Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Rustaveli Avenue (Georgian: რუსთაველის გამზირი), formerly known as Golovin Street, [2] is the central avenue in Tbilisi named after the medieval Georgian poet, Shota Rustaveli. The avenue starts at Freedom Square and extends for about 1.5 km in length, before it turns into an extension of Kostava Street ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Then Tbilisi Spiritual Seminary was built not far from the gymnasium (later on this building became agricultural institute, now it is one of the clinics of Tbilisi State Medical University [formerly the 9th Hospital]). Since January 1906, Vake was incorporated into Tbilisi. [citation needed] Intensive construction began in the 1920s.
Tbilisi - Beslan: 137 km (85 mi) S3 (Georgian Military Highway) A-302: Tbilisi - Lagodekhi via Bakurtsikhe: 152 km (94 mi) S5 (Kakheti Highway). A-302 continued as A-315 after Lagodekhi A-303: Tbilisi - Bogdanovka (Ninotsminda) via Manglisi: 164 km (102 mi) Via Tbilisi's Sololaki District, Kojori, Manglisi and then Sh31 to Ninotsminda. A-304
Ilia Chavchavadze Avenue (Georgian: ილია ჭავჭავაძის გამზირი) is one of the main avenues of Tbilisi and is named after the writer Ilia Chavchavadze. The avenue is located on the right bank of the Kura River in the Vake district of Tbilisi and is a continuation of Melikishvili and Rustaveli Avenue.
Formerly it was called Vake Street, according to the 1926 reference of Tbilisi - Vake Avenue. In the 1925-1926 reference book "All of Tiflis" , the street is included in the list of new streets in Vake. It was named after Zacharia Paliashvili in the 1930s. Alexander Tvalchrelidze Caucasus Mineral Resources Institute is on the street.
The avenue is located on the right bank of the Kura River in the Saburtalo and Vake districts of Tbilisi and starts at Pekini Avenue and ends at Petre Kavtaradze street. In 1941 it was originally named Pavlov street. The development of the street began in 1956 with several administrative educational buildings.
Currently named after David IV of Georgia, it was originally called Mikheil Street in 1851, and Plekhanov Street after the Russian revolutionary Georgi Plekhanov from 1918 to 1988. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Since 2010, the avenue has seen major rehabilitation works, which includes the renovation of seventy buildings, as well as the road, sidewalks and street ...