Brīvības iela
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![]() View of Brīvības iela towards the city centre in 2011 | |
Native name | Brīvības iela (Latvian) |
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Former name(s) | Große Sandstraße Aleksandrovskaya ulitsa / Alexanderstraße Brīvības gatve Adolf-Hitler-Straße Ļeņina iela |
Length | 12 km (7 mi) |
Location | Riga, Latvia |
Coordinates | 56°57′05.6″N 24°06′47.6″E / 56.951556°N 24.113222°ECoordinates: 56°57′05.6″N 24°06′47.6″E / 56.951556°N 24.113222°E |
Other | |
Known for | Dailes Theatre St. Gertrude New Church, Riga St. Alexander Nevsky Church, Riga |
Brīvības iela is the central street of Riga, the capital of Latvia. It is more than 12 km long, going through all of Riga from the historical centre to the outskirts.
History[]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5d/Alexanderstrasse_Riga.jpg/220px-Alexanderstrasse_Riga.jpg)
The street was the beginning of an important trade route - the road to the region of Vidzeme (Southern Swedish Livonia) and the Russian city of Pskov. It began with what is today and went through Riga's suburbs. The city entrance next to the Powder Tower was initially the main entrance to Riga from the countryside. As the city expanded, the city gates moved more towards the east and the street was extended further.
In the late 19th century and early 20th various Art Nouveau buildings were erected on what now is Brīvības iela.
Throughout its history, the street and its three main parts were known as Große Sandstraße (before 1818), Aleksandrovskaya ulitsa (Александровская улица)/Alexanderstraße (1818-1923), Brīvības gatve (1923-1942, 1944-1950), Adolf-Hitler-Straße (1942-1944) and Ļeņina iela (1950-1991).
Today, Brīvības iela is divided into three parts:
- Brīvības bulvāris (boulevard) is the traditional name of the part from its beginning at the Freedom Monument to (572 m);
- Brīvības iela from Elizabetes iela to bridge (3049 m);
- Brīvības gatve from bridge to the city border (8450 m).
Notable buildings[]
Brīvības bulvāris[]
Freedom Monument - monument to Latvia's independence erected in 1935
Nativity Cathedral, main Russian Orthodox cathedral of Riga
Palace of Justice, seat of the Government of Latvia and Supreme Court of Latvia
Riga Regional Court
Brīvības iela[]
Number 56 - St. Alexander Nevsky Russian Orthodox Church, built in 1825
Number 61 - Corner House, former building of the KGB of the Latvian SSR during the second Soviet occupation of Latvia; initially built as a residential house in 1911
Brīvības iela 33
Brīvības iela 137, former A. Leutner Bicycle Works
Number 99 - residential house by architect Mikhail Eisenstein, father of Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein; 1905
- Richard Wagner lived in 1838 - 1839 in a house at the intersection of Brīvības iela and (Mühlenstraße). The house was destroyed but its location is now marked with a memorial plaque.
- Number 34 - Building of the Riga Regional Court designed by Jānis Frīdrihs Baumanis (1888)
- Number 75 - Dailes Theatre, formerly State Academic Theatre of the Latvian SSR; 1976
Brīvības gatve[]
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brīvības iela (Riga). |
Historical building of VEF featuring a statue of Zeus holding a thunderbolt in the middle
The VEF Palace of Culture
The VEF Palace of Culture after restoration in 2019
- Streets in Riga