half of the 17th century. - Tretyakovs
1646-1682 - steward V.B. Sheremetyev
end of the 17th century - A.V. Golitsyna, A.V. Pronskaya, A.V. Pozharskaya
1700-1758 - Golovins
before 1811 - E.P. Holtstein-Beck (married Princess Baryatinskaya)
1811-1818 - Obolensky
1818-1851 N.A. and G.D. Stolypin
1859-1879 - Molchanovs
1879-1892 - merchant S.E. Panov
1895-1917 - merchants Grachevs

Estate architecture:
the manor house of G.A. Kaiser according to the design of L.N. Kekushev was built under the Grachevs.

Location of the estate, travel:
Moscow, st. Klinskaya, 2
From M. River Station bus. No. 188 to the "Hospital" stop

Preservation of the estate:
The master's house, kitchen outbuilding, outbuilding, stables, carriage house, greenhouse, service outbuilding, Church of the Mother of God (current), park.

The Grachevka estate near Moscow in the Khovrino region was created in the 15th-16th centuries as the estate of the Tretyakov-Khovrins.

During the revolutionary years, a hospital was located within the walls of the palace; in the post-war period, a tuberculosis sanatorium operated. Now the building belongs to the Moscow Regional Hospital complex. The park also contains a small pond, a memorial to those killed in the Great Patriotic War, and the restored Znamenskaya Church.

History of the estate and development of Khovrino

The name of the area Khovrino appeared at the turn of the 14th - 15th centuries. Then the merchant Stefan Vasilyevich came to Moscow with his son Grigory, who bore the nickname “Khovra”, which means “untidy”. They founded a small estate in the suburbs of Moscow, which soon received the name “Khovrino”.

Since 1985, Khovrino became the property of the Tretyakovs, and later the Sheremetevs. The estate could not find permanent owners for a long time, passing from one eminent family to another. Until Peter I donated the village to F.A. Golovin. The village belonged to the Golovin dynasty for 3 generations. Then it was sold again - to N.P. Obolensky.

In the middle of the 18th century. a beautiful architectural ensemble with a park and an estate was erected here. The center of the architectural composition was the manor house made of wood, elegant, looking like a fairy-tale tower. A driveway led from it to the southwest. On the other hand, a picturesque road descended to a bridge over the Likhoborka River. On the opposite bank of the river there was a wide alley running through a vast park area.

But during the Patriotic War of 1812, the estate burned down. The ruined estate managed to change several owners until it was bought by the merchant Mitrofan Grachev in 1895. By the beginning of the 20th century, the neglected estate acquired a luxurious appearance, and the center of Grachev’s estate became a country palace, created according to the design of Lev Kekushev. The palace resembled a casino in Monte Carlo - even then a popular summer vacation spot for the Russian aristocracy. In the first decade of the 20th century, the estate in Khovrino hosted a large number of Russian nobility: K.V. Lemokh painted his paintings here, A.N. Tolstoy, P.I. Tchaikovsky, V.A. Gilyarovsky and V.Ya. Bryusov spent their leisure time here.

Grachevka estate in Khovrino today

The territory of the main manor house is surrounded by a fence made of metal rods with a checkpoint. Only patients and hospital staff are allowed on the premises. You can view the architectural monument through fairly wide bars (some people manage to crawl through them, but staying on the hospital grounds without a pass is illegal).

Currently, Grachevsky Park, occupying an area of ​​19 hectares, is divided into 2 zones:

  • Regular park- a popular place for walks with linden alleys, oak groves and larch trees.
  • Landscape part— the most picturesque area of ​​the park occupies the territory along the Likhoborka River to a small pond.

The park area is generally considered undeveloped. But in the summer, children's attractions appear here and a football field is built. In winter, a ski track, the so-called health trail, is laid in the park.

On the outskirts of the park stands the building of the unfinished Khovrinskaya Hospital. Abandoned in 1985, the construction site has given rise to many rumors and myths over the course of 30 years. Today it is locally popular among representatives of different subcultures.

Grachevsky Park on Google panoramas. Maps

How to get to the Grachevka estate in Khovrino

Grachevsky Park and the estate are part of the Northern District of Moscow. The most convenient way to get to the Khovrino microdistrict from other suburbs of the capital is by rail to the station of the same name on the banks of Likhoborka. The manor house is located at Klinskaya Street, building 2. In front of the park there is a public transport stop “Khovrino Station (Zelenogradskaya Street)”, where buses No. 65 and 188 stop.

Khovrino and Rechnoy Vokzal metro stations are a 30-minute walk away.

Map of the walking route from the Khovrino metro station to the Grachevka estate on Google. Maps

Those traveling by private car need to turn off the Moscow Ring Road and drive about 4 kilometers. You can leave your car in the parking lot near the Church of the Mother of God of the Sign.

By taxi

A taxi in Moscow is not cheap. Special applications for calling a taxi will help you make a trip by car with a private driver more affordable. All popular applications operate in Moscow and the Moscow region, including: Yandex. Taxi, Uber, Gett, Maxim, Taxi Lucky.

Video of the Grachevka estate in Khovrino


Brief historical background

Owners of the estate:
beginning of the 15th century - Grigory Khovra
Second half of the 16th - first half of the 17th century. - Tretyakovs
1646-1682 - steward V.B. Sheremetyev
end of the 17th century - A.V. Golitsyna, A.V. Pronskaya, A.V. Pozharskaya
1700-1758 - Golovins
before 1811 - E.P. Holtstein-Beck (married Princess Baryatinskaya)
1811-1818 - Obolensky
1818-1851 N.A. and G.D. Stolypin
1859-1879 - Molchanovs
1879-1892 - merchant S.E. Panov
1895-1917 - merchants Grachevs

Estate architecture:
the manor house of G.A. Kaiser according to the design of L.N. Kekushev was built under the Grachevs.

Location of the estate, travel:
Moscow, st. Klinskaya, 2
From M. River Station bus. No. 188 to the "Hospital" stop

Preservation of the estate:
The master's house, kitchen outbuilding, outbuilding, stables, carriage house, greenhouse, service outbuilding, Church of the Mother of God (current), park. .

02 The Battle of Kulikovo has just died down, in which the holy noble prince Dimitry Donskoy, through the intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos and through the prayers of St. Sergius of Radonezh, defeated the hordes of Mamai. At this time, the Sourozh merchant Stefan, nicknamed Komra, comes to Moscow. His son was also nicknamed Komra, or Khovra, and his grandson already had the surname Khovrin. We do not know who was the first of them at the beginning of the 15th century to take possession of the estate on the Likhoborka River, but it is known that at the end of the 16th century a church was built here in the name of the Great Martyr George. It was built by Stefan's descendant Vasily Tretyakov-Khovrin. This church was burned by apostates during the Time of Troubles.

03 The Tretyakovs owned the estate until the first half of the 17th century. Then the owners changed: 1646-1682 - steward V.B. Sheremetyev, end of the 17th century. - A.V. Golitsyna, A.V. Pronskaya, A.V. Pozharskaya, 1700-1758. - Golovins. In 1700, Khovrino, by decree of Peter I, was donated to his associate, Field Marshal Count Fyodor Alekseevich Golovin, a descendant of the Khovrins. After the death of the count, the village was inherited by his widow Sofya Nikitichna, who built the stone Church of the Sign on the old Khovrinsky churchyard.

04 The Golovins laid the foundations for a regular axial layout of the Khovrino estate, planted a linden park and a “fertile garden”. The estate was flanked on both sides by rural streets. The church stood to the right of the manor's buildings, on the banks of the Likhoborka River, surrounded by a cemetery where local peasants were buried from the end of the 15th century.

05 In 1811, the estate was acquired by Prince Obolensky. Soon the Patriotic War began, which did not bypass Khovrino. In 1812, when Moscow was burning in fires, Napoleonic soldiers raided the estate, robbed it and burned it, and desecrated the temple. After the end of the war, unable to restore the burnt estate, Obolensky sold it in 1818 to N.A. and G.D. Stolypin. The latter changed the terrain: a long, wide pond appeared on Likhoborka. A new house was built, the park became more compact, and the semicircle of the orchard was turned to the south.

06 Years passed, owners changed. The Stolypins (1818-1851), the Zhemchuzhnikovs (1851-59)… In pre-reform times, the old way of life was collapsing. The Nikolaevskaya Railway, which cut the estate park, opened the way to Khovrino for summer residents. Peasants from cultivators turned into dacha owners, gardeners, cab drivers, cast-iron workers and factory workers in the neighboring village of Mikhalkov.

07 The Khovrino estate, fortunately, did not fall into the hands of resellers and was not sold in parts... The most favorable era in the life of the Khovrino estate came in 1859, after its purchase by the Moscow millionaire, manufacturer Evgraf Vladimirovich Molchanov. The new owner, Evgraf Vladimirovich Molchanov, arranged his estate near Moscow on a grand scale. Journalist A. Yartsev wrote about the construction of the estate under him in “Moscow Walks”: “In an almost bare but beautiful place, thanks to beautiful ponds and a river, a park was laid out. Huge trees of different species were brought here in troikas: cedars, fir, larch, pine trees, poplars, all kinds of shrubs, etc. Flower beds were full of flowers, beautiful gazebos, bridges, grottoes grew. The huge three-story house was decorated anew, several new outbuildings were built... A large farm was established, utility services and a water pump were built."

08 Evgraf Vladimirovich Molchanov rebuilt the estate, inviting a famous architect to Khovrino. It was decided to demolish the old temple on the shore of the pond. For the construction of the new church, Bykovsky chose a dry, elevated place that was surrounded by a rural road (now it is the turn from Klinskaya Street to Festivalnaya). Probably Bykovsky rebuilt the entire estate complex in Khovrin and redesigned the park. But only the only building of the architect in the estate is documented: the new Church of the Sign. Its draft, signed by Bykovsky on May 14, 1868, was preserved in the Central Historical Archives of Moscow.

09 The old temple near the pond was dismantled, the places of the thrones were traditionally marked with stone venerable pillars. For the new church, Molchanov donated a plot of land at the turn of the estate road towards the village of Degunina (now the corner of Klinskaya and Festivalnaya streets), which Bykovsky pointed out to him. Molchanov did not live to see the opening of the church; he died in 1869. In 1879, his widow, Elizaveta Iosifovna, sold the estate, but continued to take care of the Znamenskaya Church. Why was the small rural Khovrinsky church so amazing to contemporaries? How did it stand out among the surrounding churches built in the middle - second half of the 19th century in Degunin, Businov, Aksinin?

10 After the construction of the railway platform, Khovrino became a real summer cottage. The richer public came to Molchanov’s dachas; petty officials, artists, and intellectuals lived in rural houses in the summer. The merchant S.E. Panov, who acquired the estate in 1879, turned out to be a gloomy tyrant, accustomed to dealing with criminals during the construction of railways. He oppressed the Khovrin peasants so much that they, driven to despair, wanted to kill him. An archival document has been preserved - Panov’s complaint against the priest Ioann Pomortsev, who defended local peasants who resisted the tyranny of the landowner in such a desperate way as setting the manor’s house on fire.

11 In 1895, after the death of the “wild master” Panov, the estate was acquired by the 1st guild merchant Mitrofan Semyonovich Grachev. Grachev once again redesigned and rebuilt the estate. In 1900, on the site of a burned house designed by the outstanding architect L.A. Kekushev built a magnificent palace, the prototype of which was the famous gambling house in Monte Carlo. There were legends that the owner of Khovrin won a fortune in cards. The newly rebuilt estate has since been called Grachevka.

12 Dacha life continued to flourish in Khovrin. It was a favorite vacation spot for writers, artists, and poets. On September 28, 1897, the poet Valery Bryusov and Ioanna Runt were married in the Church of the Sign. M.S. Grachev died in 1899. The owner of the estate until the revolution was his widow Varvara Nikolaevna.

13 In 1918, the Grachevs were expelled from the estate, and the workers' faculty of the Petrovsky Agricultural Academy (the future TSHA) was located in the palace and services. Since 1928, a sanatorium was located on the territory of the estate.
During the war, the building housed a hospital.

14 In 1947, the territory of the Grachevka estate and the adjacent park with an area of ​​32.0 hectares were transferred to the Moscow Regional Clinic of Physical Treatment Methods. In 1952, the Moscow Regional Physiotherapeutic Hospital was renamed the Moscow Regional Hospital, maintaining its physiotherapeutic profile.

15 In 2004, after a series of renamings, the hospital received the name: Moscow Regional Clinical Center for Rehabilitation Medicine and Rehabilitation. Currently, it is a multidisciplinary specialized institution of a new type, unique in its structure and integrated approach to solving the modern trend of rehabilitation medicine.

16 Along with the main tasks, the administration of the Moscow Center for Military and Cultural History pays great attention to the issues of preserving and maintaining in proper order the Grachevka estate, which is, first of all, a historical monument and spiritual heritage. Thanks to proper treatment, the modern estate remains in excellent shape and is rightfully considered one of the architectural and historical pearls of Moscow and the Moscow region.

All my posts appear first in my journal:

The Grachevka estate in Khovrino is an architectural ensemble in the style of merchant eclecticism. Located on the territory of Grachevsky Park.

The name of the estate is associated with the name of its last owner - merchant Mitrofan Grachev. He was a rich and ambitious man who built himself a real palace with turrets, statues, stucco moldings, verandas, and an abundance of colored glass.

The first noble estate in Khovrino appeared in the 15th century. At that time, these lands belonged to the famous boyar family of the Tretyakovs. At the beginning of the 16th century. The Tretyakovs sold the estate to the Sheremetev counts, then the estate changed owners several more times.

In the 18th century by order of the new owner, N.P. Obolensky, the estate was completely rebuilt, the park was landscaped in the English style. In the center of the architectural ensemble is a large wooden house, similar to a Russian tower. Well-groomed paths led to the house on all sides.

In 1812, a fire destroyed most of the buildings of the Khovrinskaya estate, including the manor house. From that moment on, endless resales of the plot began, ending in 1895, when Mitrofan Grachev paid a very large sum for it at that time. Thus began the new life of the estate in Khovrino.

To build a new manor house, Grachev hired the most talented architects - L. Kekushev and G. Kaiser. The work was completed in 1900, but the merchant was not destined to see his house in its finished form: Mitrofan died in 1899.

The main feature of the main house of the Grachevka estate is that it is very similar to the famous Monte Carlo casino in Monaco - the oldest casino in Europe. Mitrofan Grachev considered the gambling house building, built by the famous architect C. Garnier, to be the highest manifestation of architectural art. The similarity between the estate and the casino gave rise to a popular legend that the merchant won his money in Monaco.

Just like the building of the Monte Carlo casino, the manor house of the estate in Khovrino is decorated with towers, statues, risalits, flowerpots, and stucco moldings. Kekushev and Kaiser fully realized a very bold idea: the mansion was built according to the “sea wave” principle. The building begins with a marble staircase with statues of lions and caryatids, the first two floors protrude deep forward, like a huge portico, the third floor consists of two rotundas, and the composition is completed by an elegant tower with balconies and a sharp spire.

After Grachev's death, his family owned the estate. At this time, the house in Khovrino became one of the centers of cultural life in Moscow. The Grachevs gladly invited representatives of the intelligentsia to relax in the lap of nature. A. Tolstoy, V. Gilyarovsky, P. Tchaikovsky stayed here. The wedding of the poet V. Bryusov and the translator I. Runt took place in the Znamenskaya Church located on the territory of the estate.

Immediately after the revolution, the estate was transferred to the workers' faculty of the Agricultural Academy. The façade and interiors of the main building were rapidly falling into disrepair. The structures of Grachevsky Park were also destroyed: numerous gazebos, benches, flower beds and fountains.

In 1928, the Agricultural Academy transferred the estate to the sanatorium. Unfortunately, this did not lead to the restoration of the architectural monument and the surrounding area. On the contrary, during this period the ponds were pumped out, and several dozen hundred-year-old trees were cut down in the park.

During the Second World War, a military hospital was located in the estate; after the war, the Moscow Regional Rehabilitation Hospital moved here. This institution continues to occupy the mansion now (data as of November 15, 2018).

In 1972, the Grachevka estate was given the status of a cultural heritage site of national significance. The main building, outbuildings and outbuildings were partially restored.

To get to the estate, you must go through the security point of the Moscow Regional Hospital. The architectural monument is clearly visible through the lattice fence.

Grachevsky Park

Around the Grachevka estate there is a park of the same name. The total area of ​​land is 19 hectares. The park is divided into two parts – regular and landscape. Regular is a well-groomed space with linden, oak and larch alleys. There are many flower beds, gazebos, and benches. There are bridges across streams and rivers.

The landscape part of Grachevsky Park is particularly beautiful. A spruce-deciduous forest is located on the banks of the picturesque Likhoborka River. A small pond is hidden in the thickets of the forest: the landscape seems to have come out of Vasnetsov’s famous painting “Alyonushka”.

In the summer, children's playgrounds with attractions, fields for playing football and volleyball open in the regular part of Grachevsky Park. In winter, the Health Path runs through the park - one of the longest ski runs in Moscow.

For many years, Grachevsky Park has been very popular among representatives of youth subcultures, lovers of abandoned and mysterious places, post-apocalyptic aesthetics, stalkers and rafters. The fact is that at one of the ends of the park there was an unfinished building. This huge multi-story building with many buildings was supposed to become the pride of Soviet medicine. However, in 1985, the construction of the hospital was stopped, and the huge complex began to fall into disrepair. Among the residents of Khovrino, the high-rise building enjoys a bad reputation: over the past 30 years, many tragic incidents have occurred here. In November 2018, demolition of the Khovrinskaya hospital began.

In 1870, the architect M. Bykovsky erected a small elegant church on the territory of the Grachevka estate, illuminated in honor of the Orthodox icon “The Sign”. The temple was erected on the foundation of an ancient wooden church that burned down in a fire in 1812.

In 1991, the Church of the Sign was returned to the Russian Orthodox Church. Currently, the church hosts a traditional Orthodox service, an evening school and the Lampada gymnasium.

The church houses two ancient icons – “The Sign” and “The Quick to Hear”.

Video about the estate:

Grachevsky Park is one of the most interesting green areas in the Moscow Khovrino district of the Northern urban district. This place is known as the Khovrino estate, or Grachevka. The main manor house, which is a unique architectural monument, and several outbuildings have survived to this day.

From the 15th century to the present day

The first mentions in historical sources of this area are associated with the name of Georgy Safarin, the son of a Sourozh merchant. He owned the estate in the 15th century. Local residents behind their backs nicknamed Safarin “Khovra” - an unclean and unkempt person. This popular nickname stuck, and over time turned into the surname of an entire boyar family. It was from her that the village got its name, which over time turned into a district of the capital.

The estate and the surrounding lands passed from hand to hand over several centuries. The palace, which has survived to this day, was built under Count Grachev, who bought the estate in 1895. The main house is reminiscent of the famous casino in Monte Carlo. It is noteworthy that Mitrofan Grachev actually saw the gambling house designed by Charles Garnier, and perhaps even visited it.

A temple built in 1868-1870 has been preserved on the territory of Grachevsky Park. The green zone covers an area of ​​about 19 hectares. This territory is conventionally divided into landscape and regular parks. Nowadays, the surroundings of the estate are very popular among residents of the capital who love to spend time in nature.

Park of Count Grachev's estate

The history of the park around the estate in Khovrino begins in 1700. At that time, these lands belonged to the Golovin family, and it was they who ordered the planting of linden alleys and an orchard. Half a century later, the estate changes hands again. The millionaire who bought it, E. Molchanov, orders cedars, pines, firs, larches, poplars and shrubs. At the same time, gazebos, grottoes, bridges are being built in the park, and many flower beds are being planted. The last owner of the estate, Count Grachev, also improved the territory during the construction of the new palace.

Grachevsky Park in Khovrino, along with the estate, was nationalized in 1918. The main house and outbuildings were transferred to the Petrovsky Agricultural Academy. Later, a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients was opened here, and during the Second World War there was a hospital in Khovrino. For a long time, the park and the surviving ancient buildings remained without due attention. Restoration of the main palace began in the 80s of the last century and continues today. In 2012, landscaping of the park area was carried out.

What to see in Grachevsky Park today?

Entrance to the green zone is free. Grachevsky Park is a favorite place for walks for residents of nearby neighborhoods. The park has asphalt paths, a canine area for walking dogs, and children's playgrounds and sports grounds. In winter, there is a ski slope here, and in summer, fans of an active lifestyle ride bicycles and roller skates. The main attraction of the park is the manor house. Today the building is occupied by the Moscow Regional Hospital for Rehabilitation. Entrance to the territory is only with passes; tourists can only admire the general view of the facades of this architectural masterpiece from behind the fence. During the walk, you can visit the mass grave and see the monument in Grachevsky Park. The memorial “To Soviet Soldiers - Defenders of Moscow” was opened during the thirtieth anniversary of the Great Victory.

The Church of the Mother of God of the Sign was reopened to parishioners in 2005. And this is a real miracle, since the temple suffered greatly in the post-revolutionary years and was turned into a factory.

Today Grachevsky Park is a place for quiet walks and active sports. The recreation area is also suitable for walking with children. There is almost no entertainment infrastructure, but here you can listen to birdsong and enjoy the fresh air.

How to get to the Khovrino estate: travel options by public and private transport

The park around the estate of Count Grachev is located in the Khovrino district. Nearby is the railway station of the same name, where commuter trains stop. Residents of the capital will have convenient access to the recreation area by public land transport. The nearest stop is “Hospital - Korolenko Library”. Buses No. 65, 65k, 188, 284, 857, as well as minibuses No. 89m, 600m and 615m stop here. When you get off at this stop, you will immediately see the central entrance to Grachevsky Park.

How to get to this recreation area with your own car? Exact coordinates for the navigator: 55.866753; 37.507160. Address of the main manor house (today it houses a hospital): Klinskaya street, 2, building 1.