The political, scientific, historical, architectural and business center of Russia, Moscow displays the country's contrasts at their most extreme. The ancient and modern are juxtaposed side by side in this city of 10 million. Catch a metro from one of the ornate stations to see Red Square, the Kremlin, the nine domes of St. Basil's Cathedral, Lenin's Mausoleum, the KGB Museum and other symbols of Moscow's great and terrible past, then lighten up and shop Boulevard Ring or people watch in Pushkin Square.
Restaurants in Moscow
5.0 based on 4 reviews
5.0 based on 1 reviews
5.0 based on 29 reviews
PlatformaVR is the full immertion VR-game with the delightful graphics and the latest equipment. Unique development and absolutely realistic immersion. We have a games for 2 or 4 people.
5.0 based on 13 reviews
The cozy and nice "MoyChay" Tea Clubs are composed of a tea shop and a special space for tea parties, where you can enjoy tasting many tea varieties and having a good time. You can taste a big choice of excellent teas brewed according to the traditional Chinese methods by attentive tea masters.
5.0 based on 6 reviews
A vintage store with a wide selection of clothing, bags and jewelry from 1950s-1990s, including Chanel, Christian Dior, Salvatore Ferragamo and many other brands.
5.0 based on 7 reviews
One of the largest collections of vintage jewelry.
4.5 based on 39 reviews
Solyanka VPA — a project in a genre known in the world as artist-run space — that is, many of the principles and criteria are a bit subjective, which doesn’t prevent the curators and artists working on a project from moving in their own independent direction.Solyanka is located exactly where blood flows on Moscow vessels — in the heart of city life, just 5 minutes from the Kremlin, right on the Ivanovskaya hill. All around you can see temples which miraculously survived 1917, as if the destroyer that was the twentieth century never rocked the city. Almost everything is almost exactly the way it once was. Here — as in few places in Moscow — you can see the surviving medieval tricky side streets which are twisted into complex knots making lanes run either down or up the hill. The word «Solyanka» comes from the time of Ivan the Terrible and his Salty yard. Architects Sergeyev, Sherwood and Guerman built the house that inhabits our museum in the early XX century. They managed to complete what the developers required. They maximized the use of space, which had quite an intricate form, and they increased the size of the building both in height and depth. The house is now considered a monument of neoclassicism.
4.5 based on 5 reviews
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