Panorama of Beketovo (Crimea). Virtual tour of Beketovo (Crimea)

Park  (Ukrainian Parkove, Crimean. Yañi Küçükköy, Yany Kuchyukkoy) - urban-type settlement of the urban district of Yalta of the Republic of Crimea on the southern coast of Crimea (Big Yalta). It was founded in 1971 by the union of three villages - Beketovo (until 1948 Kuchuk-Koy), Zhukovka and Karpovka (until 1948 New Kuchuk-Koy).

Park is located at 8.5 km  west of the village of Simeiz and is divided into two parts by the South Coast Highway (Sevastopol - Yalta). In the northern part there is an old settlement, and in the lower - a seaside resort area. Area of \u200b\u200bthe village - 144.29 ha. Population 495 (2011). West of the landslide from the old Sevastopol highway goes to the sea along a rather steep slope, a winding road that leads to the northern part of the village of Parkovoe.

Parkovoy has a beautiful landscape park, which has remained here since the pre-revolutionary period. It is a real sculptural and decorative monument belonging to the Russian landscape gardening art, and related to the beginning of the twentieth century. The park is decorated with dynamic sculptures of boys, youths and young bathers. All this original atmosphere was created by the project of the sculptor A.T. Matveev.

In Parkovy there is a relay tower, automatic telephone exchange. There is a store here, for recreation - a boarding house "Tavrida Plaza". Of the modern innovations - the console construction of luxury apartments "Parkovoe" - having a negative impact on the environment.

History

The village of Kuchuk-Koy (in Crimean Tatar - “small village”, küçük - small, köy - village) - the northern part of the village, exists for a long time. It is found in the cameral description of the Crimea in 1784, compiled immediately after the annexation of Crimea to Russia.

In the northern part of the village on a slope, above the South-coastal highway, the houses of the former village of Kuchuk-Koy, which became famous due to the disastrous landslide of 1786, were sheltered. Academician P.S. Pallas, traveler and writer P.I. Sumarokov wrote about it. The famous Russian poet A. A. Fet, who was here in 1883, was so struck by the cyclopean collapse that he wrote the poem Crimean Collapse.

Large landslides are tenacious enough. In the pre-war period, a special Crimean (Kuchuk-Koyskaya) landslide station was organized here, where the outstanding scientist, patriarch of Russian and Soviet hydrography N.F. Pogrebov, professors V.F. Pchelintsev, I.E. Khudyaev and others studied Kuchuk-Koysky landslide, landslide phenomena in other places of Crimea.

The Crimean pages of A.P. Chekhov's life are connected with Kuchuk-Koy. Here in 1898 he acquired an estate (the estate was not preserved), which was located on that very steep slope, on which the descent from the upper Sevastopol road to South Coast highway now winds. Anton Pavlovich was pleased with his purchase: “How scary it is to go down, it’s so nice, peaceful and calm below ...” he wrote to Maria Pavlovna Chekhova’s sister. Everything is touching, cozy, original, artistic; wonderful, thick smell of cypresses ... The air is clean, as in heaven. " It is noteworthy that at the cottage of A.P. Chekhov in Kuchuk-Koy, he met with A.M. Gorky in 1899.

At the end of the 19th century, a new holiday village was built near Kuchuk-Koy called New Kuchuk-Koy.

After the deportation of the Crimean Tatars, the villages Kuchuk-Koy and Novy Kuchuk-Koy were renamed respectively Beketovo and Karpovka (named after the doctor P. Karpov).

In 1971, the villages of Beketovo, Zhukovka and Karpovka were united under the new name Parkovoe - in honor of the park ensemble located in the former estate of the patron and collector Y. Zhukovsky.

Park – resort town type is located 30 km from Yalta. In the northern part there is an old settlement, and in the lower - a seaside resort area.

The village was formed in 1971 by the union of three villages - Beketovo (until 1948 Kuchuk-Koy), Zhukovka and Karpovka (until 1948 New Kuchuk-Koy).

The village received its name in honor of the park ensemble located in the former estate of Jacob Zhukovsky.

In the northern part of the village on a slope, above the South-coastal highway, the houses of the former village of Kuchuk-Koy, which became famous due to the disastrous landslide of 1786, were sheltered. Academician P.S. Pallas, traveler and writer P.I. Sumarokov wrote about it. The famous Russian poet A. A. Fet, who was here in 1883, was so struck by the cyclopean collapse that he wrote the poem Crimean Collapse.

Large landslides are tenacious enough. In the pre-war period, a special Crimean (Kuchuk-Koyskaya) landslide station was organized here, where the outstanding scientist, patriarch of Russian and Soviet hydrography N.F. Pogrebov, professors V.F. Pchelintsev, I.E. Khudyaev and others studied Kuchuk-Koysky landslide, landslide phenomena in other places of Crimea.

The Crimean pages of A.P. Chekhov's life are connected with Kuchuk-Koy.

Here in 1898 he acquired an estate (the estate was not preserved), which was located on that very steep slope, on which the descent from the upper Sevastopol road to South Coast highway now winds. Anton Pavlovich was pleased with his purchase. Not a single purchase by Chekhov in his entire life has brought him so much joy as the acquisition of Kuchuk-Koy.

"Everything is touching, cozy, original, artistic; but ... the terrible road !! How terrible it is to go down, it’s so nice, peaceful and calm below ... The descent is very cool, I was so scared to go that then I saw a twist all night," he wrote to his sister Maria Pavlovna Chekhova.

Kuchuk-Koy aroused the imagination of A.P. Chekhov.

In October 1898, he described these places to Vladimir Ivanovich Nemirovich-Danchenko: "... poetically, comfortably, but wildly; this is not Crimea, but Syria. This is an amazing place in beauty, something unprecedented ...".

In early April 1899, Chekhov visited Kuchuk-Koy along with Maxim Gorky. Showing his estate, he said that he would like to arrange a sanatorium for sick rural teachers here - to build a new bright building, with large windows and high ceilings, with an excellent library and various musical instruments. But Chekhov's dreams did not materialize.

Having engaged in the construction of a villa in Outka, he could not do anything for Kuchuk-Koy. Then marriage ... Art Theater ... trips to Moscow ... The further, the clearer the writer realized: Kuchuk-Koy is charming, but almost inaccessible. The wonderful sea was seductively close, there were a sandy shore and comfortable stones from which large fish were caught, but when Chekhov went down to the sea on one of his visits, he was unable to ascend on the way back.

Either in jest, or seriously after that, he said that “for bathing and fishing you will have to resort to the services of a horse or donkeys.”

Already on November 1, Anton Pavlovich wrote to his sister from Yalta: “I think I’ll sell it with Kuchuka and buy somewhere closer, with a piece of the coast, to have my bath. Such a small thing is for sale near Gurzuf ...” In less than three months, Chekhov will really buy a plot in Gurzuf, and the family will receive another cottage on the seashore.The last visitor to the picturesque Chekhov estate was I.A. Bunin.

During the life of A.P. Chekhov, the Kuchuk-Koy estate was never sold.

After the death of the writer at the family council, Kuchuk-Koy, it was decided to transfer for use to Ivan Pavlovich Chekhov. But he did not live there either, and in August 1905 he leased the land to Tatar Aji Osman-oglu under a tobacco shed.

The Chekhovs retained the right to use the residential building, but none of them was already interested in this estate. According to family stories, I.P. Chekhov sold it in 1910, after which he bought a small Grishino estate near Moscow.

At the end of the 19th century, a new holiday village was built near Kuchuk-Koy called New Kuchuk-Koy. Landmark Park is a landscape park, which is a sculptural and decorative monument of landscape art at the beginning of the twentieth century.

The park occupies 6 hectares. The park owes its originality, first of all, to the sculptor A.T. Matveev, who in 1905-1912. The park was decorated with dynamic sculptures of young men and young bathers: Awakening (1907), The Sleeping Boy (1908), The Bather (1910-1911), The Thought (1906), The Dressing Stocking (1911), The Thoughtful boy ”,“ Sleeping Boys ”(1907),“ Sitting Boy ”(1909). A copy of the last sculpture is installed on the grave of A. Matveev in the Novodevichy cemetery. In plastic, composition and spatial arrangement of the works of A.T. Matveeva the problem of synthesis of sculpture and its natural environment was solved. Until now, this manor complex of the 1900-1910s is little known.

During the Great Patriotic War, almost all the sculptures died. Only some fragments of the originals are preserved in the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg. According to them, as well as copies, in the 1960s. the sculptor’s students restored the work of their teacher.

Wisteria, yucca, palm trees, a bamboo grove, cedars, roses and many rare species of plants grow in the park outdoors, which gives a rare charm to this park.

On the site of the estates of Zhukovsky and Karpov in Soviet times, the resort complex of the Krivoy Rog Miner boarding house was built. The village also has a boarding house “Slavutich” and a boarding house “Tavrida Plaza”. The successful location of the resort between the rocky slopes of the Main Ridge and the Black Sea creates a wonderful soft marine local microclimate. Mountains delay the cold air masses coming from the north, which extends the holiday season from almost April to November.

The space between the sea and the mountains is saturated with healing air, formed from the mixing of mountain and sea streams with useful volatile products of forests, gardens and parks. Holidays in the Park will please lovers of measured relaxation away from the noise of large resorts.

Surrounded by greenery, the Mediterranean-style villa is located on the southern coast of Crimea with beautiful views of the sea and the majestic rocky mountains located between Yalta and Sevastopol, in the village of Beketovo. The distance to Yalta is 30 km, to Sevastopol 56 km.

ACCOMMODATION:

In the closed house adjoining territory of the villa, landscape design was performed with a large number of green spaces from exotic southern varieties of fruit and ornamental trees and shrubs, garden paths, a pond and a waterfall. Small buildings for various purposes for a comfortable stay. In the main building are located:

On the 1st floor  - children's bedroom, bedroom for staff, a bathroom, laundry room and technical rooms.

On the 2nd floor  - a kitchen-dining room, a bathroom, a spacious living room with access to the courtyard to a shady gazebo, (a summer dining room with a large bed for an afternoon bliss).

On the 3rd floor  - an office, one bedroom with access to a view balcony towards the sea, and two bedrooms with balconies overlooking the mountains, a bathroom with shower.

ON VILLA:

  • parking place for cars
  • orchard
  • open pool
  • jacuzzi
  • gym
  • finnish bath
  • billiard room
  • barbecue gazebo
  • internet Wi-Fi
  • satellite TV

NUTRITION:

The villa is equipped with winter and summer kitchens, equipped with all necessary equipment, for self-cooking. For an additional fee, it is possible to organize the services of a professional chef and a waiter. Other dining options in cafes and restaurants of resort villages and recreation complexes within a radius of 3 - 5 km, the closest of which (800 m), the pearl of the Crimean coast VIP hotel "Crimean Breeze". The villa provides the opportunity to deliver guests to the restaurant and back with their own transport for an additional fee.

BEACH:

The nearest equipped beach of the VIP hotel "Crimean Breeze", other small-pebble beaches of the coast within a radius of 1 to 5 km. The villa provides the opportunity to deliver guests to the beach and back with their own transport for an additional fee.

The distance from the object to the coastline of the sea is measured on the Google map in the shortest straight line.

RENT PRICE PER DAY, IN RUBLES OF THE RF:

from 25,000 to 35,000

The rental price is determined for each specific request and depends on: season, length of stay, number of guests, availability of “windows”.

RENTAL COST INCLUDES:

  • Use of inventory infrastructure of the estate.
  • Car parking.
  • Utilities.
  • Change of bed linen and towels (as agreed).
  • Wet cleaning of premises (as agreed).

TO GUEST SERVICES FOR ADDITIONAL FEE:

  • Services of a professional cook and waiters
  • Yacht Charter
  • Car rent
  • Reservation of SPA services, restaurants, clubs
  • Organization of VIP events, excursions
  • Concierge service 24h

08/12/2019, ALBERT

I liked everything, in line with expectations.
Thanks.

From 2018-08-06 to 2018-08-20, VLADISLAV

All as always at the highest level!

08/14/2017, VLAD

Thanks for a nice stay, wonderful place. We will recommend to friends.

04/08/2017, Dmitry

Thank you, I liked everything, the disadvantages that were first eliminated the next day.

09/19/2016, KRISTINA

Loved it!

Great house with fireplace, upper terrace, panoramic views of the mountains and the sea! Good repair, plumbing, washing machine ... There are almost no neighbors! Aliens do not go! Quiet! To the sea a couple of minutes. The sea is good! Plot with pool, gym, fitness equipment, bathhouse, jacuzzi, billiard room, summer kitchen! Beautiful shady garden! High fence! (Located on the site is visible only from the air)

It's nice to talk with the owners: Intelligent, decent people! During our vacation, they were constantly interested in how we are doing, is there enough for us? They never came in without a call. They also took a car, Pajero, in good condition, inexpensive!

Near the house there is a local guard, the house and the plot are cleaned. They also always tell you where to swim, where to go, where and what you can buy, and where not. Three minutes from the house restaurant. You can relax both together and a large family. House, furnishings, plot built very well! All liked it! Recommended!

Beketovo (until 1948, Kuchuk-Koy; Ukr. Beketov, Crimean-Tat. Küçükköy, Kuchyukkoy) - a disbanded village in the urban district of Yalta, Republic of Crimea (according to the administrative-territorial division of Ukraine - in the Simeiz council of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea), included in Park. Now part of the village, north of the highway N-19 Sevastopol - Yalta.

The first documented mention of the village is found in the Cameral Description of the Crimea ... 1784, judging by which, in the last period of the Crimean Khanate, Kuchuk-koi entered the Mangup Kadylyk Bakchi-Sarai Kaymakanism. After the annexation of Crimea to Russia on February 8, 1784, the village was assigned to the Simferopol district of the Tauride region. After the Pavlovsk reforms, from 1796 to 1802, it was part of the Akmechet district of Novorossiysk province. According to the new administrative division, after the creation of the Tauride province on October 8 (20), 1802, Kuchuk-Koy was included in the Mahuldur volost of Simferopol district. According to Vedomosti, about all the villages in Simferopol Uyezd consisting of an indication in which the volost is the number of yards and souls ... dated October 9, 1805, in the village of Kuchuk-koy there were 9 yards and 64 residents, exclusively Crimean Tatars. On the military topographic map of Major General Mukhin in 1817, the village of Kuchuk-koy is indicated with 11 courtyards. After the reform of the volost division of 1829, Kuchuk-Koy, according to the “Vedomosti on state volosts of the Tauride province of 1829”, was assigned to the Baidar volost. By a personal decree of Nicholas I of March 23 (old style), 1838, on April 15, a new Yalta district was formed and the village was transferred to the Baidar volost of the Yalta district. On the map of 1842, Kuchuk-koy is marked with 22 yards. Following the results of the Zemstvo reform of Alexander II of the 1860s, the village was assigned to the Derekoy volost. According to the “List of Populated Places of the Tauride Province according to the Information of 1864” compiled according to the results of the VIII revision of 1864, Kuchuk-Koy is a state-owned Tatar village and 3 possessive Russian economies with 9 yards, 22 inhabitants, a mosque and barracks of a military-working company at the wells. On a three-verst map of 1865-1876, 48 yards are indicated in the village. For 1886, in the village near the Biyuk-Uzeni river, according to the directory “Volosts and important villages of European Russia”, 20 people lived in 3 households, a mosque operated. According to the "Memorial Book of the Tauride Province of 1889", according to the results of the X revision of 1887, in the village of Kuchuk-Koy there were 18 yards and 115 inhabitants. On the milestone map of 1890 in the village 19 courtyards with the Tatar population are indicated. After the Zemstvo reform of the 1890s, which took place in Yalta County after 1892, the village remained part of the transformed Derekoy volost. According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1892" in the village of Kuchuk-Koy, which was part of the Kekeneizsky rural society, there were 45 inhabitants in 10 households. According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1902" in the villages of Kekeneiz, Kuchuk-Koy and Limena, which constituted the Kekeneiz rural ...

  His cottage in Alushta turned into a museum, and the metro station in Kharkov bears his name. The buildings created by his project are located in many cities of Russia and Ukraine, and the most famous in Simferopol is the building of the Crimean Academic Russian Drama Theater. These days marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of academician of architecture Alexei Beketov.


He was born in Kharkov on March 3 (according to a new style) in 1862 in the family of the famous physicist-chemist Nikolai Nikolaevich and Elena Karlovna Beketovs. Since childhood, he drew well, therefore, in parallel with studying at a real school, he also attended a private art school. But painting still remained a hobby, albeit for a lifetime: being in the Crimea, Alexei Nikolaevich rested with a sketchbook in his hands, imprinting oil and watercolors on the peninsula's beauty canvases. Architecture was chosen as a profession - a line from Victor Hugo’s book “Notre Dame de Paris” read in his youth: “Architecture is an immortal stone book by which one can read the history of the people”.

Six years of study at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg and return to his native Kharkov. The first building constructed according to his project was the Alexander Commercial School, followed by the buildings of the Land and Trade Banks, the administration of the Ekaterinoslav Railway, a shelter for noble orphans, etc. Many mansions were erected by the project of Alexey Beketov, especially for the Alchevsky family. By the way, in honor of the philanthropist and industrialist Alexei Alchevsky, the city of Alchevsk was named, where at the end of the 19th century a metallurgical plant appeared on his initiative. The wife of Alexei Kirillovich Khristina Dmitrievna was an enlightener, she kept a Sunday school. Aleksey Beketov also became related with them, marrying the daughter of the patron and enlightener Anna, a talented artist. Buildings created according to Beketov’s designs are different from one another. “I forced customers to build mansions in a wide variety of styles,” he wrote. “However, when designing public buildings, I adhered to the fact that the appearance always corresponded to the purpose of the structure.”

Academician of the Imperial St. Petersburg Academy of Arts Alexei Beketov did not reject the Great October Socialist Revolution, and the new government calmly reacted to his activities. Soon Aleksey Nikolaevich already worked at Archistroy and designed houses for workers, clubs, buildings of factories and institutes.

In 1939, he confirmed his academic title in the new conditions - he became a full member of the Academy of Architecture of the USSR. He was out of politics, devoting all his strength and knowledge to creativity. He even brought out three incentives for himself: love for the Motherland, youth (he lectured at universities) and nature.

Crimean fell in love with nature. Our peninsula has become for Alexei Beketov a place of rest and work. He first visited here for ten years: his father bought a plot at the foot of Mount Kastel, in the tract "Baar-Dere" ("Spring Gorge"), in the Professor’s Corner, and built a summer house. In 1895, Nikolay Beketov will present a piece of land next to his dacha to his son, and a new Crimean stone house with carved wooden details will appear. Now there is a museum of academician of architecture. Having learned about the neighbor, the locals were in a hurry not to miss a happy opportunity - several private mansions on the South Bank were designed by Alexei Beketov. After the Civil War, Beketov took up the design of sanatoriums and rest houses, trying to harmoniously fit the buildings into the nature of the “wonderful corner”.

The last time Alexei Beketov visited the Crimea before the war. He was not destined to return to his beloved land anymore: Alexei Nikolaevich died on November 23, 1941. In Kharkov, occupied by the Nazis, the architect was buried in the first city cemetery. In the late 70s, in connection with the liquidation of the cemetery, the remains were transferred to the 13th city.

And in the Crimean capital, Alexei Beketov left a memory of himself with the building of the Tauride Nobility Theater (now the Crimean Academic Russian Drama Theater). The competition for the best architectural project of the theater was announced in 1909, but not one project found support. We decided to turn to Beketov. And now for 101 years, Simferopol residents and guests of the city can admire the work of the writer of the "stone book".

By the way

The architect Aleksey Beketov was the nephew of the famous botanist Andrei Beketov, the author of a brief botanical and geographical sketch of the Crimean South Coast; cousin of the poet Alexander Blok and son-in-law of the composer Grigory Alchevsky, who created “Tables of breathing for singers and their application to the development of voice qualities”, which are used now.

Natalia Pupkova, "