Yekaterinburg

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Feb 04, 2025 / 22:00

Yekaterinburg is a city and the administrative centre of Sverdlovsk Oblast and the Ural Federal District Russia The city

Yekaterinburg
Yekaterinburg
Yekaterinburg

Yekaterinburg is a city and the administrative centre of Sverdlovsk Oblast and the Ural Federal District, Russia. The city is located on the Iset River between the Volga-Ural region and Siberia, with a population of roughly 1.5 million residents, up to 2.2 million residents in the urban agglomeration. Yekaterinburg is the fourth-largest city in Russia, the largest city in the Ural Federal District, and one of Russia's main cultural and industrial centres. Yekaterinburg has been dubbed the "Third capital of Russia", as it is ranked third by the size of its economy, culture, transportation and tourism.

Yekaterinburg
Екатеринбург
City
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View of Yekaterinburg-City and the Iset River from Vysotsky Skyscraper
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Church of All Saints
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Main building of Ural Federal University
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Summit Business Center and Yekaterinburg Circus
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Location of Yekaterinburg
Map
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Yekaterinburg
Location of Yekaterinburg
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Yekaterinburg
Yekaterinburg (Sverdlovsk Oblast)
Coordinates: 56°50′08″N 60°36′46″E / 56.83556°N 60.61278°E / 56.83556; 60.61278
CountryRussia
Federal subjectSverdlovsk Oblast
Founded18 November 1723
City status since1781
Government
 • BodyCity Duma
 • HeadAlexey Orlov
Area
 • Total
1,111 km2 (429 sq mi)
Elevation
237 m (778 ft)
Population
 (2010 Census)
 • Total
1,349,772
 • Estimate 
(2024)
1,536,183
 • Rank4th in 2010
 • Density1,200/km2 (3,100/sq mi)
Administrative status
 • Subordinated toCity of Yekaterinburg
 • Capital ofSverdlovsk Oblast, City of Yekaterinburg
Municipal status
 • Urban okrugYekaterinburg Urban Okrug
 • Capital ofYekaterinburg Urban Okrug
Time zoneUTC+5 (MSK+2 image)
Postal code(s)
620000
Dialing code(s)+7 343
OKTMO ID65701000001
City Day3rd Saturday of August
Websiteекатеринбург.рф

Yekaterinburg was founded on 18 November 1723 and named after the Orthodox name of Catherine I (born Marta Helena Skowrońska), the wife of Russian Emperor Peter the Great. The city served as the mining capital of the Russian Empire as well as a strategic connection between Europe and Asia. In 1781, Catherine the Great gave Yekaterinburg the status of a district town of Perm Province, and built the historical Siberian Route through the city. Yekaterinburg became a key city to Siberia, which had rich resources. In the late 19th century, Yekaterinburg became one of the centres of revolutionary movements in the Urals. In 1924, after the Russian SFSR founded the Soviet Union, the city was renamed Sverdlovsk after the Bolshevik leader Yakov Sverdlov. During the Soviet era, Sverdlovsk was turned into an industrial and administrative powerhouse. On 23 September 1991 the city returned to its historical name.

Yekaterinburg is one of Russia's most important economic centres and was one of the host cities of the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The city is currently[when?] experiencing an economic and population boom, which resulted in some of the tallest skyscrapers of Russia being located in the city. Yekaterinburg is home to the headquarters of the Central Military District of the Russian Armed Forces, as well as the presidium of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Yekaterinburg is famous for its constructivist architecture and is also considered the "Russian capital of street art".

History

Prehistory

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Bronze Age 5-sickle casting mold, Sverdlovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore

The area was settled in prehistory. The earliest settlements date to 8000–7000 BC, in the Mesolithic period. The Isetskoe Pravoberezhnoye I archaeological site contains a Neolithic settlement dated to 6000–5000 BC. It includes stone processing workshops with artefacts such as grinding plates, anvils, clumps of rock, tools, and finished products. Over 50 different types of rock and minerals were used in tool making, indicating extensive knowledge of the region's natural resources. The Gamayun peninsula (left bank of the Verkh-Isetsky Pond) has archaeological findings from the Chalcolithic Period: workshops for producing stone tools (upper area) and two dwellings of the Ayat culture (lower area). There are also traces of the Koptyak culture from 2000 BC: dishes decorated with bird images and evidence of metallurgical production. The Tent I site contains the only Koptyak culture burials discovered in the Ural Mountains. In the Bronze Age, the people of Gamayun culture lived in the area. They left fragments of ceramics, weapons, and ornaments.

Archaeological artifacts in the vicinity of Yekaterinburg were first discovered during railway construction, at the end of the 19th century. Excavation and research began in the 20th century. Artifacts are held at the Sverdlovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore, at the Hermitage, at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the Academy of Sciences, and at other museums.

Imperial era

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Uktus plant, 1720

The first Russian settlements within the boundaries of modern Yekaterinburg appeared in the second half of the 17th century — in 1672, an Old Believers village arose in the area of Shartash lake (this fact is disputed by historians, since no evidence of the founding of the village at that time was found in the sources), and in 1680–1682, the villages of Nizhny and Verkhny Uktus appeared on the banks of Uktus River (now the territory of the Chkalovsky district of the city). In 1702, by the initiative of the head of Sibirskiy prikaz Andrew Vinius, the Uktus state ironwork plant was founded near Nizhny Uktus — the first ironworks within the boundaries of modern Yekaterinburg. In 1704, the Shuvakish ironworks was built (now the territory of the Zheleznodorozhny district of the city). With the beginning of active construction of factories in the Urals in the 18th century, relations with their southern neighbors, the Bashkirs, became strained. As a result of the Bashkir raid in 1709, the village of Verkhny Uktus was devastated, all buildings, including the wooden church and chapel, were burned, the residents fled to the protection of the Uktus plant fortifications. On the night of 5 April 1718, a fire destroyed all the factory buildings of the Uktus plant, except for the dam, and the plant was restored only by 1720 under the supervision of Timofey Burtsev. However, the plant did not receive further development due to the lack of water in Uktus river.

In 1720, by decree of Peter I, a delegation led by mining specialist Johann Blüher and statesman Vasily Tatishchev was sent to the Urals. They were entrusted with managing the mining industry, identifying the causes of the collapse and reduction of production at state-owned factories. On 29 December 1720, Tatishchev and Blüher arrive at the Uktus plant, which became their main residence in the Urals. As a result of familiarizing himself with the state of nearby state-owned factories, Tatishchev came to the conclusion that on the basis of these factories, even if they were reconstructed and expanded, it would not be possible to quickly increase the production of iron, and it would be more profitable to build a new large plant. After inspecting the immediate area, together with the commissary of the Uktus plant, Timofey Burtsev, a place rich in ore and forest was chosen on the banks of the more full-flowing Iset River, 7 versts from Uktus. On 6 February 1721, Tatishchev sent a message to the Collegium of Mining, in which he asked permission to begin construction of the plant, with detailed explanations and justification for this project. On 1 March 1721, without waiting for a response from the Collegium, Tatishchev began construction of the new plant, but he failed to convince Collegium, and by the Collegium decree of 10 December 1721, he was removed from the leadership of mining affairs in the Urals. In 1722, by decree of Peter the Great, a mining engineer, Major General Georg Wilhelm de Gennin, was sent to the Urals in place of Tatishchev. Having studied all the circumstances, de Gennin fully supported Tatishchev’s project, and on 12 March 1723, construction of the plant on Iset resumed.

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Yekaterinburg, 1789

Russian historian Vasily Tatishchev and Russian engineer Georg Wilhelm de Gennin founded Yekaterinburg with the construction of a massive iron-making plant under the decree of Russian emperor Peter the Great in 1723. They named the city after the emperor's wife, Yekaterina, who later became empress regnant Catherine I. Officially, the city's founding date is 18 November 1723, when the shops carried out a test run of the bloomery for trip hammers. The plant was commissioned 6 days later, on 24 November. 1723 also saw the establishment of Yekaterinburg fortress, which would encompass many of the settlement's earliest buildings. Dmitry Mamin-Sibiryak very vividly described the beginning of the construction of a mining plant and a fortress: "Imagine completely deserted banks of the Iset river, covered with forest. In the spring of 1723, soldiers from Tobolsk, peasants of the assigned settlements, hired craftsmen appeared, and everything around came to life, as if by the dictates of a fairy tale. They dropped the forest, prepared a place for the dam, laid blast furnaces, raised the rampart, set up barracks and houses for the authorities... ".

In 1722–1726 the Verkhne-Uktussky mining plant was built, which was officially called the plant of the princess Elizabeth (the future village of Elizabeth, or Elizavetinskoe) and became a part of modern Yekaterinburg in 1934. In 1726, Wilhelm de Gennin founded an auxiliary Verkh-Isetsky plant with a working settlement 2 versts from Yekaterinburg upstream ('verkh' in Russian) the Iset River. The plant's dam formed the Verkh-Isetsky pond. Colloquially called by the Russian acronym VIZ, it was a satellite town until in 1926, with a population of over 20,000 people by this time, it was incorporated into Yekaterinburg as the core of the Verkh-Isetsky district.

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Plan of Yekaterinburg, 1743

Yekaterinburg was one of the industrial cities of Russia prompted at the beginning of the 18th century by decrees of Tsar Peter the Great which demanded the development of the metalworking industry. With extensive use of iron, the city was built to a regular square plan with ironworks and residential buildings at the centre. These were surrounded by fortified walls so that Yekaterinburg was at the same time both a manufacturing centre and a fortress at the frontier between Europe and Asia. It, therefore, found itself at the heart of Russia's strategy for further development of the entire Ural region. The so-called Siberian Route became operational in 1763 and placed the city on an increasingly important transit route, which led to its development as a focus of trade and commerce between east and west, and gave rise to the description of the city as the "window to Asia". With the growth in trade and the city's administrative importance, the ironworks became less critical, and the more important buildings were increasingly built using expensive stone. Small manufacturing and trading businesses proliferated. In 1781 Russia's empress, Catherine the Great, granted Yekaterinburg town status and nominated it as the administrative centre for the wider region within Perm Governorate. In 1807, the role of the capital of the mining and smelting region was confirmed by assigning it the status of the only "mountain city" in Russia. Until 1863, Yekaterinburg remained subordinate to the head of the mining plants of the Ural ridge, the minister of finance and personally to the emperor, and enjoyed considerable freedom from the governor's power. Since the 1830s, mountainous Yekaterinburg has become the center of mechanical engineering.

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Cathedral on the Blood stands on the site of the Ipatiev House, where the Romanovs — the last royal family of Russia — were murdered

In 1820–1845, 45% of the world's gold was mined in Yekaterinburg. This is the first ever "Gold Rush". Until 1876, 80% of the coins in circulation in the Russian Empire were produced at the Yekaterinburg mint.

Following the October Revolution, the family of deposed Tsar Nicholas II was sent to internal exile in Yekaterinburg where they were imprisoned in the Ipatiev House in the city. In July 1918, the Czechoslovak Legions were closing on Yekaterinburg. In the early hours of the morning of 17 July, the deposed Tsar, his wife Alexandra, and their children Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia, and Tsarevich Alexei were murdered by the Bolsheviks at the Ipatiev House. Other members of the Romanov family were killed at Alapayevsk later the same day. The Legions arrived less than a week later and captured the city. The city remained under the control of the White movement in which a provisional government was established. The Red Army took back the city and restored Soviet authority on 14 July 1919.

Soviet era

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Snow-covered statue of Yakov Sverdlov

In the years following the Russian Revolution and the Russian Civil War, political authority of the Urals was transferred from Perm to Yekaterinburg. On 19 October 1920, Yekaterinburg established its first university, the Ural State University, as well as polytechnic, pedagogical, and medical institutions under the decree of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin. Enterprises in the city ravaged by the war were nationalised, including: the Metalist (formerly Yates) Plant, the Verkh-Isetsky (formerly Yakovleva) Plant, and the Lenin flax-spinning factory (formerly Makarov). In 1924, the city of Yekaterinburg was renamed Sverdlovsk after the Bolshevik leader Yakov Sverdlov.

By the 1934, following a series of administrative reforms carried by the early Soviet government, the earliest Russian settlements which predated Yekaterinburg and laid the basis of its founding, were incorporated into the city proper.

During the reign of Stalin, Sverdlovsk was one of several places developed by the Soviet government as a centre of heavy industry. Old factories were reconstructed and new large factories were built, especially those specialised in machine-building and metalworking. These plants included Magnitogorsk and the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant in Chelyabinsk oblast, and Uralmash in Sverdlovsk. During this time, the population of Sverdlovsk tripled in size, and it became one of the fastest-growing cities of the Soviet Union. At that time, very large powers were given to the regional authorities. By the end of the 1930s, there were 140 industrial enterprises, 25 research institutes, and 12 higher education institutions in Sverdlovsk.

During World War II, the city became the headquarters of the Ural Military District on the basis of which more than 500 different military units and formations were formed, including the 22nd Army and the Ural Volunteer Tank Corps. Uralmash became the main production site for armoured vehicles. Many state technical institutions and whole factories were relocated to Sverdlovsk away from cities affected by war (mostly Moscow), with many of them staying in Sverdlovsk after the victory. The Hermitage Museum collections were also partly evacuated from Leningrad to Sverdlovsk in July 1941 and remained there until October 1945. In the postwar years, new industrial and agricultural enterprises were put into operation and massive housing construction began. The lookalike five-story apartment blocks that remain today in Kirovsky, Chkalovsky, and other residential areas of Sverdlovsk sprang up in the 1960s, under the direction of Nikita Khrushchev's government. In 1977, Ipatiev House was demolished by order of Boris Yeltsin in accordance to a resolution from the Politburo in order to prevent it from being used as a rallying location for monarchists. Yeltsin later became the first President of Russia and represented the people at the funeral of the former Tsar in 1998. There was an anthrax outbreak in Sverdlovsk in April and May 1979, which was attributed to a release from the Sverdlovsk-19 military facility.

Contemporary era

During the 1991 coup d'état attempt, Sverdlovsk, the home city of President Boris Yeltsin, was selected by him as a temporary reserve capital for the Russian Federation, in case Moscow became too dangerous for the Russian government. A reserve cabinet headed by Oleg Lobov was sent to the city, where Yeltsin enjoyed strong popular support at that time. Shortly after the failure of the coup and subsequent dissolution of the Soviet Union, the city regained its historical name of Yekaterinburg on 23 September 1991. However, Sverdlovsk Oblast, of which Yekaterinburg is the administrative centre, kept its name.

In the 2000s, an intensive growth of trade, business, and tourism began in Yekaterinburg. In 2003, Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder negotiated in Yekaterinburg. On 15–17 June 2009, the SCO and BRIC summits were held in Yekaterinburg, which greatly improved the economic, cultural, and tourist situation in the city. On 13–16 July 2010, a meeting between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and German Chancellor Angela Merkel took place in the city.

In 2018, Yekaterinburg hosted four matches of the 2018 FIFA World Cup and hosted the inaugural University International Sports Festival in 2023.

Geography

Location

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Yekaterinburg City and vicinities, satellite image of ESA Sentinel-2

Geographically, Yekaterinburg is in North Asia, close to the Ural Mountains (which divide Europe from Asia), 1,667 km (1,036 mi) east of the nation's capital Moscow.

The city has a total area of 1,111 km2 (429 sq mi).

Yekaterinburg is on the eastern side of the Urals. The city is surrounded by wooded hills, partially cultivated for agricultural purposes. Yekaterinburg is located on a natural watershed, so there would be many bodies of water close and in the city. The city is bisected by the Iset River, which flows from the Urals into the Tobol River. There are two lakes in the city, Lake Shuvakish and Lake Shartash. The city borders Verkh-Isetskiy Pond, through which the Iset River flows. Lake Isetskoye and Lake Baltym are both near the city, with Lake Isetskoye located near Sredneuralsk, and Lake Baltym located near the towns of Sanatornyy and Baltym.

Time

Yekaterinburg uses Yekaterinburg Time, which is five hours ahead of UTC (UTC+5), and two hours ahead of Moscow Time.

Climate

The city possesses a humid continental climate (Dfb) under the Köppen climate classification. It is characterised by sharp variability in weather conditions, with well-marked seasons. The Ural Mountains, despite their insignificant height, block air from the west, from the European part of Russia. As a result, the Central Urals are open to the invasion of cold arctic air and continental air from the West Siberian Plain. Equally, warm air masses from the Caspian Sea and the deserts of Central Asia can freely penetrate from the south. Therefore, the weather in Yekaterinburg is characterised by sharp temperature fluctuations and weather anomalies: in winter, from frost at −40 °C to thaw and rain; in summer, from frosts to temperatures above 35 °C (95 °F).

The distribution of precipitation is determined by the circulation of air masses, relief, and air temperatures. The main part of the precipitation is brought by cyclones with a western air mass transfer, that is, from the European part of Russia, while their average annual amount is 601 mm. The maximum falls on a warm season, during which about 60–70% of the annual amount falls. For the winter period is characterized by snow cover with an average capacity of 40–50 cm. The coefficient of moistening(the ratio of yearly precipitation and potential evaporation) – 1.

  • The average temperature in January is −12.6 °C (9.3 °F). The record minimum temperature is −44.6 °C (−48.3 °F) (6 January 1915);
  • The average July temperature is 18.9 °C (66.0 °F). The record maximum temperature is 40.0 °C (104.0 °F) (11 July 2023);
  • The average annual temperature is 2.1 °C (35.8 °F);
  • The average annual wind speed is 2.9 m/s (10 km/h; 6.5 mph);
  • The average annual humidity is 75%;
  • The average annual precipitation is 534 mm (21.0 in);
Climate data for Yekaterinburg (1991–2020, extremes 1831–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 5.6
(42.1)
9.4
(48.9)
18.1
(64.6)
28.8
(83.8)
34.7
(94.5)
36.4
(97.5)
40.0
(104.0)
37.2
(99.0)
31.9
(89.4)
24.7
(76.5)
13.5
(56.3)
5.9
(42.6)
40.0
(104.0)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) −9.3
(15.3)
−6.6
(20.1)
0.9
(33.6)
10.1
(50.2)
18.3
(64.9)
22.6
(72.7)
24.3
(75.7)
21.4
(70.5)
15.0
(59.0)
6.9
(44.4)
−2.6
(27.3)
−7.8
(18.0)
7.8
(46.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) −12.6
(9.3)
−10.8
(12.6)
−3.6
(25.5)
4.7
(40.5)
12.2
(54.0)
16.9
(62.4)
18.9
(66.0)
16.2
(61.2)
10.4
(50.7)
3.6
(38.5)
−5.4
(22.3)
−10.7
(12.7)
3.3
(37.9)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −15.5
(4.1)
−14.1
(6.6)
−7.3
(18.9)
0.3
(32.5)
6.9
(44.4)
12.0
(53.6)
14.4
(57.9)
12.2
(54.0)
6.8
(44.2)
1.0
(33.8)
−7.8
(18.0)
−13.3
(8.1)
−0.4
(31.3)
Record low °C (°F) −44.6
(−48.3)
−42.4
(−44.3)
−39.2
(−38.6)
−21.8
(−7.2)
−13.5
(7.7)
−5.3
(22.5)
1.5
(34.7)
−2.2
(28.0)
−9.0
(15.8)
−22.0
(−7.6)
−39.2
(−38.6)
−44.0
(−47.2)
−44.6
(−48.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 25
(1.0)
19
(0.7)
25
(1.0)
31
(1.2)
47
(1.9)
73
(2.9)
93
(3.7)
75
(3.0)
45
(1.8)
41
(1.6)
33
(1.3)
28
(1.1)
534
(21.0)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 33
(13)
42
(17)
38
(15)
5
(2.0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1
(0.4)
8
(3.1)
21
(8.3)
42
(17)
Average rainy days 1 1 5 13 20 20 19 22 22 17 6 1 147
Average snowy days 26 23 18 10 4 0.4 0 0 2 13 23 25 144
Average relative humidity (%) 79 75 68 60 58 63 68 73 75 75 78 79 71
Mean monthly sunshine hours 47 94 164 206 256 272 269 217 143 78 51 37 1,834
Source 1: Pogoda.ru
Source 2: NOAA (sun 1961–1990)

Demographics

Population

Historical population
YearPop.±%
189737,399—    
1926134,831+260.5%
1939425,533+215.6%
1959778,602+83.0%
19701,025,045+31.7%
19791,211,172+18.2%
19891,364,621+12.7%
20021,293,537−5.2%
20101,349,772+4.3%
20211,544,376+14.4%

According to the results of the 2021 Census, the population of Yekaterinburg was 1,544,376; up from 1,349,772 recorded in the 2010 Census.

As of 2021, the ethnic composition of Yekaterinburg was:

Ethnicity Population Percentage
Russians 1,172,704 91.0%
Tatars 27,431 2.1%
Tajiks 13,102 1.0%
Kyrgyz 8,769 0.7%
Bashkirs 6,121 0.5%
Ukrainians 4,987 0.4%
Uzbeks 4,755 0.4%
Armenians 4,307 0.3%
Azerbaijanis 4,014 0.3%
Others 42,033 3.3%

Religion

Religion in Yekaterinburg (2024) [citation needed]

  Orthodoxy (65%)
  Islam (12%)
  Atheists / Non-Religious (17.5%)
  other christians (3%)
  difficult to say (2.5%)
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This photo by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky from 1910 shows the tallest building in the Urals at the time, the Great Zlatoust bell tower

Christianity is the predominant religion in the city, of which most are adherents to the Russian Orthodox Church. The Yekaterinburg and Verkhotursky diocese is located in the Holy Trinity Cathedral in the city. Other religions practised in Yekaterinburg include Islam, Old Believers, Catholicism, Protestantism, and Judaism.

Yekaterinburg has a significant Muslim community, but it suffers from a lack of worship space: there are only two small mosques. Another mosque was built in the nearby city of Verkhnyaya Pyshma. On 24 November 2007, the first stone was laid in the construction of a large Cathedral Mosque with four minarets, and space for 2,500 parishioners in the immediate vicinity of the cathedral and a synagogue, thus forming the "area of the three religions". The mosque was planned to be built for the SCO summit, but due to funding problems, construction did not move from zero and is now frozen.

Construction of a Methodist church started in 1992, and with the help of American donations, finished in 2001. A synagogue was opened in 2005, on the same place a 19th-century synagogue was demolished in 1962.

Most of the city's religious buildings were destroyed during the Soviet era, in addition to the synagogue, the three largest Orthodox churches in Yekaterinburg were demolished – the Epiphany Cathedral, the Ekaterininsky Cathedral, and the Great Zlatoust Church. Other Christian churches such as the Lutheran Church of Yekaterinburg and the Roman Catholic Church of St. Anne (a new Catholic St. Anne's Church was built in 2000) were demolished as well. Other churches were used as warehouses and industrial sites. The only religious building in Yekaterinburg in the Soviet era was the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist. Recently, some churches are being rebuilt. Since 2006, according to the surviving drawings, the Great Zlatoust Church was restored in 2012. On 17 April 2010, the city was visited by Patriarch Kirill.

Government

Yekaterinburg is the administrative centre of Sverdlovsk Oblast. Within the framework of the administrative divisions, it is, together with twenty-nine rural localities, incorporated as the City of Yekaterinburg, an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, the City of Yekaterinburg is incorporated as Yekaterinburg Urban Okrug.

Administrative districts

Administrative districts of Yekaterinburg
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Label OKATO Name Area

(2019)

Population

(2019)

Founded Head Website Dialing code(s) Subdivisions
1 65 401 362 Akademicheskiy 81,000 2020 Smirnyagin Nikolai Sergeevich +7 3432, +7 3433 3
2 65 401 364 Verkh-Isetsky 240 square kilometres (93 sq mi) 221,207 1919 Morozov Andrey Mikhailovich .cm Archived 1 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine +7 3432, +7 3433 5
3 65 401 368 Zheleznodorozhnyy 126.3 square kilometres (48.8 sq mi) 221,207 1938 Pershin Vitaly Pavlovich .cm Archived 1 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine +7 343 8
4 65 401 373 Kirovsky 72 square kilometres (28 sq mi) 228,864 1943 Bolikov Vladimir Yurievich .cm Archived 15 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine +7 343 7
5 65 401 377 Leninsky 25 square kilometres (9.7 sq mi) 156,723 1934 Beruashvili Elena Zauryevna .cm Archived 15 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine +7 343 3
6 65 401 380 Oktyabrsky 157 square kilometres (61 sq mi) 148,981 1934 Kostenko Igor Vitalievich .cm Archived 10 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine +7 3432 11
7 65 401 385 Ordzhonikidzevsky 102 square kilometres (39 sq mi) 286,482 1934 Kravchenko Roman Gennadievich .cm Archived 16 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine +7 3433 6
8 65 401 390 Chkalovsky 402 square kilometres (155 sq mi) 275,571 1943 Shipitsyn Evgeny Viktorovich .cm Archived 9 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine +7 3432 10

Each district is not a municipal formation, and the historical centre of the city is divided into five inner-city districts (except Chkalovsky and Ordzhonikidzevsky).

A district named Akademicheskiy was formed from the parts of Leninsky and Verkh-Isetsky districts on 3 January 2020. On 1 October 2021, more settlements were transferred from Verkh-Isetsky to Akademicheskiy district.

Administration

Urban

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Building of the Administration of Yekaterinburg located on 1905 Square

The Charter of Yekaterinburg establishes a four-link system for the organisation of local authorities, which includes: the Head of Yekaterinburg, who serves as the chairman of the Yekaterinburg City Duma, the Yekaterinburg City Duma, the Administration of the City of Yekaterinburg, and the Chamber of Accounts.

According to the charter of Yekaterinburg, the highest official of the municipal formation is the mayor of Yekaterinburg. The mayor is elected by universal suffrage, but since 3 April 2018, the procedure for direct elections of the mayor of the City of Yekaterinburg was abolished. The mayor of the city is endowed with representative powers and powers to organize activities and guide the activities of the City Duma. In addition, the mayor of the city exercises other powers such as concluding a contract with the head of the city administration and ensuring compliance with the Russian Constitution, Russian legislation, the city charter, and other normative acts.

In the event of a temporary absence of the mayor of Yekaterinburg, his authority under his written order is exercised by the deputy mayor of Yekaterinburg.

The representative body of the municipal formation is the Yekaterinburg City Duma, which represents the city's entire population. The membership of the Duma is 36 deputies (18 deputies were elected in single-mandate constituencies and 18 in a single electoral district). Residents of the city elect deputies on the basis of universal suffrage for a period of 5 years.

The executive and administrative body of the municipal formation is the Administration of the City of Yekaterinburg, led by the head of the Administration, currently held by Aleksandr Yacob. The administration is endowed with its own powers to resolve issues of local importance, but it is under the control and accountable to the Yekaterinburg City Duma. The building of the Administration of Yekaterinburg is located on 1905 Square.

The Chamber of Accounts is a permanently operating body of external municipal financial control. The Chamber is formed by the apparatus of the City Duma and is accountable to it. The Chamber consists of the chairman, deputy chairman, auditors and staff. The structure and number of staff of the chamber, including the number of auditors, is determined by the decision of the City Duma. The term of office of the Chamber staff is 5 years. The Chamber of Accounts is a legal entity.

Oblast

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The building of Sverdlovsk Oblast's Legislative Assembly

In accordance with the regional charter, Yekaterinburg is the administrative centre of the Sverdlovsk Oblast. The executive power is exercised by the governor of Sverdlovsk Oblast, the legislative power by the legislative assembly of Sverdlovsk Oblast, and the judicial power by the Sverdlovsk Regional Court, located in the building of the Palace of Justice. The building serving the regional government is the White House and the building serving the legislative assembly is located next to it on October Square. The ministries of the Sverdlovsk Region are located in the building of the regional government, as well as in other separate buildings of the city.

Federal

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Residence of the presidential envoy of the Ural Federal District

Yekaterinburg serves as the centre of the Ural Federal District. As a result, it serves as the residence of the presidential envoy, the highest official of the district and part of the administration of the President of Russia. The residence is located the building of the regional government on October Square near the Iset River embankment.

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The Central Military District headquarters building

In addition, Yekaterinburg serves as the centre of the Central Military District and more than 30 territorial branches of the federal executive bodies, whose jurisdiction extends not only to Sverdlovsk Oblast, but also to other regions in the Ural Mountains, Siberia, and the Volga Region.

Politics

According to the results of the September 2013 elections, the mayor of the city was Yevgeny Roizman, nominated by the Civil Platform party. Out of the 36 seats in the City Duma, 21 belong to United Russia, 7 to A Just Russia, 3 to the Civil Platform, 2 to the Communist Party and 1 seat to the LDPR. The turnout in the mayoral elections was 33.57%.

Russian federal legislative election, 2016
United Russia Dmitry Medvedev 78,289 38.4%
SRZP Sergey Mironov 31,288 15.4%
LDPR Leonid Slutsky (politician) 25,869 12.7%
CPRF Gennady Zyuganov 22,293 10.9%
Yabloko Nikolay Rybakov 11,340 5.6%
Party Candidate Votes % ±%

It was the last popular vote in Yekaterinburg. Since 2018, there have been no elections, but a vote in the Municipal Duma. On 25 September 2018 the majority of the representatives in the Duma voted in favour of the Vice-Governor of Sverdlovsk oblast, Alexander Vysokinskiy.

Economy

Overview

Yekaterinburg is one of the largest economic centres in Russia. It is included in the City-600 list (it unites the 600 largest cities in the world that produce 60% of global GDP), compiled by the McKinsey Global Institute, a research organisation. In 2010, the consulting company estimated the gross product of Yekaterinburg to be about $19 billion (according to the calculations of the company, it should grow to $40 billion by 2025).

By volume of the economy, Yekaterinburg ranks third in the country, after Moscow and St. Petersburg. According to a research of the Institute for Urban Economics, in the ranking of the largest cities and regional capital cities according to economic standards for 2015, Yekaterinburg ranked third. The city's gross urban product (GVP) was 898 billion rubles. Per capita GDP was 621.0 thousand rubles (18th place). In 2015, the gross urban product of the Yekaterinburg metropolitan area amounted to 50.7 billion international dollars (the fourth place in the country) or 25.4 thousand international dollars in terms of per inhabitant of the metropolitan area.

In the Soviet era, Yekaterinburg (as Sverdlovsk) was a purely industrial city, with a share of industry in the economy of 90% (of which 90% were in defense production). With Chelyabinsk and Perm, the three cities formed what to be the Urals industrial hub.

The former head of Yekaterinburg, Arkady Chernetsky, has set the goal of diversifying the city's economy, which has resulted in the development of sectors such as warehousing, transportation, logistics, telecommunications, financial sector, wholesale and retail trade, etc. in Yekaterinburg. Economist-geographer Natalia Zubarevich points out that at the present stage, Yekaterinburg has practically lost its industrial specialisation.

Living costs and the labor market

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Aquamarine apartment complex with the topped out 188-meter Vysotsky skyscraper in the background

The standard of living in Yekaterinburg exceeds the average standard across Russia. According to the Department of Sociology of the Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation, it is among the top ten cities with the highest standard of living. Compared to other Russian cities with a population of around or over one million, in 2015, Yekaterinburg held a leading position in terms of average monthly wages and retail turnover, in terms of the total volume of investments in fourth place of fixed assets, and second place in housing placement.

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Iset Tower is a 52-story residential skyscraper and is the tallest building in Yekaterinburg. It is located within the vicinity of Yekaterinburg-City

The average monthly wage in Yekaterinburg following the results of 2019 was 54,976 rubles. This is the first place among the millionth municipalities of the Russian Federation. There are on average 440,300 people employed by large and middle-sized organisations and companies. The unemployment rate at the end of 2015 was 0.83% of the total economically active population. Locals labelled the main problems of the city such the current state of the healthcare system, housing system, and transportation system.

The budget of Yekaterinburg in 2015 was executed on income in the amount of 32,063.6 million rubles, for expenses in the amount of 32,745.8 million rubles. Among the budget expenditures: 17 billion rubles were spent on education, over 1 billion rubles on culture, and about 900 million rubles on health. The main part of the revenue of the city treasury was its own tax and non-tax revenues (more than 18 billion rubles). The revenues from the regional and federal budgets were at the lowest level in 10 years. Specialists noted a decrease in tax revenues and an increase in tax debt (exceeded 2 billion rubles).

The main budget expenditures are the development of the economy (which accounts for 19% of expenditures) and the social security of the townspeople (11% of expenditures go). Cities such as Perm, Kazan and Ufa, spend for these purposes in a smaller percentage of costs (from 2 to 6%). Also, a fairly strict budgetary discipline is noted—the budget deficit is kept at the level of 2% of its volume.

Finance and business

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Yekaterinburg-City along the Iset River

Yekaterinburg is one of the largest financial and business centres in Russia, with offices of multinational corporations, representative offices of foreign companies, and a large number of federal and regional financial and credit organisations. The financial market of Yekaterinburg is characterised by stability and independence, based both on the broad presence of large foreign and Moscow credit organisations and on the availability of large and stable local financial holdings.

The financial sector of Yekaterinburg has more than 100 banks, including 11 foreign banks. The list of the largest Russian banks for assets for 2016 included 10 banks registered in Yekaterinburg, including but not all: Ural Bank for Reconstruction and Development, SKB-Bank, Uraltransbank, and UM Bank.

IT "SKB Kontur" from Yekaterinburg – the largest software manufacturer in Russia – first place according to the RAEX rating

Also in Yekaterinburg is the Ural headquarters of the Central Bank of Russia. Since 7 August 2017, by order of the Bank of Russia, the branches of the Siberian, Far Eastern and part of the Prevolzhsky Federal Districts have been transferred to the control of the Ural Megaregal Directorate. Thus, this is one of the three main departments of the Mega-regulator in the territory of Russia.

A major role in the formation of Yekaterinburg as a business centre has its infrastructural potential, which is growing at a high rate: transport accessibility for Russian and foreign economic entities, the availability of hotels, advanced communication services, business related services (consulting, exhibition activities, etc.). Yekaterinburg has its own central business district, Yekaterinburg City.

Industry

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1st Pyatiletka Square, where Uralmash is headquartered

Yekaterinburg has been a major industrial centre since its foundation. In the 18th century, the main branches were smelting and processing of metal. Since the beginning of the 19th century, machine building appeared, and in the second half of the 19th century, light and food (especially milling) industry was widely spread. A new stage in the development of production occurred during the period of industrialisation – at this time in the city, factories were built, which determined the industry specialisation of heavy engineering. During World War II, Yekaterinburg (as Sverdlovsk) hosted about sixty enterprises evacuated from Central Russia and Ukraine. As a result, there was a sharp increase in the production capacity of existing plants and the emergence of new branches of the Urals industry.

At present, more than 220 large and medium-sized enterprises are registered in Yekaterinburg, 197 of them in manufacturing industries. In 2015, they shipped 323,288 million rubles worth of own-produced goods. Production by industry was divided accordingly: metallurgical production and metalworking 20.9%, food production 13.3%, production of electrical equipment, electronic and optical equipment 9.2%, production of vehicles 8.4%, production of machinery and equipment 6.4%, chemical production 5.5%, production of other nonmetallic mineral products 3.7%, production of rubber and plastic products 2.8%, pulp and paper production, publishing and printing 0.5%, and other 29.3%.

Several headquarters of large Russian industrial companies are located in the city: IDGC of Urals, Enel Russia, Steel-Industrial Company, Russian Copper Company, Kalina, NLMK-Sort, VIZ-Stal, Sinara Group, Uralelectrotyazhmash, Automation Association named after academician NA Semikhatov, Ural Heavy Machinery Plant (Uralmash), Fat Plant, Fores, confectionery association Sladko, Machine Building Plant named after M.I. Kalinin, Ural Turbine Plant, Uralkhimmash and others.

Retail and services

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Vaynera Street, a pedestrian street with lots of retail shops

Yekaterinburg ranks first in retail trade of the Russian Federation per capita, ahead of Moscow. The consumer market contributes significantly to Yekaterinburg's economy. Revenue of retail stores in 2015 amounted to 725.9 billion rubles, and the number of retailers totaled 4,290. As of 1 January 2016, 36 shopping centers operate in the city, taking up a total area of which was 1,502,700 m2 (16,175,000 sq ft). The availability of shopping centres per 1,000 inhabitants increased to 597.2 m2 (6,428 sq ft).

Retail areas amounted to 2,019,000 m2 (21,730,000 sq ft), with the availability of retail space reached 1,366.3 m2 (14,707 sq ft) per 1,000 inhabitants. According to these statistics, Yekaterinburg holds leading positions among other major cities of Russia. In the consumer market of Yekaterinburg, 1041 network operators are represented. The number of wholesale enterprises totalled 1,435. Among the Federal construction stores represented in the city, you can select: Leroy Merlin, Castorama, Domostroy, Maxidom, OBI, Sdvor. Yekaterinburg has an agricultural market named Shartashsky.

The revenue of catering in 2015 totalled 38.6 billion rubles. The network of catering enterprises in Yekaterinburg is presented as follows: 153 restaurants, 210 bars, 445 cafes, 100 coffee houses, 582 dining rooms, 189 eateries, 173 fast-food establishments, 10 tea shops, 319 other types of institutions (buffets, cafeterias, catering companies). 82.6% of catering enterprises provide additional services to consumers.

The revenue of the services industry in 2015 totalled 74.9 billion rubles. The fastest pace in the city is developing hairdressing services, sewing and knitting atelier services, pawnshop services, fitness centre services. The network of public service enterprises in Yekaterinburg includes 5,185 facilities. In 2015, the provision of service areas for service enterprises totaled 382.1 m2 (4,113 sq ft) per 1,000 citizens. The highest concentration of household services is observed in the Verkh-Isetsky, Oktyabrsky and Leninsky districts.

Greenwich Shopping Center, as of 2021, is the largest shopping center in Europe.

The largest store in the world by area is Sima-Land.

Tourism

Yekaterinburg is a major centre for the Russian tourist industry. In 2015, the city was one of the top five most visited Russian cities (others being Moscow, St. Petersburg, Novosibirsk, and Vladivostok) according to the Global Destinations Cities Index, which represents the payment system Mastercard. In recent years, a lot of work has been done to create a positive image of Yekaterinburg as a centre for international tourism, including holding of summits for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in 2008 and 2009 and the international exhibition Innoprom in 2009 and 2010. In 2014, Yekaterinburg ranked third among Russian cities in popularity among foreign tourists after Moscow and St. Petersburg.

In 2015, the total flow of inbound tourism grew by 10% compared to the previous year and amounted to 2.1 million people. In recent years, there has been a tendency to reduce the role of business tourism in the overall flow: if in 2013 about 80% of trips were business, in 2015 their number was already 67%. Most tourists go to "bow to the memory of the last [czar] and his family." In addition, new tourist ideas are developing such as the Bazhov theme, the geological and mineralogical theme, industrial tourism, and the event calendar.

Transportation

Yekaterinburg is the third largest transport hub of Russia, behind Moscow and St. Petersburg. The city has 6 federal highways, 7 main railway lines, and an international airport. The location of Yekaterinburg in the central part of the region allows for 7 to 10 hours to get from it to any large city of the Urals. The formation of Yekaterinburg as an important transportation hub is largely due to the city's favourable geographical location on a low stretch of the Ural Mountains, through which it was convenient to lay the main roads connecting the European and Eastern parts of Russia.

Roads

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E22 bypass in the Chkalovsky District

Yekaterinburg is one of the ten Russian megacities with the largest car fleet (0.437 megacars were registered in the city in 2014), which has been intensively increasing in recent years (by 6–14% annually). The level of car ownership in 2015 has reached 410 cars per 1,000 people. Its pace in the past few years has seriously exceeded the pace of development and the capacity of the road infrastructure. For the first time, transport problems started to appear in Yekaterinburg in the 1980s and though it did not seem threatening at first, the situation gets worse every year. Studies have shown that as early as 2005, the capacity limit for the road network was reached, which has now led to permanent congestion. To increase the capacity of the street-road network, stage-by-stage reconstruction of streets is being carried out, as well as multi-level interchanges being built. In order to reduce the transit traffic, the Sverdlovsk Oblast administration announced two road projects in 2014: the Yekaterinburg Ring Road (EKAD) and an overpass road on Sovetskaya Street. The Yekaterinburg Ring Road would surround the largest municipalities of Yekaterinburg. Its purpose would be to help the city's economy and reduce traffic on the Middle Ring Road of the city, making it easier for civilians to commute around the city than going through the city's traffic congestion. Eventually, the Ring Road would connect to other federal roads in order for easier access between other Russian cities. Construction of the road started in the same year. The projects were assigned to the Ministry of Transport and Communications since the projects were crucial to the city's economy. Officials hope the road projects will build environments more conducive to improving local quality of life and outside investments. Completing these major inter-regional roads will increase productive traffic by 50% to 100%, improving the local economy with its ease of access to industries.

Since 2014, the project for the introduction of paid parking in the central part of Yekaterinburg is being implemented. The project is implemented in parallel with the increase in the number of intercepting parking lots and the construction of parking lots. At the end of 2015, in the central part of the city there were 2,307 paid parking places.

The total length of the road network in Yekaterinburg is 1,311.5 km (814.9 mi), of which 929.8 km (577.8 mi) is cobbled carriageways, 880 km (550 mi) is with upgraded coverage, 632 km (393 mi) is backbone networks, of which 155 km (96 mi) are on the citywide backbone network movement. 20 interchanges have been constructed at different levels within the city limits, including 11 on the EKAD and 9 on the middle ring. 74 transport facilities (27 bridges across the Iset River, Patrushikha, Mostovka, Istok Rivers, 13 dams on the Iset, Patrushikha, Istok, Olkhovka, Warm, Shilovka Rivers, 23 road overpasses, and 18 out-of-the-way pedestrian crossings) were built as well.

Yekaterinburg is served by the following highways:

  • image M5
  • image E22
  • R351
  • R352
  • R354
  • R355

Public transit

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Chkalovskaya station of the Yekaterinburg Metro.

Yekaterinburg uses almost all types of public transport. The largest transportation services—the Municipal Association of Bus Enterprises, the Tram-Trolleybus Office, and the Yekaterinburg Metro —transported 207.4 million people in 2015. The total volume of passenger transportation by all land transport modes decreases annually. If the annual passenger traffic of municipal transport was 647.1 million people in 2002, and according to this index the city occupied the third place in the country with a wide margin, then in 2008 this figure would be 412 million people (the fourth place in Russia).

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Yekaterinburg tram

Since 1991, the city operates the sixth metro in Russia and the thirteenth in the CIS. At the moment there is one line with 9 stations. In 2015 49.9 million passengers were transported; according to this metric the Yekaterinburg Metro is the fourth in Russia, behind the Moscow Metro, Saint Petersburg Metro, and Novosibirsk Metro. Although the metro is the second most popular type of public transport, in recent years significant problems have appeared in its work: loss-making, obsolete rolling stock, and a shortage of funds for modernisation. The tram network was established in 1929 and currently[when?] plays a leading role in the urban transport system. The volume of passengers carried for 2013 is 127.8 million, but this declines every year (245 million people in 2013). In 2016 there were 30 routes operating 459 cars. The total length of the tracks is 185.5 km. As of 2016, the construction of a tram line "Yekaterinburg-Verkhnyaya Pyshma" was planned.

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Yekaterinburg trolleybus

There are 93 bus routes operating in Yekaterinburg, including 30 municipal ones (EMUP "MOAP"). In 2007, 114.5 million passengers were transported by municipal intercity buses (124.6 million in 2006). The decrease in volume is due to the increasing role of the fixed-route taxis in the urban transport system of Yekaterinburg, as well as the high cost of travel. However, the city bus transport network provides significant employment for the people of Yekaterinburg, including the formidable babushkas who collect passenger fares. In the park of EMPU, there are 537 buses. In 2013, there are 19 routes, which employ 250 trolleybuses. The total length of trolleybus lines is 168.4 km. The number of passengers transported by trolleybus in 2007 amounted to 78.4 million (84.3 million in 2006).

In addition, the city operates an electric train route linking the north-western and the southern parts of Yekaterinburg, from Sem' Klyuchey to Elizavet.

Rail

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Yekaterinburg railway station
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Station Square

Yekaterinburg is a major railway junction. In the Yekaterinburg node, 7 main lines converge (to Perm, Tyumen, Kazan, Nizhny Tagil, Chelyabinsk, Kurgan, and Tavda). The Sverdlovsk Railway Administration is located in the city, which serves trains on the territory of the Sverdlovsk and Tyumen Regions, the Perm Territory, the Khanty-Mansiysk and Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Districts, as well as parts of the Omsk Region, and there is a single road traffic control centre. The Perm–Yekaterinburg–Tyumen section is now part of the main route of the Trans-Siberian Railway.

Air

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Koltsovo Airport

Yekaterinburg is served by two primary airports: Koltsovo International Airport (SVX) and the smaller Yekaterinburg Aramil Airport. Koltsovo Airport is one of the largest airports in the country, serving 5.404 million passengers (including 3.485 million serviced by domestic airlines, 1.919 million at international flights) in 2017, making it the sixth busiest airport in Russia.

Health

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Regional Clinical Hospital No. 1

Yekaterinburg has an extensive network of municipal, regional and federal health facilities. There are 54 hospitals, designed at a capacity of 18,200 beds, 272 ambulatory polyclinics, and 156 dental clinics and offices. Some health facilities are based on medical research institutes such as the Research Institute of Phthisiopulmonology, the Research Institute of Dermatology and Immunopathology, and the Ural State Medical University, as well as others.

In clean areas of the city, there is the Yekaterinburg Medical Centre, which includes the Sverdlovsk Regional Clinical Hospital No. 1 (also includes a polyclinic and a boarding house), Central City Hospital No. 40 (polyclinic, therapeutic building, surgical building, infectious body, neuro-surgical building, maternity hospital), Regional Cardiology Centre, Centre for Prevention and Control of AIDS, and MNTK Eye Microsurgery.

Other large medical centres are the Uralmash Health Centre (Hospital No. 14), the Hospital of veterans of the Great Patriotic War, the district hospital of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the district military hospital, the Oncology Centre, the Sverdlovsk Oblast Psychiatric Hospital, the Disaster Medicine Centre, the Sanguis Blood Transfusion Centre, children's versatile hospital No. 9, and the regional rehabilitation centre on Chusovsky lake. There are about 300 pharmacies in the city. The number of doctors in public medical institutions is 11,339 people (83.9 per 10,000 people) and the number of nurses is 16,795 (124 per 10,000 people).

Private medical institutions also operate in the city.

Education

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Main building of the Ural Federal University

Yekaterinburg's education system includes institutions of all grades and conditions: preschool, general, special (correctional), and vocational (secondary and higher education), as well as others. Today, the city is one of the largest educational centres of Russia, with Yekaterinburg considered to be the leading educational and scientific centre of the Urals.

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Main building of Technical University of UMMC

There are 164 educational institutions in Yekaterinburg: 160 of them operate in the morning and the other 4 in the evening. In 2015, 133,800 people were enrolled in general education institutions, which holds a capacity of 173,161 people. Yekaterinburg's education system also includes state pre-school educational institutions, non-state pre-school institutions, out-of-town health camps, and municipal city health facilities with a one-day stay. Five educational institutions of the city: SUNC UrFU, Gymnasium No. 2, Gymnasium No. 9, Gymnasium No. 35, and Lyceum No. 135, were included in the rating of the five hundred best schools in the country by the Moscow Center for Continuous Mathematical Education and the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation.

On 16 July 1914, the Ural Mining Institute of Emperor Nicholas II (now the Ural State Mining University) was established as Yekaterinburg's first educational institution. In 1930, the Sverdlovsk Power Engineering College (now the Ural Technical Institute of Communications and Informatics) was opened to train specialists in the field of communications. The Alexei Maximovich Gorky Ural State University (now the Ural Federal University) became the first university in Yekaterinburg by decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR, signed by Vladimir Lenin on 19 October 1920. The Sverdlovsk Engineering and Pedagogical Institute (today the Russian State Vocational and Pedagogical University) became the first university of the USSR for the training of engineering and pedagogical personnel when it was opened in 1979.

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Ural State Mining University

In terms of the level of qualification of the graduates, Yekaterinburg's universities are among the leading in Russia, in particular in terms of the number of graduates representing the current managing elite of the country, Yekaterinburg universities are second only to the educational institutions of Moscow and Saint Petersburg. Currently, there are 20 state universities in the city, which currently holds a total of 140,000 students. In addition, there are 14 non-state institutions of higher education in the city, such as the Yekaterinburg Academy of Contemporary Art and the Yekaterinburg Theological Seminary. The prestigious architecture school, the Ural State Academy of Architecture and Arts, is also located within the city limits. Other institutions of higher education Ural State Pedagogical University, Ural State University of Forestry, Ural State University of Railway Transport, Ural State University of Economics, Military Institute of Artillery, Ural State Conservatory, Ural State Agricultural Academy, Ural State Law Academy, Ural State Medical University, Ural State Academy of Performing Arts, Ural Academy of Public Service, and Institute of International Relations.

In May 2011, the Ural State University and Ural State Technical University merged to form the Boris N. Yeltsin Ural Federal University, making it the largest university in the Urals and the largest university in Russia. As of 1 January 2016, the university had 35,300 students and 2,950 teachers. The university's budget in 2015 totalled 9,1 billion rubles and the volume of research and development work totalled 1,6 billion rubles. As of 2021, UrFU is the largest university in Russia in terms of the number of students, being on the 351st place in the QS World University Rankings. The number of publications of the university in the Web of Science database is about a thousand per year.

There are many branches of non-resident universities in the city, including the Ural branch of the Siberian State University of Telecommunications and Informatics, the Ural branch of the Russian Academy of Private Law, the Yekaterinburg branch of the Plekhanov Russian Economic Academy, the Yekaterinburg branch of the University of the Russian Academy of Education, the Yekaterinburg branch of the Moscow State University, and Sholokhov Humanitarian University, as well as others.

Media and telecommunications

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Yekaterinburg TV Tower before it was demolished

In Yekaterinburg, a large number of print publications are published: about 200 newspapers, the most read being the Ural Worker, Vecherny Yekaterinburg, Oblastnaya Gazeta, and For Change!, and 70 magazines, with most read being Red Burda and I'm Buying.

A television studio was built in Yekaterinburg (as Sverdlovsk) in 1955 and on 6 November of the same year, the first telecast appeared. Coloured television later appeared in 1976. Now the television is broadcast by 19 companies, including but not all: STRC Ural, Channel Four, 41 Home, Channel 10, OTV, Union (Orthodox), and UFO 24. Broadcasting is carried out from the TV tower on Lunacharsky street (television studio GTRK Ural), the TV tower on the Moskovskiy Hill, and from the TV tower (radio relay tower) on Blyukher Street. In 1981, construction of a new television tower was started, which was to become the second tallest in Russia after the Ostankino Tower and cover the territory of most of the Sverdlovsk region, but economic difficulties postponed construction. As a result, the television tower was the tallest uncompleted structure in the world. On 24 March 2018, the television tower was demolished by detonation for the city's beautification in preparation of the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The Shartash radio mast, which broadcasts, is the tallest structure in the city, with a height of 263 meters. In addition, several dozens of national and local news agencies are broadcast in Yekaterinburg, with the most watched being ITAR-TASS Ural, RUIA-Ural, and Interfax-Ural.

At the moment[when?], there are 26 internet providers and 6 cellular operators in the city. According to Yekaterinburg News, the city has signed a cooperative agreement with the Russian mobile operator Vimpelcom, working under the Beeline brand. The partnership will involve cooperation on investment projects and social programmes focused on increasing access to mobile services in the city. Beeline has launched an initiative to provide Wi-Fi services in 500 public trams and trolley buses in Yekaterinburg.

Operators of mobile communication in Yekaterinburg
Generation Mobile communication standard Operators
2G GSM MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia, Motive
2.5G GPRS MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia, Motive
2.75G EDGE MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia, Motive
3G UMTS, CDMA 1X MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia
3.5G HSPA MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia
3.75G HSPA+ MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia
4G LTE MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Tele2 Russia, Motive, Yota
4G+ LTE Advanced MTS, MegaFon, Beeline, Yota

Life and culture

Overview

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Europe-Asia border marker near Yekaterinburg

Yekaterinburg is a multipurpose cultural centre of the Urals Federal District. There are about fifty libraries in the city. The largest library organisations are the Sverdlovsk Oblast Universal Scientific Library, the V.G. Belinsky Scientific Library, which is the largest public library in Sverdlovsk Oblast, and the Municipal Library Association, which is composed of 41 libraries throughout the city, including the AI Herzen Central City Library.

There are about 50 different museums in the city. Yekaterinburg has unique museum collections, such as the collections of Russian paintings in the Yekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts and the Nevyansk icons in the Nevyansk Icon Museum, with more than 300 icons representing the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries on display. There is also a unique exhibit, the Kaslinsky cast iron pavilion, which received main awards at the 1900 World Exhibition in Paris. The Kasli Pavilion was registered by UNESCO as the only cast-iron architectural structure in the world, which is in the museum collection. Museums of the city also have collections of jewellery and stone ornaments. The United Museum of Writers of the Urals presents exhibitions in memory of writers such as Dmitry Mamin-Sibiryak and Pavel Bazhov. It also is the home of the Shigirskaya Kladovaya (Шигирская кладовая), or Shigir Collection, which includes the oldest known wooden sculpture in the world. The sculpture was found near Nevyansk and originally estimated to have been made approximately 9,500 years ago, but now is estimated to have been made 11,500 years ago. Yekaterinburg museums annually participate in the international event Long Night of Museums.

Yekaterinburg has the third most theatres in Russia. The influence of theatrical life of the city was made by the Moscow Art Academic Theater and the Central Theater of the Soviet Army when they evacuated to Yekaterinburg (as Sverdlovsk) during World War II, and they had their own theater in the city. Notable theatres that operate in the city are Academic Theater of Musical Comedy, Drama Theater, Kolyada-Theater, the youth theatre, and the puppet theatre, as well as others. The Yekaterinburg Opera and Ballet Theater received four awards at the Golden Mask 2020 Festival in Moscow, including the main Golden Mask for the Best Opera Performance

In 2014, the city showcased its education, literary, art, and theatre culture through the Russian Year of Culture Programme.

The city has a well-developed film industry. Opened back in 1909, Laurage was the first cinema in Yekaterinburg. In 1943, the Sverdlovsk Film Studio was opened and produced its first feature film Silva a year later. After the Second World War, the studio produced up to ten feature films a year. There are more than 20 cinemas in Yekaterinburg, the oldest of which is the Salyut, while the most capacious is the Cosmos spacecraft. There are also chains of movie theatres such as Premier-Zal, Kinomaks, and Kinoplex, which usually open in shopping and entertainment centres.

A number of popular Russian rock bands, such as Urfin Dzhyus, Chaif, Chicherina, Nautilus Pompilius, Nastya, Trek, Agata Kristi, Slaughter to Prevail and Smyslovye Gallyutsinatsii, were originally formed in Yekaterinburg (Ural Rock is often considered as a particular variety of rock music. Yekaterinburg and St. Petersburg are actually considered to be the main centres of the genre in Russia). Also, opera singers like Boris Shtokolov, Yuri Gulyayev, Vera Bayeva graduated from the Urals State Conservatory. The Ural Philharmonic Orchestra (currently conducted by Dmitry Liss), founded by Mark Paverman and located in Yekaterinburg, is also very popular in Russia and in Europe, as well as the Ural Academic Popular Chorus, a folk-singing and dance ensemble.[citation needed]

image
Yekaterinburg Circus.

Yekaterinburg V. I. Filatov State Circus is located in the centre of the city, on the western bank of the Iset River. In 2012, the Yekaterinburg Circus was nominated "Best Circus of the Year" for the circus show Sharivari by the Rosgoscirk and the Ministry of Culture.

The Presidential Center named after Boris Yeltsin was built in Yekaterinburg in 2015. It is considered to be a public, cultural and educational center. Center has its art gallery, library, museum equipped with the newest multimedia technologies that help to present the documents, video materials and archive photos. In 2017, the Yeltsin Center was recognized as the best museum in Europe by the Council of Europe, the first of the museums in Russia.

The Urals Society of Natural Science Lovers pushed Yekaterinburg to have a zoo. Currently, the zoo has more than 1,000 animals that belong to more than 350 species. The zoo covers an area of 2.7 hectares.

On 18 June 2011, Yekaterinburg launched Red Line as a pedestrian tourist route for self-guided tours by residents and visitors to go to 34 landmarks in the historical section of the city.

Architecture

image
The Rastorguyev-Kharitonov Palace, built from 1794 to 1820

Many buildings of Yekaterinburg are ranged from a different number of architectural styles. The city had a regular layout, based on the fortresses of the Renaissance and by the principles of French town planning during the 17th century. By the 18th century, the Baroque movement was not that influential in Yekaterinburg, with the style being seen in churches which later declined

In the first half of the 19th century, neoclassicism grew influential in the Yekaterinburg's architecture. The estates were built in the neoclassic style, including the main house, wings, services, and often an English-style park. This style's influence in Yekaterinburg is mostly due to the contributions of architect Michael Malakhov, who worked in the city from 1815 to 1842. He designed the assemblies of the Verkhne-Isetsky factory as well as the Novo-Tikhvinsky Monastery.

image
White Tower of the Ural Heavy Machinery Plant
image
District Officers' House

At the beginning of the 20th century, eclecticism became a dominant influence in Yekaterinburg's architecture. Buildings such as the Opera House and Yekaterinburg railway station were built in this style. During the 1920s and the 1930s, constructivism took effect, influencing residential complexes, industrial buildings, stadiums, etc. Architects Moses Ginzburg, Jacob Kornfeld, the Vesnina brothers, Daniel Friedman, and Sigismund Dombrovsky contributed greatly to the constructivism in the city. More than 140 structures in Yekaterinburg are designed in the constructivist style, including the Uralmash White Tower and the building of the printing house of the "Uralskiy Rabochiy" publishing house.

During the 1930s to 1950s, there was a turn back to neoclassicism, with much attention paid to public buildings and monuments. Notable examples include the buildings of the Ural Industrial Institute on Lenin Avenue, the City Party Committee and the City Council Executive Committee building (now the City Administrative building), the District Officers' House, and the House of Defense complex. Cultural buildings are built in the squares in orderly composition. In these years, architects Golubev, K. T. Babykin, Valenkov worked fruitfully in Yekaterinburg with this style. In the 1960s, changes in the approach to construction led to widespread distribution of apartment blocks common in the Khrushchev era. Buildings built by individuals were rare, among them being: KKT "Kosmos", the Palace of Youth, and DK UZTM.

From the 1960s to the 1980s, as industrial development grew in Yekaterinburg, so did rationalism. The situation changed in the 1990s when Russia transferred into a market economy. At that time, older buildings were restored, giving the urban area a new environment such as: the Cosmos Concert Hall, the Puppet Theater, the children's ballet theatre The Nutcracker, the Palace of Justice, the Cathedral of the Blood, and the Church of the Transfiguration. At the same time, the construction of new buildings was accompanied by the demolition of historical buildings, leading to the development of the "facade" phenomenon, where the facades of historic buildings are preserved while adjacent modern buildings are built.

The centre of Yekaterinburg became the centre of new construction, where banks, business centres, hotels, luxury residential complexes, and sports and shopping centres were built. High-tech architecture grew influential, with buildings such as the Center for Railway Transportation Management, the Summit business centre, the Aquamarine residential complex, and the retail strip at Vaynera Street being notable examples. Along with this, postmodernism revived interest in the older architectural styles of Yekaterinburg, growing more emphasis on historicalism and contextualism. In the late 1990s, architects grew interested in regionalism.

At the beginning of the 21st century, Yekaterinburg architects turned back to the Soviet-based avant-garde, and influence future city buildings with the neoconstructivist style. The practice of attracting large foreign investors to projects has become popular. In 2007, the construction of the Central business district started, being headed by the French architect Jean Pistre. In 2010, Yekaterinburg became one of the largest centers for the construction of High-rise buildings. In the city, 1,189 high-rise buildings were built, including 20 skyscrapers, the tallest of which is the Iset Tower, with a height of 209 meters.

Sports

Yekaterinburg is also a leading sports centre in Russia. A large number of well-known athletes, both world and Olympics champions, are associated with the city. Since 1952, Yekaterinburg athletes have won 137 medals at the Olympic Games (46 gold, 60 silver and 31 bronze). In the 2008 Summer Olympics, 8 residents of Yekaterinburg returned with medals (1 gold, 3 silver and 4 bronze).

In 1965, Yekaterinburg (as Sverdlovsk), along with a number of Russian cities, hosted the Bandy World Championship. In 2018, Yekaterinburg was one of the 11 Russian cities that hosted the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The matches were played on the upgraded Yekaterinburg Arena (called Central Stadium before the World Cup).

Yekaterinburg has a total of 1728 sports facilities, including 16 stadiums with stands, 440 indoor gyms and 45 swimming pools. There are 38 sports children's and youth schools for reserves for the Olympic Games, in which more than 30,000 people are participating.

Sport clubs

Yekaterinburg has many professional sports clubs in sports such as volleyball, basketball, futsal, bandy, and ice hockey for both women and men. Bandy club SKA-Sverdlovsk, women's volleyball club VC Uralochka-NTMK, women's basketball club UMMC Yekaterinburg, and futsal club MFK Sinara Yekaterinburg were among the best teams in Russia and Europe.

Club Sport Founded Current League League
Tier
Stadium
Ural Yekaterinburg Association football 1930 Russian Premier League 1st Central Stadium
Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg Ice Hockey 2006 Kontinental Hockey League 1st KRK Uralets
Avto Yekaterinburg Ice Hockey 2009 Minor Hockey League Jr. 1st KRK Uralets
Spartak-Merkury Ice Hockey 1992 Women's Hockey Championship 1st Sports Palace Snezhinka
Uralsky Trubnik Bandy 1937 Russian Bandy Super League 1st Uralsky Trubnik Stadium
SKA-Sverdlovsk Bandy 1935 Russian Bandy Supreme League 2nd Uralsky Trubnik Stadium
Ural Yekaterinburg Basketball 2006 Russian Basketball Super League 2nd Palace of Sporting Games
UGMK Yekaterinburg Basketball 1938 Women's Basketball Premier League 1st Palace of Sporting Games
Lokomotiv-Izumrud Yekaterinburg Volleyball 1945 Volleyball Supreme League A 2nd Palace of Sporting Games
Uralochka Yekaterinburg Volleyball 1966 Women's Volleyball Superleague 1st Palace of Sporting Games
Metallurg-Forum
Sinara Yekaterinburg Futsal 1992 Futsal Super League 1st Palace of Sporting Games

2018 FIFA World Cup

image
Crowd of fans in Yekaterinburg during the 2018 World Cup

Yekaterinburg hosted four matches of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Yekaterinburg is one of the 11 Russian cities that hosted the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The matches were played on the upgraded Yekaterinburg Arena.

For the World Cup 2018, from 7 October 2015 to 29 December 2017, the Central Stadium was upgraded to bring it into compliance with FIFA requirements for the World Cup and was renamed Yekaterinburg Arena. The architectural concept of the new stadium is built on a combination of historical walls and the built-in core of the modern arena. During the reconstruction of the sports facility, which is a monument of history and culture, the facades are carefully preserved, and the arena itself is equipped with the latest technical achievements of the sports industry. Temporary stands extending outside the stadium's original perimeter were erected to comply with the FIFA requirement of seating for 35,000 spectators. They can hold a total of 12,000 spectators, but the seating will be removed after the World Cup, decreasing the seating capacity back to 23,000.

The FIFA Fan Fest in Yekaterinburg is located in the Mayakovsky Central Park of Entertainment and Culture. Located just outside the city centre in a popular and well-known amusement park, it will have a capacity to hold 17,000 people.

Koltsovo Airport was also reconstructed and had a second runway built. In addition, work was done to prepare another passenger terminal, modernize the technical infrastructure, and launch the business aviation hangar. The airport's capacity in preparation for the World Cup has increased to two thousand people per hour. The street and road network was also upgraded.

International relations

Consulates

The United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, China and several other countries have consulates in Yekaterinburg.

BRIC summit

The BRIC countries met for their first official summit on 16 June 2009, in Yekaterinburg, with Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Dmitry Medvedev, Manmohan Singh, and Hu Jintao, the respective leaders of Brazil, Russia, India and China, all attending. The foreign ministers of the BRIC countries had also met in Yekaterinburg previously on 16 May 2008.[citation needed]

World Expo

In June 2013, at the 153rd General Assembly of the Bureau of International Expositions held in Paris, representatives from Yekaterinburg presented the city's bid to host the Expo 2020. Russian President Vladimir Putin confirmed during a televised statement in English to earmark the required funds to build an exhibition complex large enough to receive the estimated 30 million visitors from more than 150 countries. Ultimately, Dubai was chosen to host the exhibition. Yekaterinburg later bid for the Expo 2025. Yekaterinburg's concept for the bid exhibition relates to the technologies to make people happy by changing the world with innovation and quality of life. The host was announced on 23 November 2018 and Yekaterinburg lost out to Osaka, Japan.

Yekaterinburg hosted the Global Summit on Manufacturing and Industrialization (GMIS — 2019) under the auspices of the United Nations. The annual INNOPROM exhibition is among the five largest industrial exhibitions in the world.

Twin towns – sister cities

Yekaterinburg is twinned with:

  • image Annaba, Annaba Province, Algeria
  • image Ferentino, Lazio, Italy (1997)
  • image Guangzhou, Guangdong, China (2002)
  • image Incheon, South Korea (2009)
  • image Managua, Nicaragua (2013)
  • image Plovdiv, Plovdiv Province, Bulgaria
  • image San Jose, California, United States (1992)

Notable people

  • Anton Bakov, Leader of the Monarchist Party
  • Irina Antonenko, Miss Russia 2010
  • Aleksei Balabanov, film director, screenwriter, producer
  • Vera Bazarova, pairs figure skater
  • Pavel Bazhov, folklorist and children's author
  • Old Man Bukashkin, artist and poet
  • Pavel Datsyuk, ice hockey player
  • Nikolay Durakov, bandy legend
  • Chiang Fang-liang, former first lady of Taiwan
  • Aleksey Fedorchenko, film director, producer
  • Denis Galimzyanov, sprinter cyclist
  • Anna Gavrilenko, Group rhythmic gymnast Olympic Gold medalist
  • Nikolay Karpol, national women volleyball team coach
  • Nikolai Khabibulin, ice hockey player
  • Alexei Yashin, ice hockey player
  • Alexei Khvostenko, avant-garde poet, singer-songwriter, artist, and sculptor
  • Nikolay Kolyada, actor, director, writer, playwright, and playwriting teacher
  • Ilya Kormiltsev, poet, translator, publisher
  • Olga Kotlyarova, Olympic runner
  • Maxim Kovtun, figure skater
  • Vladislav Krapivin, children's author
  • Valeria Savinykh, WTA Professional player
  • Nikolay Krasovsky, mathematician
  • Yulia Lipnitskaya, figure skater
  • Iskander Makhmudov, businessman
  • Vladimir Malakhov, ice hockey player
  • Gennady Mesyats, vice-president of the Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Maxim Miroshkin, pairs figure skater
  • Vladimir Mulyavin (1941 – 2003), Belarusian musician and the founder of the folk-rock band Pesniary
  • Alfia Nazmutdinova, rhythmic gymnast
  • Ernst Neizvestny, sculptor
  • Oleg Platonov, writer, historian, and economist
  • Daria Pridannikova, rhythmic gymnast
  • Eduard Rossel, ex-governor of Sverdlovsk Oblast
  • Boris Ryzhy, poet
  • Mikhail Shchennikov, race walker
  • Vera Sessina, rhythmic gymnast
  • Georgy Shishkin, painter
  • Vassily Sigarev, playwright, screenwriter, film director
  • Anastasiia Tatareva, Group rhythmic gymnast Olympic Gold medalist
  • Sergei Tchepikov, Olympic biathlon competitor
  • Vladimir Tretyakov, ex-rector of the Ural State University
  • Lev Vainshtein, Olympic shooter
  • Sergei Vonsovsky, physicist
  • Alexander Dudoladov, writer
  • Alexander Malinin, singer
  • Petr Yan, Former UFC Bantamweight Champion

Others

  • A ballistic missile submarine of the Project 667BDRM Delfin class (NATO reporting name: Delta IV) is named Ekaterinburg (K-84/"807") in honour of the city.
  • The asteroid 27736 Ekaterinburg was named in the city's honour on 1 June 2007.

Notes

  1. /jɪˈkætərɪnbɜːrɡ/ yih-KAT-ər-in-burg; Russian: Екатеринбург, IPA: [jɪkətʲɪrʲɪnˈburk]; alternatively romanized as Ekaterinburg and formerly known as Sverdlovsk (Russian: Свердловск, IPA: [svʲɪrˈdlofsk], 1924–1991

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Yekaterinburg is a city and the administrative centre of Sverdlovsk Oblast and the Ural Federal District Russia The city is located on the Iset River between the Volga Ural region and Siberia with a population of roughly 1 5 million residents up to 2 2 million residents in the urban agglomeration Yekaterinburg is the fourth largest city in Russia the largest city in the Ural Federal District and one of Russia s main cultural and industrial centres Yekaterinburg has been dubbed the Third capital of Russia as it is ranked third by the size of its economy culture transportation and tourism Yekaterinburg EkaterinburgCityView of Yekaterinburg City and the Iset River from Vysotsky SkyscraperChurch of All SaintsMain building of Ural Federal UniversitySummit Business Center and Yekaterinburg CircusFlagCoat of armsLocation of YekaterinburgYekaterinburgLocation of YekaterinburgShow map of RussiaYekaterinburgYekaterinburg Sverdlovsk Oblast Show map of Sverdlovsk OblastCoordinates 56 50 08 N 60 36 46 E 56 83556 N 60 61278 E 56 83556 60 61278CountryRussiaFederal subjectSverdlovsk OblastFounded18 November 1723City status since1781Government BodyCity Duma HeadAlexey OrlovArea Total1 111 km2 429 sq mi Elevation237 m 778 ft Population 2010 Census Total1 349 772 Estimate 2024 1 536 183 Rank4th in 2010 Density1 200 km2 3 100 sq mi Administrative status Subordinated toCity of Yekaterinburg Capital ofSverdlovsk Oblast City of YekaterinburgMunicipal status Urban okrugYekaterinburg Urban Okrug Capital ofYekaterinburg Urban OkrugTime zoneUTC 5 MSK 2 Postal code s 620000Dialing code s 7 343OKTMO ID65701000001City Day3rd Saturday of AugustWebsiteekaterinburg wbr rf Yekaterinburg was founded on 18 November 1723 and named after the Orthodox name of Catherine I born Marta Helena Skowronska the wife of Russian Emperor Peter the Great The city served as the mining capital of the Russian Empire as well as a strategic connection between Europe and Asia In 1781 Catherine the Great gave Yekaterinburg the status of a district town of Perm Province and built the historical Siberian Route through the city Yekaterinburg became a key city to Siberia which had rich resources In the late 19th century Yekaterinburg became one of the centres of revolutionary movements in the Urals In 1924 after the Russian SFSR founded the Soviet Union the city was renamed Sverdlovsk after the Bolshevik leader Yakov Sverdlov During the Soviet era Sverdlovsk was turned into an industrial and administrative powerhouse On 23 September 1991 the city returned to its historical name Yekaterinburg is one of Russia s most important economic centres and was one of the host cities of the 2018 FIFA World Cup The city is currently when experiencing an economic and population boom which resulted in some of the tallest skyscrapers of Russia being located in the city Yekaterinburg is home to the headquarters of the Central Military District of the Russian Armed Forces as well as the presidium of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences Yekaterinburg is famous for its constructivist architecture and is also considered the Russian capital of street art HistoryPrehistory Bronze Age 5 sickle casting mold Sverdlovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore The area was settled in prehistory The earliest settlements date to 8000 7000 BC in the Mesolithic period The Isetskoe Pravoberezhnoye I archaeological site contains a Neolithic settlement dated to 6000 5000 BC It includes stone processing workshops with artefacts such as grinding plates anvils clumps of rock tools and finished products Over 50 different types of rock and minerals were used in tool making indicating extensive knowledge of the region s natural resources The Gamayun peninsula left bank of the Verkh Isetsky Pond has archaeological findings from the Chalcolithic Period workshops for producing stone tools upper area and two dwellings of the Ayat culture lower area There are also traces of the Koptyak culture from 2000 BC dishes decorated with bird images and evidence of metallurgical production The Tent I site contains the only Koptyak culture burials discovered in the Ural Mountains In the Bronze Age the people of Gamayun culture lived in the area They left fragments of ceramics weapons and ornaments Archaeological artifacts in the vicinity of Yekaterinburg were first discovered during railway construction at the end of the 19th century Excavation and research began in the 20th century Artifacts are held at the Sverdlovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore at the Hermitage at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the Academy of Sciences and at other museums Imperial era Uktus plant 1720 The first Russian settlements within the boundaries of modern Yekaterinburg appeared in the second half of the 17th century in 1672 an Old Believers village arose in the area of Shartash lake this fact is disputed by historians since no evidence of the founding of the village at that time was found in the sources and in 1680 1682 the villages of Nizhny and Verkhny Uktus appeared on the banks of Uktus River now the territory of the Chkalovsky district of the city In 1702 by the initiative of the head of Sibirskiy prikaz Andrew Vinius the Uktus state ironwork plant was founded near Nizhny Uktus the first ironworks within the boundaries of modern Yekaterinburg In 1704 the Shuvakish ironworks was built now the territory of the Zheleznodorozhny district of the city With the beginning of active construction of factories in the Urals in the 18th century relations with their southern neighbors the Bashkirs became strained As a result of the Bashkir raid in 1709 the village of Verkhny Uktus was devastated all buildings including the wooden church and chapel were burned the residents fled to the protection of the Uktus plant fortifications On the night of 5 April 1718 a fire destroyed all the factory buildings of the Uktus plant except for the dam and the plant was restored only by 1720 under the supervision of Timofey Burtsev However the plant did not receive further development due to the lack of water in Uktus river In 1720 by decree of Peter I a delegation led by mining specialist Johann Bluher and statesman Vasily Tatishchev was sent to the Urals They were entrusted with managing the mining industry identifying the causes of the collapse and reduction of production at state owned factories On 29 December 1720 Tatishchev and Bluher arrive at the Uktus plant which became their main residence in the Urals As a result of familiarizing himself with the state of nearby state owned factories Tatishchev came to the conclusion that on the basis of these factories even if they were reconstructed and expanded it would not be possible to quickly increase the production of iron and it would be more profitable to build a new large plant After inspecting the immediate area together with the commissary of the Uktus plant Timofey Burtsev a place rich in ore and forest was chosen on the banks of the more full flowing Iset River 7 versts from Uktus On 6 February 1721 Tatishchev sent a message to the Collegium of Mining in which he asked permission to begin construction of the plant with detailed explanations and justification for this project On 1 March 1721 without waiting for a response from the Collegium Tatishchev began construction of the new plant but he failed to convince Collegium and by the Collegium decree of 10 December 1721 he was removed from the leadership of mining affairs in the Urals In 1722 by decree of Peter the Great a mining engineer Major General Georg Wilhelm de Gennin was sent to the Urals in place of Tatishchev Having studied all the circumstances de Gennin fully supported Tatishchev s project and on 12 March 1723 construction of the plant on Iset resumed Yekaterinburg 1789 Russian historian Vasily Tatishchev and Russian engineer Georg Wilhelm de Gennin founded Yekaterinburg with the construction of a massive iron making plant under the decree of Russian emperor Peter the Great in 1723 They named the city after the emperor s wife Yekaterina who later became empress regnant Catherine I Officially the city s founding date is 18 November 1723 when the shops carried out a test run of the bloomery for trip hammers The plant was commissioned 6 days later on 24 November 1723 also saw the establishment of Yekaterinburg fortress which would encompass many of the settlement s earliest buildings Dmitry Mamin Sibiryak very vividly described the beginning of the construction of a mining plant and a fortress Imagine completely deserted banks of the Iset river covered with forest In the spring of 1723 soldiers from Tobolsk peasants of the assigned settlements hired craftsmen appeared and everything around came to life as if by the dictates of a fairy tale They dropped the forest prepared a place for the dam laid blast furnaces raised the rampart set up barracks and houses for the authorities In 1722 1726 the Verkhne Uktussky mining plant was built which was officially called the plant of the princess Elizabeth the future village of Elizabeth or Elizavetinskoe and became a part of modern Yekaterinburg in 1934 In 1726 Wilhelm de Gennin founded an auxiliary Verkh Isetsky plant with a working settlement 2 versts from Yekaterinburg upstream verkh in Russian the Iset River The plant s dam formed the Verkh Isetsky pond Colloquially called by the Russian acronym VIZ it was a satellite town until in 1926 with a population of over 20 000 people by this time it was incorporated into Yekaterinburg as the core of the Verkh Isetsky district Plan of Yekaterinburg 1743 Yekaterinburg was one of the industrial cities of Russia prompted at the beginning of the 18th century by decrees of Tsar Peter the Great which demanded the development of the metalworking industry With extensive use of iron the city was built to a regular square plan with ironworks and residential buildings at the centre These were surrounded by fortified walls so that Yekaterinburg was at the same time both a manufacturing centre and a fortress at the frontier between Europe and Asia It therefore found itself at the heart of Russia s strategy for further development of the entire Ural region The so called Siberian Route became operational in 1763 and placed the city on an increasingly important transit route which led to its development as a focus of trade and commerce between east and west and gave rise to the description of the city as the window to Asia With the growth in trade and the city s administrative importance the ironworks became less critical and the more important buildings were increasingly built using expensive stone Small manufacturing and trading businesses proliferated In 1781 Russia s empress Catherine the Great granted Yekaterinburg town status and nominated it as the administrative centre for the wider region within Perm Governorate In 1807 the role of the capital of the mining and smelting region was confirmed by assigning it the status of the only mountain city in Russia Until 1863 Yekaterinburg remained subordinate to the head of the mining plants of the Ural ridge the minister of finance and personally to the emperor and enjoyed considerable freedom from the governor s power Since the 1830s mountainous Yekaterinburg has become the center of mechanical engineering Cathedral on the Blood stands on the site of the Ipatiev House where the Romanovs the last royal family of Russia were murdered In 1820 1845 45 of the world s gold was mined in Yekaterinburg This is the first ever Gold Rush Until 1876 80 of the coins in circulation in the Russian Empire were produced at the Yekaterinburg mint Following the October Revolution the family of deposed Tsar Nicholas II was sent to internal exile in Yekaterinburg where they were imprisoned in the Ipatiev House in the city In July 1918 the Czechoslovak Legions were closing on Yekaterinburg In the early hours of the morning of 17 July the deposed Tsar his wife Alexandra and their children Grand Duchesses Olga Tatiana Maria Anastasia and Tsarevich Alexei were murdered by the Bolsheviks at the Ipatiev House Other members of the Romanov family were killed at Alapayevsk later the same day The Legions arrived less than a week later and captured the city The city remained under the control of the White movement in which a provisional government was established The Red Army took back the city and restored Soviet authority on 14 July 1919 Soviet era Snow covered statue of Yakov Sverdlov In the years following the Russian Revolution and the Russian Civil War political authority of the Urals was transferred from Perm to Yekaterinburg On 19 October 1920 Yekaterinburg established its first university the Ural State University as well as polytechnic pedagogical and medical institutions under the decree of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin Enterprises in the city ravaged by the war were nationalised including the Metalist formerly Yates Plant the Verkh Isetsky formerly Yakovleva Plant and the Lenin flax spinning factory formerly Makarov In 1924 the city of Yekaterinburg was renamed Sverdlovsk after the Bolshevik leader Yakov Sverdlov By the 1934 following a series of administrative reforms carried by the early Soviet government the earliest Russian settlements which predated Yekaterinburg and laid the basis of its founding were incorporated into the city proper During the reign of Stalin Sverdlovsk was one of several places developed by the Soviet government as a centre of heavy industry Old factories were reconstructed and new large factories were built especially those specialised in machine building and metalworking These plants included Magnitogorsk and the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant in Chelyabinsk oblast and Uralmash in Sverdlovsk During this time the population of Sverdlovsk tripled in size and it became one of the fastest growing cities of the Soviet Union At that time very large powers were given to the regional authorities By the end of the 1930s there were 140 industrial enterprises 25 research institutes and 12 higher education institutions in Sverdlovsk During World War II the city became the headquarters of the Ural Military District on the basis of which more than 500 different military units and formations were formed including the 22nd Army and the Ural Volunteer Tank Corps Uralmash became the main production site for armoured vehicles Many state technical institutions and whole factories were relocated to Sverdlovsk away from cities affected by war mostly Moscow with many of them staying in Sverdlovsk after the victory The Hermitage Museum collections were also partly evacuated from Leningrad to Sverdlovsk in July 1941 and remained there until October 1945 In the postwar years new industrial and agricultural enterprises were put into operation and massive housing construction began The lookalike five story apartment blocks that remain today in Kirovsky Chkalovsky and other residential areas of Sverdlovsk sprang up in the 1960s under the direction of Nikita Khrushchev s government In 1977 Ipatiev House was demolished by order of Boris Yeltsin in accordance to a resolution from the Politburo in order to prevent it from being used as a rallying location for monarchists Yeltsin later became the first President of Russia and represented the people at the funeral of the former Tsar in 1998 There was an anthrax outbreak in Sverdlovsk in April and May 1979 which was attributed to a release from the Sverdlovsk 19 military facility Contemporary era During the 1991 coup d etat attempt Sverdlovsk the home city of President Boris Yeltsin was selected by him as a temporary reserve capital for the Russian Federation in case Moscow became too dangerous for the Russian government A reserve cabinet headed by Oleg Lobov was sent to the city where Yeltsin enjoyed strong popular support at that time Shortly after the failure of the coup and subsequent dissolution of the Soviet Union the city regained its historical name of Yekaterinburg on 23 September 1991 However Sverdlovsk Oblast of which Yekaterinburg is the administrative centre kept its name In the 2000s an intensive growth of trade business and tourism began in Yekaterinburg In 2003 Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder negotiated in Yekaterinburg On 15 17 June 2009 the SCO and BRIC summits were held in Yekaterinburg which greatly improved the economic cultural and tourist situation in the city On 13 16 July 2010 a meeting between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and German Chancellor Angela Merkel took place in the city In 2018 Yekaterinburg hosted four matches of the 2018 FIFA World Cup and hosted the inaugural University International Sports Festival in 2023 GeographyLocation Yekaterinburg City and vicinities satellite image of ESA Sentinel 2 Geographically Yekaterinburg is in North Asia close to the Ural Mountains which divide Europe from Asia 1 667 km 1 036 mi east of the nation s capital Moscow The city has a total area of 1 111 km2 429 sq mi Yekaterinburg is on the eastern side of the Urals The city is surrounded by wooded hills partially cultivated for agricultural purposes Yekaterinburg is located on a natural watershed so there would be many bodies of water close and in the city The city is bisected by the Iset River which flows from the Urals into the Tobol River There are two lakes in the city Lake Shuvakish and Lake Shartash The city borders Verkh Isetskiy Pond through which the Iset River flows Lake Isetskoye and Lake Baltym are both near the city with Lake Isetskoye located near Sredneuralsk and Lake Baltym located near the towns of Sanatornyy and Baltym Time Yekaterinburg uses Yekaterinburg Time which is five hours ahead of UTC UTC 5 and two hours ahead of Moscow Time Climate The city possesses a humid continental climate Dfb under the Koppen climate classification It is characterised by sharp variability in weather conditions with well marked seasons The Ural Mountains despite their insignificant height block air from the west from the European part of Russia As a result the Central Urals are open to the invasion of cold arctic air and continental air from the West Siberian Plain Equally warm air masses from the Caspian Sea and the deserts of Central Asia can freely penetrate from the south Therefore the weather in Yekaterinburg is characterised by sharp temperature fluctuations and weather anomalies in winter from frost at 40 C to thaw and rain in summer from frosts to temperatures above 35 C 95 F Spring in Yekaterinburg Summer in Yekaterinburg Autumn in Yekaterinburg Winter in Yekaterinburg The distribution of precipitation is determined by the circulation of air masses relief and air temperatures The main part of the precipitation is brought by cyclones with a western air mass transfer that is from the European part of Russia while their average annual amount is 601 mm The maximum falls on a warm season during which about 60 70 of the annual amount falls For the winter period is characterized by snow cover with an average capacity of 40 50 cm The coefficient of moistening the ratio of yearly precipitation and potential evaporation 1 The average temperature in January is 12 6 C 9 3 F The record minimum temperature is 44 6 C 48 3 F 6 January 1915 The average July temperature is 18 9 C 66 0 F The record maximum temperature is 40 0 C 104 0 F 11 July 2023 The average annual temperature is 2 1 C 35 8 F The average annual wind speed is 2 9 m s 10 km h 6 5 mph The average annual humidity is 75 The average annual precipitation is 534 mm 21 0 in Climate data for Yekaterinburg 1991 2020 extremes 1831 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 5 6 42 1 9 4 48 9 18 1 64 6 28 8 83 8 34 7 94 5 36 4 97 5 40 0 104 0 37 2 99 0 31 9 89 4 24 7 76 5 13 5 56 3 5 9 42 6 40 0 104 0 Mean daily maximum C F 9 3 15 3 6 6 20 1 0 9 33 6 10 1 50 2 18 3 64 9 22 6 72 7 24 3 75 7 21 4 70 5 15 0 59 0 6 9 44 4 2 6 27 3 7 8 18 0 7 8 46 0 Daily mean C F 12 6 9 3 10 8 12 6 3 6 25 5 4 7 40 5 12 2 54 0 16 9 62 4 18 9 66 0 16 2 61 2 10 4 50 7 3 6 38 5 5 4 22 3 10 7 12 7 3 3 37 9 Mean daily minimum C F 15 5 4 1 14 1 6 6 7 3 18 9 0 3 32 5 6 9 44 4 12 0 53 6 14 4 57 9 12 2 54 0 6 8 44 2 1 0 33 8 7 8 18 0 13 3 8 1 0 4 31 3 Record low C F 44 6 48 3 42 4 44 3 39 2 38 6 21 8 7 2 13 5 7 7 5 3 22 5 1 5 34 7 2 2 28 0 9 0 15 8 22 0 7 6 39 2 38 6 44 0 47 2 44 6 48 3 Average precipitation mm inches 25 1 0 19 0 7 25 1 0 31 1 2 47 1 9 73 2 9 93 3 7 75 3 0 45 1 8 41 1 6 33 1 3 28 1 1 534 21 0 Average extreme snow depth cm inches 33 13 42 17 38 15 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 8 3 1 21 8 3 42 17 Average rainy days 1 1 5 13 20 20 19 22 22 17 6 1 147Average snowy days 26 23 18 10 4 0 4 0 0 2 13 23 25 144Average relative humidity 79 75 68 60 58 63 68 73 75 75 78 79 71Mean monthly sunshine hours 47 94 164 206 256 272 269 217 143 78 51 37 1 834Source 1 Pogoda ruSource 2 NOAA sun 1961 1990 DemographicsPopulation Historical populationYearPop 189737 399 1926134 831 260 5 1939425 533 215 6 1959778 602 83 0 19701 025 045 31 7 19791 211 172 18 2 19891 364 621 12 7 20021 293 537 5 2 20101 349 772 4 3 20211 544 376 14 4 According to the results of the 2021 Census the population of Yekaterinburg was 1 544 376 up from 1 349 772 recorded in the 2010 Census As of 2021 update the ethnic composition of Yekaterinburg was Ethnicity Population PercentageRussians 1 172 704 91 0 Tatars 27 431 2 1 Tajiks 13 102 1 0 Kyrgyz 8 769 0 7 Bashkirs 6 121 0 5 Ukrainians 4 987 0 4 Uzbeks 4 755 0 4 Armenians 4 307 0 3 Azerbaijanis 4 014 0 3 Others 42 033 3 3 Religion The template Pie chart is being considered for merging Religion in Yekaterinburg 2024 citation needed Orthodoxy 65 Islam 12 Atheists Non Religious 17 5 other christians 3 difficult to say 2 5 This photo by Sergey Prokudin Gorsky from 1910 shows the tallest building in the Urals at the time the Great Zlatoust bell tower Christianity is the predominant religion in the city of which most are adherents to the Russian Orthodox Church The Yekaterinburg and Verkhotursky diocese is located in the Holy Trinity Cathedral in the city Other religions practised in Yekaterinburg include Islam Old Believers Catholicism Protestantism and Judaism Yekaterinburg has a significant Muslim community but it suffers from a lack of worship space there are only two small mosques Another mosque was built in the nearby city of Verkhnyaya Pyshma On 24 November 2007 the first stone was laid in the construction of a large Cathedral Mosque with four minarets and space for 2 500 parishioners in the immediate vicinity of the cathedral and a synagogue thus forming the area of the three religions The mosque was planned to be built for the SCO summit but due to funding problems construction did not move from zero and is now frozen Construction of a Methodist church started in 1992 and with the help of American donations finished in 2001 A synagogue was opened in 2005 on the same place a 19th century synagogue was demolished in 1962 Most of the city s religious buildings were destroyed during the Soviet era in addition to the synagogue the three largest Orthodox churches in Yekaterinburg were demolished the Epiphany Cathedral the Ekaterininsky Cathedral and the Great Zlatoust Church Other Christian churches such as the Lutheran Church of Yekaterinburg and the Roman Catholic Church of St Anne a new Catholic St Anne s Church was built in 2000 were demolished as well Other churches were used as warehouses and industrial sites The only religious building in Yekaterinburg in the Soviet era was the Cathedral of St John the Baptist Recently some churches are being rebuilt Since 2006 according to the surviving drawings the Great Zlatoust Church was restored in 2012 On 17 April 2010 the city was visited by Patriarch Kirill GovernmentYekaterinburg is the administrative centre of Sverdlovsk Oblast Within the framework of the administrative divisions it is together with twenty nine rural localities incorporated as the City of Yekaterinburg an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts As a municipal division the City of Yekaterinburg is incorporated as Yekaterinburg Urban Okrug Administrative districts Administrative districts of YekaterinburgLabel OKATO Name Area 2019 Population 2019 Founded Head Website Dialing code s Subdivisions1 65 401 362 Akademicheskiy 81 000 2020 Smirnyagin Nikolai Sergeevich 7 3432 7 3433 32 65 401 364 Verkh Isetsky 240 square kilometres 93 sq mi 221 207 1919 Morozov Andrey Mikhailovich cm Archived 1 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine 7 3432 7 3433 53 65 401 368 Zheleznodorozhnyy 126 3 square kilometres 48 8 sq mi 221 207 1938 Pershin Vitaly Pavlovich cm Archived 1 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine 7 343 84 65 401 373 Kirovsky 72 square kilometres 28 sq mi 228 864 1943 Bolikov Vladimir Yurievich cm Archived 15 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine 7 343 75 65 401 377 Leninsky 25 square kilometres 9 7 sq mi 156 723 1934 Beruashvili Elena Zauryevna cm Archived 15 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine 7 343 36 65 401 380 Oktyabrsky 157 square kilometres 61 sq mi 148 981 1934 Kostenko Igor Vitalievich cm Archived 10 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine 7 3432 117 65 401 385 Ordzhonikidzevsky 102 square kilometres 39 sq mi 286 482 1934 Kravchenko Roman Gennadievich cm Archived 16 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine 7 3433 68 65 401 390 Chkalovsky 402 square kilometres 155 sq mi 275 571 1943 Shipitsyn Evgeny Viktorovich cm Archived 9 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine 7 3432 10 Each district is not a municipal formation and the historical centre of the city is divided into five inner city districts except Chkalovsky and Ordzhonikidzevsky A district named Akademicheskiy was formed from the parts of Leninsky and Verkh Isetsky districts on 3 January 2020 On 1 October 2021 more settlements were transferred from Verkh Isetsky to Akademicheskiy district Administration Urban Building of the Administration of Yekaterinburg located on 1905 Square The Charter of Yekaterinburg establishes a four link system for the organisation of local authorities which includes the Head of Yekaterinburg who serves as the chairman of the Yekaterinburg City Duma the Yekaterinburg City Duma the Administration of the City of Yekaterinburg and the Chamber of Accounts According to the charter of Yekaterinburg the highest official of the municipal formation is the mayor of Yekaterinburg The mayor is elected by universal suffrage but since 3 April 2018 the procedure for direct elections of the mayor of the City of Yekaterinburg was abolished The mayor of the city is endowed with representative powers and powers to organize activities and guide the activities of the City Duma In addition the mayor of the city exercises other powers such as concluding a contract with the head of the city administration and ensuring compliance with the Russian Constitution Russian legislation the city charter and other normative acts In the event of a temporary absence of the mayor of Yekaterinburg his authority under his written order is exercised by the deputy mayor of Yekaterinburg The representative body of the municipal formation is the Yekaterinburg City Duma which represents the city s entire population The membership of the Duma is 36 deputies 18 deputies were elected in single mandate constituencies and 18 in a single electoral district Residents of the city elect deputies on the basis of universal suffrage for a period of 5 years The executive and administrative body of the municipal formation is the Administration of the City of Yekaterinburg led by the head of the Administration currently held by Aleksandr Yacob The administration is endowed with its own powers to resolve issues of local importance but it is under the control and accountable to the Yekaterinburg City Duma The building of the Administration of Yekaterinburg is located on 1905 Square The Chamber of Accounts is a permanently operating body of external municipal financial control The Chamber is formed by the apparatus of the City Duma and is accountable to it The Chamber consists of the chairman deputy chairman auditors and staff The structure and number of staff of the chamber including the number of auditors is determined by the decision of the City Duma The term of office of the Chamber staff is 5 years The Chamber of Accounts is a legal entity Oblast The building of Sverdlovsk Oblast s Legislative Assembly In accordance with the regional charter Yekaterinburg is the administrative centre of the Sverdlovsk Oblast The executive power is exercised by the governor of Sverdlovsk Oblast the legislative power by the legislative assembly of Sverdlovsk Oblast and the judicial power by the Sverdlovsk Regional Court located in the building of the Palace of Justice The building serving the regional government is the White House and the building serving the legislative assembly is located next to it on October Square The ministries of the Sverdlovsk Region are located in the building of the regional government as well as in other separate buildings of the city Federal Residence of the presidential envoy of the Ural Federal District Yekaterinburg serves as the centre of the Ural Federal District As a result it serves as the residence of the presidential envoy the highest official of the district and part of the administration of the President of Russia The residence is located the building of the regional government on October Square near the Iset River embankment The Central Military District headquarters building In addition Yekaterinburg serves as the centre of the Central Military District and more than 30 territorial branches of the federal executive bodies whose jurisdiction extends not only to Sverdlovsk Oblast but also to other regions in the Ural Mountains Siberia and the Volga Region Politics According to the results of the September 2013 elections the mayor of the city was Yevgeny Roizman nominated by the Civil Platform party Out of the 36 seats in the City Duma 21 belong to United Russia 7 to A Just Russia 3 to the Civil Platform 2 to the Communist Party and 1 seat to the LDPR The turnout in the mayoral elections was 33 57 Russian federal legislative election 2016 United Russia Dmitry Medvedev 78 289 38 4 SRZP Sergey Mironov 31 288 15 4 LDPR Leonid Slutsky politician 25 869 12 7 CPRF Gennady Zyuganov 22 293 10 9 Yabloko Nikolay Rybakov 11 340 5 6 Party Candidate Votes It was the last popular vote in Yekaterinburg Since 2018 there have been no elections but a vote in the Municipal Duma On 25 September 2018 the majority of the representatives in the Duma voted in favour of the Vice Governor of Sverdlovsk oblast Alexander Vysokinskiy EconomyOverview Yekaterinburg is one of the largest economic centres in Russia It is included in the City 600 list it unites the 600 largest cities in the world that produce 60 of global GDP compiled by the McKinsey Global Institute a research organisation In 2010 the consulting company estimated the gross product of Yekaterinburg to be about 19 billion according to the calculations of the company it should grow to 40 billion by 2025 By volume of the economy Yekaterinburg ranks third in the country after Moscow and St Petersburg According to a research of the Institute for Urban Economics in the ranking of the largest cities and regional capital cities according to economic standards for 2015 Yekaterinburg ranked third The city s gross urban product GVP was 898 billion rubles Per capita GDP was 621 0 thousand rubles 18th place In 2015 the gross urban product of the Yekaterinburg metropolitan area amounted to 50 7 billion international dollars the fourth place in the country or 25 4 thousand international dollars in terms of per inhabitant of the metropolitan area In the Soviet era Yekaterinburg as Sverdlovsk was a purely industrial city with a share of industry in the economy of 90 of which 90 were in defense production With Chelyabinsk and Perm the three cities formed what to be the Urals industrial hub The former head of Yekaterinburg Arkady Chernetsky has set the goal of diversifying the city s economy which has resulted in the development of sectors such as warehousing transportation logistics telecommunications financial sector wholesale and retail trade etc in Yekaterinburg Economist geographer Natalia Zubarevich points out that at the present stage Yekaterinburg has practically lost its industrial specialisation Living costs and the labor market Aquamarine apartment complex with the topped out 188 meter Vysotsky skyscraper in the background The standard of living in Yekaterinburg exceeds the average standard across Russia According to the Department of Sociology of the Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation it is among the top ten cities with the highest standard of living Compared to other Russian cities with a population of around or over one million in 2015 Yekaterinburg held a leading position in terms of average monthly wages and retail turnover in terms of the total volume of investments in fourth place of fixed assets and second place in housing placement Iset Tower is a 52 story residential skyscraper and is the tallest building in Yekaterinburg It is located within the vicinity of Yekaterinburg City The average monthly wage in Yekaterinburg following the results of 2019 was 54 976 rubles This is the first place among the millionth municipalities of the Russian Federation There are on average 440 300 people employed by large and middle sized organisations and companies The unemployment rate at the end of 2015 was 0 83 of the total economically active population Locals labelled the main problems of the city such the current state of the healthcare system housing system and transportation system The budget of Yekaterinburg in 2015 was executed on income in the amount of 32 063 6 million rubles for expenses in the amount of 32 745 8 million rubles Among the budget expenditures 17 billion rubles were spent on education over 1 billion rubles on culture and about 900 million rubles on health The main part of the revenue of the city treasury was its own tax and non tax revenues more than 18 billion rubles The revenues from the regional and federal budgets were at the lowest level in 10 years Specialists noted a decrease in tax revenues and an increase in tax debt exceeded 2 billion rubles The main budget expenditures are the development of the economy which accounts for 19 of expenditures and the social security of the townspeople 11 of expenditures go Cities such as Perm Kazan and Ufa spend for these purposes in a smaller percentage of costs from 2 to 6 Also a fairly strict budgetary discipline is noted the budget deficit is kept at the level of 2 of its volume Finance and business Yekaterinburg City along the Iset River Yekaterinburg is one of the largest financial and business centres in Russia with offices of multinational corporations representative offices of foreign companies and a large number of federal and regional financial and credit organisations The financial market of Yekaterinburg is characterised by stability and independence based both on the broad presence of large foreign and Moscow credit organisations and on the availability of large and stable local financial holdings The financial sector of Yekaterinburg has more than 100 banks including 11 foreign banks The list of the largest Russian banks for assets for 2016 included 10 banks registered in Yekaterinburg including but not all Ural Bank for Reconstruction and Development SKB Bank Uraltransbank and UM Bank IT SKB Kontur from Yekaterinburg the largest software manufacturer in Russia first place according to the RAEX rating Also in Yekaterinburg is the Ural headquarters of the Central Bank of Russia Since 7 August 2017 by order of the Bank of Russia the branches of the Siberian Far Eastern and part of the Prevolzhsky Federal Districts have been transferred to the control of the Ural Megaregal Directorate Thus this is one of the three main departments of the Mega regulator in the territory of Russia A major role in the formation of Yekaterinburg as a business centre has its infrastructural potential which is growing at a high rate transport accessibility for Russian and foreign economic entities the availability of hotels advanced communication services business related services consulting exhibition activities etc Yekaterinburg has its own central business district Yekaterinburg City Industry 1st Pyatiletka Square where Uralmash is headquartered Yekaterinburg has been a major industrial centre since its foundation In the 18th century the main branches were smelting and processing of metal Since the beginning of the 19th century machine building appeared and in the second half of the 19th century light and food especially milling industry was widely spread A new stage in the development of production occurred during the period of industrialisation at this time in the city factories were built which determined the industry specialisation of heavy engineering During World War II Yekaterinburg as Sverdlovsk hosted about sixty enterprises evacuated from Central Russia and Ukraine As a result there was a sharp increase in the production capacity of existing plants and the emergence of new branches of the Urals industry At present more than 220 large and medium sized enterprises are registered in Yekaterinburg 197 of them in manufacturing industries In 2015 they shipped 323 288 million rubles worth of own produced goods Production by industry was divided accordingly metallurgical production and metalworking 20 9 food production 13 3 production of electrical equipment electronic and optical equipment 9 2 production of vehicles 8 4 production of machinery and equipment 6 4 chemical production 5 5 production of other nonmetallic mineral products 3 7 production of rubber and plastic products 2 8 pulp and paper production publishing and printing 0 5 and other 29 3 Several headquarters of large Russian industrial companies are located in the city IDGC of Urals Enel Russia Steel Industrial Company Russian Copper Company Kalina NLMK Sort VIZ Stal Sinara Group Uralelectrotyazhmash Automation Association named after academician NA Semikhatov Ural Heavy Machinery Plant Uralmash Fat Plant Fores confectionery association Sladko Machine Building Plant named after M I Kalinin Ural Turbine Plant Uralkhimmash and others Retail and services Vaynera Street a pedestrian street with lots of retail shops Yekaterinburg ranks first in retail trade of the Russian Federation per capita ahead of Moscow The consumer market contributes significantly to Yekaterinburg s economy Revenue of retail stores in 2015 amounted to 725 9 billion rubles and the number of retailers totaled 4 290 As of 1 January 2016 update 36 shopping centers operate in the city taking up a total area of which was 1 502 700 m2 16 175 000 sq ft The availability of shopping centres per 1 000 inhabitants increased to 597 2 m2 6 428 sq ft Retail areas amounted to 2 019 000 m2 21 730 000 sq ft with the availability of retail space reached 1 366 3 m2 14 707 sq ft per 1 000 inhabitants According to these statistics Yekaterinburg holds leading positions among other major cities of Russia In the consumer market of Yekaterinburg 1041 network operators are represented The number of wholesale enterprises totalled 1 435 Among the Federal construction stores represented in the city you can select Leroy Merlin Castorama Domostroy Maxidom OBI Sdvor Yekaterinburg has an agricultural market named Shartashsky The revenue of catering in 2015 totalled 38 6 billion rubles The network of catering enterprises in Yekaterinburg is presented as follows 153 restaurants 210 bars 445 cafes 100 coffee houses 582 dining rooms 189 eateries 173 fast food establishments 10 tea shops 319 other types of institutions buffets cafeterias catering companies 82 6 of catering enterprises provide additional services to consumers The revenue of the services industry in 2015 totalled 74 9 billion rubles The fastest pace in the city is developing hairdressing services sewing and knitting atelier services pawnshop services fitness centre services The network of public service enterprises in Yekaterinburg includes 5 185 facilities In 2015 the provision of service areas for service enterprises totaled 382 1 m2 4 113 sq ft per 1 000 citizens The highest concentration of household services is observed in the Verkh Isetsky Oktyabrsky and Leninsky districts Greenwich Shopping Center as of 2021 update is the largest shopping center in Europe The largest store in the world by area is Sima Land Tourism Yekaterinburg is a major centre for the Russian tourist industry In 2015 the city was one of the top five most visited Russian cities others being Moscow St Petersburg Novosibirsk and Vladivostok according to the Global Destinations Cities Index which represents the payment system Mastercard In recent years a lot of work has been done to create a positive image of Yekaterinburg as a centre for international tourism including holding of summits for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation SCO in 2008 and 2009 and the international exhibition Innoprom in 2009 and 2010 In 2014 Yekaterinburg ranked third among Russian cities in popularity among foreign tourists after Moscow and St Petersburg In 2015 the total flow of inbound tourism grew by 10 compared to the previous year and amounted to 2 1 million people In recent years there has been a tendency to reduce the role of business tourism in the overall flow if in 2013 about 80 of trips were business in 2015 their number was already 67 Most tourists go to bow to the memory of the last czar and his family In addition new tourist ideas are developing such as the Bazhov theme the geological and mineralogical theme industrial tourism and the event calendar TransportationYekaterinburg is the third largest transport hub of Russia behind Moscow and St Petersburg The city has 6 federal highways 7 main railway lines and an international airport The location of Yekaterinburg in the central part of the region allows for 7 to 10 hours to get from it to any large city of the Urals The formation of Yekaterinburg as an important transportation hub is largely due to the city s favourable geographical location on a low stretch of the Ural Mountains through which it was convenient to lay the main roads connecting the European and Eastern parts of Russia Roads E22 bypass in the Chkalovsky District Yekaterinburg is one of the ten Russian megacities with the largest car fleet 0 437 megacars were registered in the city in 2014 which has been intensively increasing in recent years by 6 14 annually The level of car ownership in 2015 has reached 410 cars per 1 000 people Its pace in the past few years has seriously exceeded the pace of development and the capacity of the road infrastructure For the first time transport problems started to appear in Yekaterinburg in the 1980s and though it did not seem threatening at first the situation gets worse every year Studies have shown that as early as 2005 the capacity limit for the road network was reached which has now led to permanent congestion To increase the capacity of the street road network stage by stage reconstruction of streets is being carried out as well as multi level interchanges being built In order to reduce the transit traffic the Sverdlovsk Oblast administration announced two road projects in 2014 the Yekaterinburg Ring Road EKAD and an overpass road on Sovetskaya Street The Yekaterinburg Ring Road would surround the largest municipalities of Yekaterinburg Its purpose would be to help the city s economy and reduce traffic on the Middle Ring Road of the city making it easier for civilians to commute around the city than going through the city s traffic congestion Eventually the Ring Road would connect to other federal roads in order for easier access between other Russian cities Construction of the road started in the same year The projects were assigned to the Ministry of Transport and Communications since the projects were crucial to the city s economy Officials hope the road projects will build environments more conducive to improving local quality of life and outside investments Completing these major inter regional roads will increase productive traffic by 50 to 100 improving the local economy with its ease of access to industries Since 2014 the project for the introduction of paid parking in the central part of Yekaterinburg is being implemented The project is implemented in parallel with the increase in the number of intercepting parking lots and the construction of parking lots At the end of 2015 in the central part of the city there were 2 307 paid parking places The total length of the road network in Yekaterinburg is 1 311 5 km 814 9 mi of which 929 8 km 577 8 mi is cobbled carriageways 880 km 550 mi is with upgraded coverage 632 km 393 mi is backbone networks of which 155 km 96 mi are on the citywide backbone network movement 20 interchanges have been constructed at different levels within the city limits including 11 on the EKAD and 9 on the middle ring 74 transport facilities 27 bridges across the Iset River Patrushikha Mostovka Istok Rivers 13 dams on the Iset Patrushikha Istok Olkhovka Warm Shilovka Rivers 23 road overpasses and 18 out of the way pedestrian crossings were built as well Yekaterinburg is served by the following highways M5 E22 R351 R352 R354 R355Public transit Chkalovskaya station of the Yekaterinburg Metro Yekaterinburg uses almost all types of public transport The largest transportation services the Municipal Association of Bus Enterprises the Tram Trolleybus Office and the Yekaterinburg Metro transported 207 4 million people in 2015 The total volume of passenger transportation by all land transport modes decreases annually If the annual passenger traffic of municipal transport was 647 1 million people in 2002 and according to this index the city occupied the third place in the country with a wide margin then in 2008 this figure would be 412 million people the fourth place in Russia Yekaterinburg tram Since 1991 the city operates the sixth metro in Russia and the thirteenth in the CIS At the moment there is one line with 9 stations In 2015 49 9 million passengers were transported according to this metric the Yekaterinburg Metro is the fourth in Russia behind the Moscow Metro Saint Petersburg Metro and Novosibirsk Metro Although the metro is the second most popular type of public transport in recent years significant problems have appeared in its work loss making obsolete rolling stock and a shortage of funds for modernisation The tram network was established in 1929 and currently when plays a leading role in the urban transport system The volume of passengers carried for 2013 is 127 8 million but this declines every year 245 million people in 2013 In 2016 there were 30 routes operating 459 cars The total length of the tracks is 185 5 km As of 2016 update the construction of a tram line Yekaterinburg Verkhnyaya Pyshma was planned Yekaterinburg trolleybus There are 93 bus routes operating in Yekaterinburg including 30 municipal ones EMUP MOAP In 2007 114 5 million passengers were transported by municipal intercity buses 124 6 million in 2006 The decrease in volume is due to the increasing role of the fixed route taxis in the urban transport system of Yekaterinburg as well as the high cost of travel However the city bus transport network provides significant employment for the people of Yekaterinburg including the formidable babushkas who collect passenger fares In the park of EMPU there are 537 buses In 2013 there are 19 routes which employ 250 trolleybuses The total length of trolleybus lines is 168 4 km The number of passengers transported by trolleybus in 2007 amounted to 78 4 million 84 3 million in 2006 In addition the city operates an electric train route linking the north western and the southern parts of Yekaterinburg from Sem Klyuchey to Elizavet Rail Yekaterinburg railway stationStation Square Yekaterinburg is a major railway junction In the Yekaterinburg node 7 main lines converge to Perm Tyumen Kazan Nizhny Tagil Chelyabinsk Kurgan and Tavda The Sverdlovsk Railway Administration is located in the city which serves trains on the territory of the Sverdlovsk and Tyumen Regions the Perm Territory the Khanty Mansiysk and Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Districts as well as parts of the Omsk Region and there is a single road traffic control centre The Perm Yekaterinburg Tyumen section is now part of the main route of the Trans Siberian Railway Air Koltsovo Airport Yekaterinburg is served by two primary airports Koltsovo International Airport SVX and the smaller Yekaterinburg Aramil Airport Koltsovo Airport is one of the largest airports in the country serving 5 404 million passengers including 3 485 million serviced by domestic airlines 1 919 million at international flights in 2017 making it the sixth busiest airport in Russia HealthRegional Clinical Hospital No 1 Yekaterinburg has an extensive network of municipal regional and federal health facilities There are 54 hospitals designed at a capacity of 18 200 beds 272 ambulatory polyclinics and 156 dental clinics and offices Some health facilities are based on medical research institutes such as the Research Institute of Phthisiopulmonology the Research Institute of Dermatology and Immunopathology and the Ural State Medical University as well as others In clean areas of the city there is the Yekaterinburg Medical Centre which includes the Sverdlovsk Regional Clinical Hospital No 1 also includes a polyclinic and a boarding house Central City Hospital No 40 polyclinic therapeutic building surgical building infectious body neuro surgical building maternity hospital Regional Cardiology Centre Centre for Prevention and Control of AIDS and MNTK Eye Microsurgery Other large medical centres are the Uralmash Health Centre Hospital No 14 the Hospital of veterans of the Great Patriotic War the district hospital of the Ministry of Internal Affairs the district military hospital the Oncology Centre the Sverdlovsk Oblast Psychiatric Hospital the Disaster Medicine Centre the Sanguis Blood Transfusion Centre children s versatile hospital No 9 and the regional rehabilitation centre on Chusovsky lake There are about 300 pharmacies in the city The number of doctors in public medical institutions is 11 339 people 83 9 per 10 000 people and the number of nurses is 16 795 124 per 10 000 people Private medical institutions also operate in the city EducationMain building of the Ural Federal University Yekaterinburg s education system includes institutions of all grades and conditions preschool general special correctional and vocational secondary and higher education as well as others Today the city is one of the largest educational centres of Russia with Yekaterinburg considered to be the leading educational and scientific centre of the Urals Main building of Technical University of UMMC There are 164 educational institutions in Yekaterinburg 160 of them operate in the morning and the other 4 in the evening In 2015 133 800 people were enrolled in general education institutions which holds a capacity of 173 161 people Yekaterinburg s education system also includes state pre school educational institutions non state pre school institutions out of town health camps and municipal city health facilities with a one day stay Five educational institutions of the city SUNC UrFU Gymnasium No 2 Gymnasium No 9 Gymnasium No 35 and Lyceum No 135 were included in the rating of the five hundred best schools in the country by the Moscow Center for Continuous Mathematical Education and the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation On 16 July 1914 the Ural Mining Institute of Emperor Nicholas II now the Ural State Mining University was established as Yekaterinburg s first educational institution In 1930 the Sverdlovsk Power Engineering College now the Ural Technical Institute of Communications and Informatics was opened to train specialists in the field of communications The Alexei Maximovich Gorky Ural State University now the Ural Federal University became the first university in Yekaterinburg by decree of the Council of People s Commissars of the RSFSR signed by Vladimir Lenin on 19 October 1920 The Sverdlovsk Engineering and Pedagogical Institute today the Russian State Vocational and Pedagogical University became the first university of the USSR for the training of engineering and pedagogical personnel when it was opened in 1979 Ural State Mining University In terms of the level of qualification of the graduates Yekaterinburg s universities are among the leading in Russia in particular in terms of the number of graduates representing the current managing elite of the country Yekaterinburg universities are second only to the educational institutions of Moscow and Saint Petersburg Currently there are 20 state universities in the city which currently holds a total of 140 000 students In addition there are 14 non state institutions of higher education in the city such as the Yekaterinburg Academy of Contemporary Art and the Yekaterinburg Theological Seminary The prestigious architecture school the Ural State Academy of Architecture and Arts is also located within the city limits Other institutions of higher education Ural State Pedagogical University Ural State University of Forestry Ural State University of Railway Transport Ural State University of Economics Military Institute of Artillery Ural State Conservatory Ural State Agricultural Academy Ural State Law Academy Ural State Medical University Ural State Academy of Performing Arts Ural Academy of Public Service and Institute of International Relations In May 2011 the Ural State University and Ural State Technical University merged to form the Boris N Yeltsin Ural Federal University making it the largest university in the Urals and the largest university in Russia As of 1 January 2016 the university had 35 300 students and 2 950 teachers The university s budget in 2015 totalled 9 1 billion rubles and the volume of research and development work totalled 1 6 billion rubles As of 2021 UrFU is the largest university in Russia in terms of the number of students being on the 351st place in the QS World University Rankings The number of publications of the university in the Web of Science database is about a thousand per year There are many branches of non resident universities in the city including the Ural branch of the Siberian State University of Telecommunications and Informatics the Ural branch of the Russian Academy of Private Law the Yekaterinburg branch of the Plekhanov Russian Economic Academy the Yekaterinburg branch of the University of the Russian Academy of Education the Yekaterinburg branch of the Moscow State University and Sholokhov Humanitarian University as well as others Media and telecommunicationsYekaterinburg TV Tower before it was demolished In Yekaterinburg a large number of print publications are published about 200 newspapers the most read being the Ural Worker Vecherny Yekaterinburg Oblastnaya Gazeta and For Change and 70 magazines with most read being Red Burda and I m Buying A television studio was built in Yekaterinburg as Sverdlovsk in 1955 and on 6 November of the same year the first telecast appeared Coloured television later appeared in 1976 Now the television is broadcast by 19 companies including but not all STRC Ural Channel Four 41 Home Channel 10 OTV Union Orthodox and UFO 24 Broadcasting is carried out from the TV tower on Lunacharsky street television studio GTRK Ural the TV tower on the Moskovskiy Hill and from the TV tower radio relay tower on Blyukher Street In 1981 construction of a new television tower was started which was to become the second tallest in Russia after the Ostankino Tower and cover the territory of most of the Sverdlovsk region but economic difficulties postponed construction As a result the television tower was the tallest uncompleted structure in the world On 24 March 2018 the television tower was demolished by detonation for the city s beautification in preparation of the 2018 FIFA World Cup The Shartash radio mast which broadcasts is the tallest structure in the city with a height of 263 meters In addition several dozens of national and local news agencies are broadcast in Yekaterinburg with the most watched being ITAR TASS Ural RUIA Ural and Interfax Ural At the moment when there are 26 internet providers and 6 cellular operators in the city According to Yekaterinburg News the city has signed a cooperative agreement with the Russian mobile operator Vimpelcom working under the Beeline brand The partnership will involve cooperation on investment projects and social programmes focused on increasing access to mobile services in the city Beeline has launched an initiative to provide Wi Fi services in 500 public trams and trolley buses in Yekaterinburg Operators of mobile communication in Yekaterinburg Generation Mobile communication standard Operators2G GSM MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia Motive2 5G GPRS MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia Motive2 75G EDGE MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia Motive3G UMTS CDMA 1X MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia3 5G HSPA MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia3 75G HSPA MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia4G LTE MTS MegaFon Beeline Tele2 Russia Motive Yota4G LTE Advanced MTS MegaFon Beeline YotaLife and cultureOverview Europe Asia border marker near Yekaterinburg Yekaterinburg is a multipurpose cultural centre of the Urals Federal District There are about fifty libraries in the city The largest library organisations are the Sverdlovsk Oblast Universal Scientific Library the V G Belinsky Scientific Library which is the largest public library in Sverdlovsk Oblast and the Municipal Library Association which is composed of 41 libraries throughout the city including the AI Herzen Central City Library There are about 50 different museums in the city Yekaterinburg has unique museum collections such as the collections of Russian paintings in the Yekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts and the Nevyansk icons in the Nevyansk Icon Museum with more than 300 icons representing the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries on display There is also a unique exhibit the Kaslinsky cast iron pavilion which received main awards at the 1900 World Exhibition in Paris The Kasli Pavilion was registered by UNESCO as the only cast iron architectural structure in the world which is in the museum collection Museums of the city also have collections of jewellery and stone ornaments The United Museum of Writers of the Urals presents exhibitions in memory of writers such as Dmitry Mamin Sibiryak and Pavel Bazhov It also is the home of the Shigirskaya Kladovaya Shigirskaya kladovaya or Shigir Collection which includes the oldest known wooden sculpture in the world The sculpture was found near Nevyansk and originally estimated to have been made approximately 9 500 years ago but now is estimated to have been made 11 500 years ago Yekaterinburg museums annually participate in the international event Long Night of Museums Yekaterinburg has the third most theatres in Russia The influence of theatrical life of the city was made by the Moscow Art Academic Theater and the Central Theater of the Soviet Army when they evacuated to Yekaterinburg as Sverdlovsk during World War II and they had their own theater in the city Notable theatres that operate in the city are Academic Theater of Musical Comedy Drama Theater Kolyada Theater the youth theatre and the puppet theatre as well as others The Yekaterinburg Opera and Ballet Theater received four awards at the Golden Mask 2020 Festival in Moscow including the main Golden Mask for the Best Opera Performance In 2014 the city showcased its education literary art and theatre culture through the Russian Year of Culture Programme The city has a well developed film industry Opened back in 1909 Laurage was the first cinema in Yekaterinburg In 1943 the Sverdlovsk Film Studio was opened and produced its first feature film Silva a year later After the Second World War the studio produced up to ten feature films a year There are more than 20 cinemas in Yekaterinburg the oldest of which is the Salyut while the most capacious is the Cosmos spacecraft There are also chains of movie theatres such as Premier Zal Kinomaks and Kinoplex which usually open in shopping and entertainment centres A number of popular Russian rock bands such as Urfin Dzhyus Chaif Chicherina Nautilus Pompilius Nastya Trek Agata Kristi Slaughter to Prevail and Smyslovye Gallyutsinatsii were originally formed in Yekaterinburg Ural Rock is often considered as a particular variety of rock music Yekaterinburg and St Petersburg are actually considered to be the main centres of the genre in Russia Also opera singers like Boris Shtokolov Yuri Gulyayev Vera Bayeva graduated from the Urals State Conservatory The Ural Philharmonic Orchestra currently conducted by Dmitry Liss founded by Mark Paverman and located in Yekaterinburg is also very popular in Russia and in Europe as well as the Ural Academic Popular Chorus a folk singing and dance ensemble citation needed Yekaterinburg Circus Yekaterinburg V I Filatov State Circus is located in the centre of the city on the western bank of the Iset River In 2012 the Yekaterinburg Circus was nominated Best Circus of the Year for the circus show Sharivari by the Rosgoscirk and the Ministry of Culture The Presidential Center named after Boris Yeltsin was built in Yekaterinburg in 2015 It is considered to be a public cultural and educational center Center has its art gallery library museum equipped with the newest multimedia technologies that help to present the documents video materials and archive photos In 2017 the Yeltsin Center was recognized as the best museum in Europe by the Council of Europe the first of the museums in Russia The Urals Society of Natural Science Lovers pushed Yekaterinburg to have a zoo Currently the zoo has more than 1 000 animals that belong to more than 350 species The zoo covers an area of 2 7 hectares On 18 June 2011 Yekaterinburg launched Red Line as a pedestrian tourist route for self guided tours by residents and visitors to go to 34 landmarks in the historical section of the city Architecture The Rastorguyev Kharitonov Palace built from 1794 to 1820 Many buildings of Yekaterinburg are ranged from a different number of architectural styles The city had a regular layout based on the fortresses of the Renaissance and by the principles of French town planning during the 17th century By the 18th century the Baroque movement was not that influential in Yekaterinburg with the style being seen in churches which later declined In the first half of the 19th century neoclassicism grew influential in the Yekaterinburg s architecture The estates were built in the neoclassic style including the main house wings services and often an English style park This style s influence in Yekaterinburg is mostly due to the contributions of architect Michael Malakhov who worked in the city from 1815 to 1842 He designed the assemblies of the Verkhne Isetsky factory as well as the Novo Tikhvinsky Monastery White Tower of the Ural Heavy Machinery PlantDistrict Officers House At the beginning of the 20th century eclecticism became a dominant influence in Yekaterinburg s architecture Buildings such as the Opera House and Yekaterinburg railway station were built in this style During the 1920s and the 1930s constructivism took effect influencing residential complexes industrial buildings stadiums etc Architects Moses Ginzburg Jacob Kornfeld the Vesnina brothers Daniel Friedman and Sigismund Dombrovsky contributed greatly to the constructivism in the city More than 140 structures in Yekaterinburg are designed in the constructivist style including the Uralmash White Tower and the building of the printing house of the Uralskiy Rabochiy publishing house During the 1930s to 1950s there was a turn back to neoclassicism with much attention paid to public buildings and monuments Notable examples include the buildings of the Ural Industrial Institute on Lenin Avenue the City Party Committee and the City Council Executive Committee building now the City Administrative building the District Officers House and the House of Defense complex Cultural buildings are built in the squares in orderly composition In these years architects Golubev K T Babykin Valenkov worked fruitfully in Yekaterinburg with this style In the 1960s changes in the approach to construction led to widespread distribution of apartment blocks common in the Khrushchev era Buildings built by individuals were rare among them being KKT Kosmos the Palace of Youth and DK UZTM From the 1960s to the 1980s as industrial development grew in Yekaterinburg so did rationalism The situation changed in the 1990s when Russia transferred into a market economy At that time older buildings were restored giving the urban area a new environment such as the Cosmos Concert Hall the Puppet Theater the children s ballet theatre The Nutcracker the Palace of Justice the Cathedral of the Blood and the Church of the Transfiguration At the same time the construction of new buildings was accompanied by the demolition of historical buildings leading to the development of the facade phenomenon where the facades of historic buildings are preserved while adjacent modern buildings are built The centre of Yekaterinburg became the centre of new construction where banks business centres hotels luxury residential complexes and sports and shopping centres were built High tech architecture grew influential with buildings such as the Center for Railway Transportation Management the Summit business centre the Aquamarine residential complex and the retail strip at Vaynera Street being notable examples Along with this postmodernism revived interest in the older architectural styles of Yekaterinburg growing more emphasis on historicalism and contextualism In the late 1990s architects grew interested in regionalism At the beginning of the 21st century Yekaterinburg architects turned back to the Soviet based avant garde and influence future city buildings with the neoconstructivist style The practice of attracting large foreign investors to projects has become popular In 2007 the construction of the Central business district started being headed by the French architect Jean Pistre In 2010 Yekaterinburg became one of the largest centers for the construction of High rise buildings In the city 1 189 high rise buildings were built including 20 skyscrapers the tallest of which is the Iset Tower with a height of 209 meters Sports Yekaterinburg is also a leading sports centre in Russia A large number of well known athletes both world and Olympics champions are associated with the city Since 1952 Yekaterinburg athletes have won 137 medals at the Olympic Games 46 gold 60 silver and 31 bronze In the 2008 Summer Olympics 8 residents of Yekaterinburg returned with medals 1 gold 3 silver and 4 bronze Yekaterinburg Arena formerly Central Stadium Uralets Arena formerly Sports Palace Uralmash Stadium Palace of Sporting Games In 1965 Yekaterinburg as Sverdlovsk along with a number of Russian cities hosted the Bandy World Championship In 2018 Yekaterinburg was one of the 11 Russian cities that hosted the 2018 FIFA World Cup The matches were played on the upgraded Yekaterinburg Arena called Central Stadium before the World Cup Yekaterinburg has a total of 1728 sports facilities including 16 stadiums with stands 440 indoor gyms and 45 swimming pools There are 38 sports children s and youth schools for reserves for the Olympic Games in which more than 30 000 people are participating Sport clubs Yekaterinburg has many professional sports clubs in sports such as volleyball basketball futsal bandy and ice hockey for both women and men Bandy club SKA Sverdlovsk women s volleyball club VC Uralochka NTMK women s basketball club UMMC Yekaterinburg and futsal club MFK Sinara Yekaterinburg were among the best teams in Russia and Europe Club Sport Founded Current League League Tier StadiumUral Yekaterinburg Association football 1930 Russian Premier League 1st Central StadiumAvtomobilist Yekaterinburg Ice Hockey 2006 Kontinental Hockey League 1st KRK UraletsAvto Yekaterinburg Ice Hockey 2009 Minor Hockey League Jr 1st KRK UraletsSpartak Merkury Ice Hockey 1992 Women s Hockey Championship 1st Sports Palace SnezhinkaUralsky Trubnik Bandy 1937 Russian Bandy Super League 1st Uralsky Trubnik StadiumSKA Sverdlovsk Bandy 1935 Russian Bandy Supreme League 2nd Uralsky Trubnik StadiumUral Yekaterinburg Basketball 2006 Russian Basketball Super League 2nd Palace of Sporting GamesUGMK Yekaterinburg Basketball 1938 Women s Basketball Premier League 1st Palace of Sporting GamesLokomotiv Izumrud Yekaterinburg Volleyball 1945 Volleyball Supreme League A 2nd Palace of Sporting GamesUralochka Yekaterinburg Volleyball 1966 Women s Volleyball Superleague 1st Palace of Sporting Games Metallurg ForumSinara Yekaterinburg Futsal 1992 Futsal Super League 1st Palace of Sporting Games2018 FIFA World Cup Crowd of fans in Yekaterinburg during the 2018 World Cup Yekaterinburg hosted four matches of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Yekaterinburg is one of the 11 Russian cities that hosted the 2018 FIFA World Cup The matches were played on the upgraded Yekaterinburg Arena For the World Cup 2018 from 7 October 2015 to 29 December 2017 the Central Stadium was upgraded to bring it into compliance with FIFA requirements for the World Cup and was renamed Yekaterinburg Arena The architectural concept of the new stadium is built on a combination of historical walls and the built in core of the modern arena During the reconstruction of the sports facility which is a monument of history and culture the facades are carefully preserved and the arena itself is equipped with the latest technical achievements of the sports industry Temporary stands extending outside the stadium s original perimeter were erected to comply with the FIFA requirement of seating for 35 000 spectators They can hold a total of 12 000 spectators but the seating will be removed after the World Cup decreasing the seating capacity back to 23 000 The FIFA Fan Fest in Yekaterinburg is located in the Mayakovsky Central Park of Entertainment and Culture Located just outside the city centre in a popular and well known amusement park it will have a capacity to hold 17 000 people Koltsovo Airport was also reconstructed and had a second runway built In addition work was done to prepare another passenger terminal modernize the technical infrastructure and launch the business aviation hangar The airport s capacity in preparation for the World Cup has increased to two thousand people per hour The street and road network was also upgraded International relationsConsulates The United States United Kingdom Germany France China and several other countries have consulates in Yekaterinburg BRIC summit The BRIC countries met for their first official summit on 16 June 2009 in Yekaterinburg with Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Dmitry Medvedev Manmohan Singh and Hu Jintao the respective leaders of Brazil Russia India and China all attending The foreign ministers of the BRIC countries had also met in Yekaterinburg previously on 16 May 2008 citation needed World Expo In June 2013 at the 153rd General Assembly of the Bureau of International Expositions held in Paris representatives from Yekaterinburg presented the city s bid to host the Expo 2020 Russian President Vladimir Putin confirmed during a televised statement in English to earmark the required funds to build an exhibition complex large enough to receive the estimated 30 million visitors from more than 150 countries Ultimately Dubai was chosen to host the exhibition Yekaterinburg later bid for the Expo 2025 Yekaterinburg s concept for the bid exhibition relates to the technologies to make people happy by changing the world with innovation and quality of life The host was announced on 23 November 2018 and Yekaterinburg lost out to Osaka Japan Yekaterinburg hosted the Global Summit on Manufacturing and Industrialization GMIS 2019 under the auspices of the United Nations The annual INNOPROM exhibition is among the five largest industrial exhibitions in the world Twin towns sister cities Yekaterinburg is twinned with Annaba Annaba Province Algeria Ferentino Lazio Italy 1997 Guangzhou Guangdong China 2002 Incheon South Korea 2009 Managua Nicaragua 2013 Plovdiv Plovdiv Province Bulgaria San Jose California United States 1992 Notable peopleAnton Bakov Leader of the Monarchist Party Irina Antonenko Miss Russia 2010 Aleksei Balabanov film director screenwriter producer Vera Bazarova pairs figure skater Pavel Bazhov folklorist and children s author Old Man Bukashkin artist and poet Pavel Datsyuk ice hockey player Nikolay Durakov bandy legend Chiang Fang liang former first lady of Taiwan Aleksey Fedorchenko film director producer Denis Galimzyanov sprinter cyclist Anna Gavrilenko Group rhythmic gymnast Olympic Gold medalist Nikolay Karpol national women volleyball team coach Nikolai Khabibulin ice hockey player Alexei Yashin ice hockey player Alexei Khvostenko avant garde poet singer songwriter artist and sculptor Nikolay Kolyada actor director writer playwright and playwriting teacher Ilya Kormiltsev poet translator publisher Olga Kotlyarova Olympic runner Maxim Kovtun figure skater Vladislav Krapivin children s author Valeria Savinykh WTA Professional player Nikolay Krasovsky mathematician Yulia Lipnitskaya figure skater Iskander Makhmudov businessman Vladimir Malakhov ice hockey player Gennady Mesyats vice president of the Russian Academy of Sciences Maxim Miroshkin pairs figure skater Vladimir Mulyavin 1941 2003 Belarusian musician and the founder of the folk rock band Pesniary Alfia Nazmutdinova rhythmic gymnast Ernst Neizvestny sculptor Oleg Platonov writer historian and economist Daria Pridannikova rhythmic gymnast Eduard Rossel ex governor of Sverdlovsk Oblast Boris Ryzhy poet Mikhail Shchennikov race walker Vera Sessina rhythmic gymnast Georgy Shishkin painter Vassily Sigarev playwright screenwriter film director Anastasiia Tatareva Group rhythmic gymnast Olympic Gold medalist Sergei Tchepikov Olympic biathlon competitor Vladimir Tretyakov ex rector of the Ural State University Lev Vainshtein Olympic shooter Sergei Vonsovsky physicist Alexander Dudoladov writer Alexander Malinin singer Petr Yan Former UFC Bantamweight ChampionOthersA ballistic missile submarine of the Project 667BDRM Delfin class NATO reporting name Delta IV is named Ekaterinburg K 84 807 in honour of the city The asteroid 27736 Ekaterinburg was named in the city s honour on 1 June 2007 Notes j ɪ ˈ k ae t er ɪ n b ɜːr ɡ yih KAT er in burg Russian Ekaterinburg IPA jɪketʲɪrʲɪnˈburk alternatively romanized as Ekaterinburg and formerly known as Sverdlovsk Russian Sverdlovsk IPA svʲɪrˈdlofsk 1924 1991ReferencesNotes Law 30 OZ Haywood A J 2010 Siberia A Cultural History Oxford University Press p 32 Zhurnal Rodina OKNO V AZIYu archive is 26 January 2013 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 15 May 2018 Charter of Yekaterinburg Article 24 1 Official website of Yekaterinburg Alexander Edmundovich Yakob Head of Administration of the City of Yekaterinburg Archived 12 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Proekt o vnesenii izmenenij v Generalnyj plan razvitiya gorodskogo okruga municipalnogo obrazovaniya gorod Ekaterinburg na period do 2025 goda in Russian p 168 permanent dead link Federal State Statistics Service 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