city of regional subordination with administrative territory[1] / urban district[2] | |
city of Stupino urban district Stupino | |
Flag | Coat of arms |
- (1,57 %)
Stupinsky district
- an administrative-territorial unit (district) and a municipal entity of the same name (municipal district), which existed until June-July 2021 in the Moscow region of Russia.
On June 6, 2021, by law No. 82/2017-OZ, the municipal formation of the Stupinsky municipal district was transformed into the municipal formation of Stupino urban district
with the abolition of all previously included settlements.[6]
On July 8, 2021, the administrative-territorial unit Stupinsky district was transformed into the city of regional subordination of Stupino
with administrative territory
.[7][8]
The administrative center is the city of Stupino.
Physiographic characteristics
Geographical position
The territory of the Stupino urban district of the Moscow region is located in the west of Russia, in the European part of the country. Within Eurasia, the urban district is located in the west of the large physical-geographical country of the East European Plain; in the central part of the zone of mixed and broad-leaved forests, the area is also characterized by pine forests. Within the described territory, the PTC of a smaller rank is the province - the Moskvoretsko-Oka moraine-erosive plain, in the southeast of which the urban district of Stupino is located.
The area of the urban district is about 1.7 thousand km2, the length from north to south is about 53 km (from 55° 16′ 49″ to 54° 50′ 30″ N), from west to east – 54.4 km (from 37° 41′ 49″ to 38° 27′ 46″ E). Regarding the territory of the Moscow region, the urban district is located in its southern part. In the south-west it borders with the Serpukhov municipal district, in the west - with the Chekhov urban district, in the north-west - with the Domodedovo urban district, in the north - with the Ramensky municipal district, in the north-east - with the Voskresensky municipal district, in the east - with Kolomna urban district, in the southeast - with the Ozyory urban district, in the south - with the Kashira urban district of the Moscow region. Also in the south, for a short distance (about 4 km), the urban district of Stupino borders on the Yasnogorsk municipal district of the Tula region.
The Stupino urban district, along with the Serpukhov municipal district and the Ozyory urban district of the Moscow region, occupies the southernmost position within the Moskvoretsko-Oka moraine-erosive plain.
The main rivers are Oka, Kashirka, Lopasnya, Gorodenka, Severka.
Story
The Stupino district was formed on June 3, 1959 from the territory subordinate to the city of Stupino and part of the abolished Mikhnevsky district. The district initially included the working villages of Mikhnevo and Zhilevo, as well as the village councils of Bolshe-Alekseevsky, Gorodishchinsky, Dubnevsky, Ivanovsky, Koledinsky, Krutyshkinsky, Kuzminsky, Lapinsky, Leontievsky, Luzhnikovsky, Malinsky, Meshcherinsky, Novoselkovsky, Safronovsky, Semenovsky, Sitne-Shchelkanovsky, Starositnensky and Starinsky.
On July 2, 1959, Tatarinovsky s/s was transferred from Podolsky district to Stupinsky. On July 31, the Krutyshkinsky s/s was abolished. On December 26, Lapinsky s/s was renamed Khatunsky.
On August 20, 1960, Koledinsky and Semenovsky s/s were abolished. Leontyevsky s/s was renamed Alfimovsky.
On July 31, 1962, the Safronovsky s/s was abolished.
On February 1, 1963, the Stupino district was abolished, and its territory was transferred to the Stupino enlarged rural district.
On January 13, 1965, the Stupinsky rural district was transformed into the Stupinsky district (Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR) (Gazette of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. - 1965. - No. 3 (329) of January 18. - P. 68-71).
On April 1, 1966, Starinsky s/s was renamed Aksininsky.
On April 5, 1967, Leontievsky s/s was formed.
On April 4, 1973, Semenovsky s/s was formed.
On February 12, 1987, the r.p. was formed. Malino, the Malinsky s/s was abolished and the Bereznetsovsky s/s was formed.
On February 3, 1994, village councils were transformed into rural districts.
On February 1, 2001, the city of Stupino lost its status as a city of regional subordination (Law of the Moscow Region of January 17, 2001 No. 12/2001-OZ, Podmoskovnye Izvestia, No. 20, 02/01/2001).
On March 15, 2004, the working village of Prioksk, Moscow Region, was merged with the city of Stupino (Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated March 15, 2004 No. 33-PG, “Information Bulletin of the Government of the Moscow Region”, No. 4, 04/26/2004).
By 2005, the Stupinsky district included the following rural districts: Aksininsky rural district, Alfimovsky rural district, Bereznetsovsky rural district, Bolshealekseevsky rural district, Gorodishchensky rural district, Dubnevsky rural district, Ivanovo rural district, Kuzminsky rural district, Leontyevsky rural district, Luzhnikovsky rural district, Meshcherinsky rural district, Novosyolkovsky rural district, Semenovsky rural district, Sitne-Shchelkanovsky rural district, Starositnensky rural district, Tatarinovsky rural district and Khatunsky rural district[9].
In the Stupino municipal district until June 9, 2021 there were 4 urban and 3 rural settlements:
№ | Urban and rural settlements | Administrative center | Number of settlements | Population | Area, km2 |
1 | Urban settlement Zhilevo | working village of Zhilevo | 24 | ↗7983[5] | 156,08[10] |
2 | Urban settlement Malino | working village of Malino | 29 | ↘7396[5] | 250,75[10] |
3 | Urban settlement Mikhnevo | working village of Mikhnevo | 21 | ↘15 539[5] | 110,28[10] |
4 | Urban settlement Stupino | city of Stupino | 45 | ↘75 476[5] | 457,83[10] |
5 | Rural settlement Aksininskoye | Aksinino village | 41 | ↘6836[5] | 282,17[10] |
6 | Rural settlement Leontyevskoye | Leontyevo village | 37 | ↘2863[5] | 174,32[10] |
7 | Rural settlement Semyonovskoye | Semenovskoe village | 41 | ↗5239[5] | 276,30[10] |
June 6, 2021 within the boundaries of the abolished municipal formation Stupinsky municipal district
the urban district of Stupino,
was formed [6] All rural and urban settlements previously included in the municipal district were abolished.
On June 14, 2021, the working villages of Zhilevo, Malino and Mikhnevo were placed under the administrative jurisdiction of the city of Stupino (Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated June 14, 2021 No. 276-PG, Official Internet portal of the Government of the Moscow Region https://www.mosreg.ru, 14.06 .2017).
On June 23, 2021, the rural settlements of Aksininskoye, Leontyevskoye and Semenovskoye were abolished (Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated June 23, 2021 No. 296-PG, Official Internet portal of the Moscow Region Government https://www.mosreg.ru, 06/23/2017).
On July 8, 2021, the administrative-territorial unit Stupinsky district was transformed into the city of regional subordination of Stupino
with administrative territory
.[7].[8]
National composition
By nationality, the majority of the population (92.92%) is Russian; The second largest population is Ukrainians, in third place are Tatars. Compared to 2002, in 2010 the largest increase (one and a half times or more) was among Uzbeks (more than six times), Tajiks (five times), as well as Moldovans, Armenians and Azerbaijanis. The number of Ukrainians, Belarusians and Jews has decreased compared to the data of the last All-Russian census. 419 thousand people did not indicate their nationality - this is almost 2.5 times more than in 2002 (172 thousand people). The Moscow region is also home to a large number of illegal labor migrants, mainly from neighboring countries; In some cities, places of their compact residence are being formed, which contributes to increased interethnic tension.
Population
Population | |||||
1959[11] | 1970[12] | 1979[13] | 1989[14] | 2002[15] | 2006[16] |
57 098 | ↗57 814 | ↘52 169 | ↘49 439 | ↗116 007 | ↗121 836 |
2009[17] | 2010[18] | 2011[19] | 2012[20] | 2013[21] | 2014[22] |
↘117 504 | ↗119 282 | ↗119 499 | →119 499 | ↘119 028 | ↗119 190 |
2015[23] | 2016[24] | 2017[5] | |||
↗120 121 | ↗121 070 | ↗121 332 |
The population of the district is 121.3 thousand people, including 84.2 thousand people living in urban areas[25]. On the territory of the Stupino municipal district there is one city (Stupino), 3 urban-type settlements (Zhilevo, Malino, Mikhnevo), 250 rural settlements[26].
Vacancies at the employment center of the city of Stupino
Proximity to the Russian capital and a large number of operating enterprises could not but have a positive impact on the employment situation in the city of Stupino. However, what immediately attracts attention is that the city needs people with engineering specialties. Here every engineer and technician will find a job to his liking. Moreover, salaries by Russian standards are quite decent. Not every Russian city can boast of such prices.
The minimum is not lower than 14,200 rubles, the most common is around 20-25 thousand rubles, and the maximum is 50-80 thousand rubles. That is, of course, you won’t become millionaires there, but it’s not bad for ordinary life. But those who have a work orientation other than engineering may have problems finding work. Firstly, other vacancies have significantly lower salaries, and secondly, they are much less common, which means there may be competition for a position.
Settlements
Main article: List of settlements in the Stupino urban district
List of settlements in the region
№ | Locality | Type | Population | former municipality |
1 | 2nd Five Year Plan | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
2 | Avdotino | village | ↘75[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
3 | Avdotino | village | ↘7[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
4 | Avdulovo-1 | village | ↗11[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
5 | Avdulovo-2 | village | ↗5[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
6 | Agarino | village | ↗18[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
7 | Akatovo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
8 | Aksinino | village | ↗638[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
9 | Aksinkino | village | ↗16[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
10 | Aleevo | village | ↗54[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
11 | Aleevo-2 | village | ↗5[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
12 | Aleshkovo | village | ↗12[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
13 | Alfimovo [comm. 1] | village | ↘1381[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
14 | Ananino | village | ↗19[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
15 | Antipino | village | ↗18[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
16 | Babeevo | village | ↗12[27] | urban settlement Malino |
17 | Baidikovo | village | ↗22[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
18 | Batayki | village | ↗23[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
19 | Beketovo | village | ↗16[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
20 | Belykhino | village | ↘2[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
21 | Bereznetsovo | village | ↘1209[27] | urban settlement Malino |
22 | Bereznya | village | ↗16[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
23 | Bespyatovo | village | ↘288[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
24 | Bessonovo | village | ↘4[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
25 | Blagovskoe | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
26 | Bobrovo | village | ↘53[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
27 | Bolshoye Alekseevskoye | village | ↗1449[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
28 | Bolshoye Lupakovo | village | ↘4[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
29 | Bolshoye Scryabino | village | ↘4[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
30 | Bortnikovo | village | ↘34[27] | urban settlement Malino |
31 | Bunkovo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
32 | Burtsevo | village | ↗16[27] | urban settlement Malino |
33 | Valtsovo | village | ↗35[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
34 | Vasilevo | village | ↘2[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
35 | Vasilyevskoe | village | ↘37[27] | urban settlement Malino |
36 | Vaskovo | village | ↘17[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
37 | Velyaminovo | village | ↗237[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
38 | Verzilovo | village | ↗43[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
39 | Verkhovlyan | village | ↘3[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
40 | Wihorna | village | ↘6[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
41 | Vladimirovo | village | ↘9[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
42 | Renaissance | village | ↗17[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
43 | Teamsters | village | →0[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
44 | Volkovo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
45 | Voskresenki | village | ↗97[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
46 | Gladkovo | village | ↘3[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
47 | Glebovo | village | ↗1[27] | urban settlement Malino |
48 | Golovlino | village | ↘5[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
49 | Golochelovo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
50 | Gorki | village | ↘13[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
51 | Gornostaevo | village | ↗1[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
52 | Settlement | village | ↗1256[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
53 | Gorodnya | village | ↘29[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
54 | State stable | village | ↗65[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
55 | Gridkovo | village | ↘4[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
56 | Gridyukino | village | ↗23[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
57 | Gryzlovo | village | ↗34[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
58 | Dvoryaninovo | village | ↗12[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
59 | Devyatkino | village | ↘141[27] | urban settlement Malino |
60 | Dorky | village | ↗22[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
61 | Road workers | village | ↘24[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
62 | Dubechino | village | ↘22[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
63 | Dubnevo | village | ↘1394[27] | urban settlement Malino |
64 | Yeganovo | village | →6[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
65 | Zhilevo | town | ↗2342[28] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
66 | Zhilevo | village | →0[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
67 | Zabelino | village | ↗12[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
68 | Zavorykino | village | ↗13[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
69 | Zalugi | village | ↗6[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
70 | Zankino | village | ↘13[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
71 | Zakharovo | village | ↘6[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
72 | Zevalovo | village | ↘41[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
73 | Zybino | village | ↘2[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
74 | Ivanovskoe | village | ↗24[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
75 | Ivanovskoe | village | ↗1455[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
76 | Ivanteevo | village | ↘5[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
77 | Ivan-Teremets | village | ↗115[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
78 | Ignatyevo | village | ↗20[27] | urban settlement Malino |
79 | Kabuzhskoe | village | ↗12[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
80 | Kaverino | village | ↘13[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
81 | Kalyanino | village | ↘6[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
82 | Kamenishchi | village | ↗19[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
83 | Kamenka | village | ↗16[27] | urban settlement Malino |
84 | Kamenka | village | →4[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
85 | Kamenka | village | ↘4[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
86 | Kanishchevo | village | ↗14[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
87 | Kanunovo | village | ↗23[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
88 | Karpovo | village | ↗352[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
89 | Kishkino | village | →1[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
90 | Kiyasovo | village | ↗243[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
91 | Koldino | village | ↗17[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
92 | Koledino | village | ↗19[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
93 | Kolychevo | village | ↗191[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
94 | Kolychevo | village | →5[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
95 | Kolyupanovo | village | ↗17[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
96 | Condrevo | village | ↗3[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
97 | Konstantinovskoe | village | ↘194[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
98 | Koroskovo | village | ↗13[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
99 | Kostomarovo | village | ↘14[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
100 | Kochkorevo | village | ↘9[27] | urban settlement Malino |
101 | Koshelevka | village | ↘56[27] | urban settlement Malino |
102 | Koshelevka | village | ↗6[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
103 | Kravtsovo | village | ↗23[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
104 | Nettle | village | ↘12[27] | urban settlement Malino |
105 | Red Boilermaker | village | →47[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
106 | Flint | village | →19[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
107 | Kubasovo | village | ↗34[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
108 | Kuzmino | village | ↗26[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
109 | Kunavino | village | ↘0[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
110 | Curtino | village | ↘39[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
111 | Lavrentyevo | village | ↘0[27] | urban settlement Malino |
112 | Lamonovo | village | ↘1[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
113 | Lapino | village | ↗64[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
114 | Laptevo | village | ↗3[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
115 | Laptevo | village | ↗47[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
116 | Lenkovo | village | ↘9[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
117 | Leontyevo | village | ↗1091[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
118 | Lipitino | village | ↗134[27] | urban settlement Malino |
119 | Lobynino | village | ↗16[27] | urban settlement Malino |
120 | Lovtsovo | village | ↘0[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
121 | Luzhniki | village | ↗1841[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
122 | Lyubanovka | village | ↗7[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
123 | Lyakhovo | village | ↗1[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
124 | Makeevo | village | ↘4[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
125 | Malino [comm. 2] | town | ↘3712[28] | urban settlement Malino |
126 | Maloe Alekseevskoe | village | ↗8[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
127 | Maloe Ivanovskoe | village | →7[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
128 | Maloe Lupakovo | village | ↘0[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
129 | Malyushina Dacha | village | ↗20[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
130 | Martynovskoe | village | ↘28[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
131 | Marinka | village | ↘9[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
132 | Marinka | village | ↘2[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
133 | Maryinskoye | village | ↗26[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
134 | Matveykovo | village | ↗65[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
135 | Matyukovo | village | ↗20[27] | urban settlement Malino |
136 | Medvedevo | village | ↘0[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
137 | Meshcherino | village | ↘3923[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
138 | Milino | village | ↗12[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
139 | Minyaevo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
140 | Mikhnevo[comm. 3] | town | ↘11 118[28] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
141 | Murzino | village | ↗6[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
142 | Myshenskoe [comm. 4] | village | ↘20[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
143 | Myakinino | village | ↘39[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
144 | Myasishchevo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
145 | Meat | village | ↗53[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
146 | Nazarovo | village | ↘3[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
147 | Nefedyevo | village | ↘6[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
148 | Nivki | village | ↗12[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
149 | Nikolo-Titeli | village | ↘4[27] | urban settlement Malino |
150 | Nikolskaya Dacha | village | ↘8[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
151 | Novoeganovo [comm. 5] | village | ↘96[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
152 | Novoselki | village | ↗56[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
153 | Novoselki | village | ↘6[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
154 | Novoselki | village | ↗13[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
155 | Ogloblino | village | ↘0[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
156 | October | village | ↗65[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
157 | Olgino | village | ↗4[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
158 | Olkhovka | village | ↘39[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
159 | Olkhovo | village | ↗14[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
160 | Orekhovo | village | ↘13[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
161 | Oreshkovo | village | ↗8[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
162 | Ostankovo | village | ↗33[27] | urban settlement Malino |
163 | Pasykino | village | ↗13[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
164 | Sandbox | village | ↗3[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
165 | Pestrikovo | village | ↘2[27] | urban settlement Malino |
166 | Petrishchevo | village | →2[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
167 | Petrovo | village | ↘194[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
168 | Pokrovskoye | village | ↘7[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
169 | Polupirogovo | village | ↗1[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
170 | Polushkino | village | ↗6[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
171 | Pochinki | village | ↗28[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
172 | Pochinki | village | ↗13[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
173 | Privalovo | village | →0[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
174 | Proskurnikovo | village | ↗36[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
175 | Protasovo | village | →7[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
176 | Prudno | village | ↗58[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
177 | Psarevo | village | ↗50[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
178 | Rainbow | village | ↗211[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
179 | Razinkovo | village | ↗19[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
180 | Rodomanovo | village | ↗10[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
181 | Rudins | village | ↗54[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
182 | Savelyevo | village | ↘7[27] | urban settlement Malino |
183 | Savino | village | ↗52[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
184 | Saigatovo | village | ↘0[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
185 | Sapronovo | village | ↘43[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
186 | Safronovo | village | ↗74[27] | urban settlement Malino |
187 | Sekirino | village | ↗2[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
188 | Semyonovskoe | village | ↗2028[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
189 | Senkino | village | ↗3[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
190 | Sidorovo | village | ↗72[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
191 | Sitne-Shchelkanovo | village | ↗2901[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
192 | Sokolova Pustyn | village | ↘60[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
193 | Sotnikovo | village | ↘4[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
194 | Sotnikovo | village | ↗42[27] | urban settlement Malino |
195 | Spasskoye | village | →11[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
196 | Old Kashira | village | ↗175[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
197 | Old Sitnya | village | ↗1878[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
198 | Old | village | ↗9[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
199 | Old | village | ↘56[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
200 | Starokurovo | village | ↗62[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
201 | Stupino[comm. 6] | city | ↘65 660[29] | urban settlement Stupino |
202 | Sukovo | village | ↗117[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
203 | Sumarokovo | village | ↘7[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
204 | Syanovo | village | ↗17[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
205 | Tatarinovo | village | ↗1144[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
206 | Tenyakovo | village | ↘8[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
207 | Tishkovo | village | ↗40[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
208 | Tolbino | village | ↗17[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
209 | Tolochanovo | village | ↗8[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
210 | Torbeevo | village | ↘52[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
211 | Trinity-Lobanovo | village | ↘11[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
212 | Reeds | village | ↘37[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
213 | Tutykhino | village | ↗18[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
214 | Tyutkovo | village | ↘11[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
215 | Uvarovo | village | →3[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
216 | Estates | village | ↗1866[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
217 | Utenkovo | village | ↗7[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
218 | Fedorovskoe | village | ↘35[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
219 | Fominka | village | ↗3[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
220 | Fomino | village | ↗1[27] | urban settlement Malino |
221 | Khatun | village | ↗936[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
222 | Hirino | village | ↗19[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
223 | Khomutovo | village | ↘0[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
224 | Khonyatino[comm. 7] | village | ↘113[27] | urban settlement Malino |
225 | Want | village | ↗24[27] | urban settlement Stupino |
226 | Chernyshovo | village | ↘1[27] | urban settlement Mikhnevo |
227 | Chetryakovo | village | ↘7[27] | urban settlement Malino |
228 | Chirkino | village | ↗19[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
229 | Chirkovo | village | ↗61[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
230 | Shelkovo | village | →10[27] | rural settlement Semyonovskoye |
231 | Shmanaevo | village | ↘8[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
232 | Shmatovo | village | →7[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
233 | Shugarovo | village | ↗1683[27] | urban settlement Zhilevo |
234 | Shugarovo | village | ↘21[27] | urban settlement Malino |
235 | Shchapovo | village | ↗37[27] | urban settlement Malino |
236 | Shchapovo | village | ↘85[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
237 | Shcherbinino | village | ↘23[27] | rural settlement Leontievskoye |
238 | Yartsevo | village | ↗2[27] | rural settlement Aksininskoye |
Transport
Railway transport
The Paveletsky railway line of the Moscow Railway runs within the city district. Stations and platforms (in order from Moscow): Velyaminovo, Privalovo, Mikhnevo, Shugarovo, platf. 85 km, Zhilevo, Sitenka, Stupino
,
Akri
,
Belopesotsky
(italics - stations within the city). The Big Ring of the Moscow Railway also passes through the area, crossing the Paveletskaya direction at the Mikhnevo and Zhilevo stations. There are an additional 12 stations/platforms on the ring.
Automobile transport
Intra-district passenger transportation is carried out by the Stupino PATP and the Malinsky branch of the Stupino PATP (Stupino branch of the State Unitary Enterprise MO Mostransavto)
Population density
Population density - 173.89 people/km 2 (2021) - is the highest among the constituent entities of Russia (except for cities of federal significance - Moscow, St. Petersburg and Sevastopol), which is due to the high share of the urban population - (according to data for 2021 - 81, 18 %).
The highest density occurs in the urban districts closest to Moscow (Lyubertsy, Balashikha, Krasnogorsk, Khimki, Dolgoprudny, Reutov, etc.), the lowest in the outlying Lotoshino, Shakhovskaya, Mozhaisk urban districts, where in 2010 it was about 20 people/km² , the eastern part of the Meshchera Lowland is also sparsely populated (less than 20 people/km²).
Attractions
- Holy Trinity Belopesotsky Monastery.
- Church of the Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God in Sredny.
- Church of the Intercession and Elijah in Voskresenki.
- Church of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God in Sukovo.
- Manor and Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Aleshkovo.
- Church of the Intercession of the Mother of God in Myshenskoe.
- Church of the Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God in Avdotino.
- Church of the Transfiguration of the Lord in Verzilovo (did not close during the USSR)
- Church of the Resurrection of Christ in Gorodnya (1st half of the 16th century, bell tower built in 1896 by I. D. Bogolepov)
- Church of John the Baptist in Ivanovo.
- Znamenskaya Church of the Icon of the Mother of God in Old Kashira.
- Church of the Nativity of Christ in Kamenishche.
- Church of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God in Kiyasovo.
- Church of the Holy Trinity in Luzhniki.
- Church of the Assumption of the Mother of God in Malino.
- Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross in Marinka.
- Church of the Nativity of the Mother of God in Meshcherino.
- Church of the Transfiguration of the Lord in Mikhnevo.
- Church of the Archangel Michael in Pochinki.
- Church of the Nativity of the Mother of God in Khatuni.
- Church of the Life-Giving Trinity in Shchapovo (1775; bell tower 1900, architect N. D. Strukov)[30]
Map
Stupino: maps |
Stupino: photo from space (Google Maps) Stupino: photo from space (Microsoft Virtual Earth)
Stupino. Nearest cities. Distances in km. on the map (in brackets along roads) + direction. Using the hyperlink in the distance , you can get the route (information courtesy of the AutoTransInfo website) | |||
1 | Kashira | 9 (15) | SE |
2 | Mikhnevo | 25 (31) | WITH |
3 | Pushchino | 29 (68) | Z |
4 | Lakes | 31 (30) | IN |
5 | Ilyinskoe | 39 () | WITH |
6 | Serpukhov | 42 (70) | Z |
7 | Bolshevik | 44 () | IN |
8 | Alachkovo | 46 () | NW |
9 | Zaoksky (Tula region) | 46 (120) | SW |
10 | Chekhov | 47 (93) | NW |
11 | Kolomna | 50 (61) | NE |
12 | Yasnogorsk | 51 (134) | SW |
13 | Stolbovaya | 53 () | NW |
14 | Protvino | 54 (110) | Z |
15 | Zaraysk | 54 (70) | IN |
16 | Kremenki | 60 (115) | Z |
17 | Tarusa | 60 (130) | Z |
18 | Bronnitsy | 60 (90) | WITH |
19 | Voskresensk | 60 (90) | NE |
20 | Lukhovitsy | 61 (83) | IN |
21 | Domodedovo | 62 (68) | WITH |
22 | Venev | 62 (71) | YU |
23 | Silver Ponds | 63 (76) | SE |
24 | Beloozersky | 66 () | WITH |
25 | Podolsk | 66 (85) | NW |
26 | Gorki Leninskie | 70 () | WITH |
27 | Shcherbinka city | 73 (95) | NW |
28 | Ramenskoye | 74 (115) | WITH |
29 | Vidnoe | 75 (85) | WITH |
30 | Ostrovtsy | 76 () | WITH |
31 | Lytkarino | 76 (104) | WITH |
a brief description of
The city is located on the Oksko-Moskvoretskaya plain, 110 km south of Moscow. Railway station.
Territory (sq. km): 128
Information about the city of Stupino on the Russian Wikipedia site
Historical sketch
Mentioned in 1507 in the charter of Grand Duke Vasily Ivanovich as Stupinsky; name from the Old Russian name Stupa. Since 1511 the village of Stupinskaya. It belonged to the Trinity Belopesotsky Monastery, founded at the end of the 15th century. and until the 17th century. served as an important outpost of the Moscow and Kashira principalities in the fight against Tatar raids. Belopesotskaya Sloboda arose under the walls of the monastery. From the second half of the 16th century. — Stupino village.
At the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. The railway to Pavelets passed through the village. In 1932, construction of a large electric locomotive plant began in the village area (in 1936 it was converted into a metallurgical plant).
In 1934, from the villages of Stupino, Kremichanka and the village of Elektrovozostroya, the working village of Elektrovoz was created, which, when transformed in 1938, received the name Stupino. Since 1944 - the center of the Stupinsky district.
Economy
Mechanical engineering software, metallurgical plant. Factories: fiberglass, chemical. Combine "Stroydetal".
Main enterprises
FERROUS METALLURGY
OJSC "Stupino Metallurgical Plant"
142800, Moscow region, Stupino, st.
Pristantsennaya, 19 Offers:
rolled aluminum, strips, profiles, pipes and stampings, rods and ingots from special steels
CHEMICAL INDUSTRY
OJSC "Stupino Fiberglass Plant"
142800, Moscow region, Stupino,
Offers:
fiberglass products, fiberglass
Universities of the city
Stupino branch of "MATI" - Russian State Technological University named after.
K.E. Tsiolkovsky 142800, Moscow region, Stupino, Pristantsennaya st., 4 WWW: https://www.sfmati.ru/
Stupino branch of the Russian New University
142800, Moscow region, Stupino, st. Timiryazeva, 60
Museums, galleries, exhibition halls
Stupino City Art Gallery “Nika” 142800, Moscow region, Stupino, st.
Bakhareva, 8 Stupino Museum of History and Local Lore 142800, Moscow region, Stupino, st. Andropova 61/11 Phone(s): (49664) 77-818
Architecture, sights
On the southern outskirts of the city, in the bend of the Oka, there is the Trinity Belopesotsky Monastery (founded at the end of the 15th century) with the Trinity Cathedral (last quarter of the 17th century), Sergievskaya (1804) and Ivanovo (first half of the 19th century) churches, a refectory chamber (16 century), service buildings (late 17th century), etc. “Holy Gate” with St. Nicholas Church (1578).
In the 1930s-50s. Most of the development was in the workers' settlement in the northern part of the city.
9 km from Stupino is the former estate of the Decembrist F.P. Shakhovsky Verzilovo. The Transfiguration Church (late 17th - early 18th centuries; Moscow Baroque), a manor house (early 19th century), and a linden landscape park in the valley of the Kashirka River have been preserved.
Population by year (thousands of inhabitants) | |||||||
1939 | 19.0 | 1986 | 73 | 2005 | 67.9 | 2014 | 66.4 |
1959 | 40.3 | 1989 | 74.5 | 2006 | 67.5 | 2015 | 66.5 |
1967 | 53 | 1992 | 74.4 | 2007 | 67.0 | 2016 | 66.4 |
1970 | 59.3 | 1996 | 68.2 | 2008 | 66.5 | 2017 | 66.3 |
1973 | 62 | 1998 | 67.0 | 2010 | 65.9 | 2018 | 66.1 |
1976 | 67 | 2000 | 65.6 | 2011 | 66.8 | 2019 | 66.0 |
1979 | 70.0 | 2001 | 64.9 | 2012 | 66.7 | 2020 | 65.9 |
1982 | 72 | 2003 | 63.1 | 2013 | 66.5 | 2021 | 65.7 |
Notes
- from the point of view of the administrative-territorial structure
- from the point of view of the municipal structure
- Head of the Stupino urban district Muzhalskikh Sergei Gennadievich (unspecified)
.
Official website of the administration, the Council of Deputies and the Chamber of Control and Accounts
(January 26, 2021). Access date: January 26, 2021. - Law of the Moscow Region dated July 28, 2017 N 118/2017-OZ “On the border of the Stupino urban district (as amended on February 20, 2021)” (undefined)
. Date accessed: March 6, 2021. - ↑ 123456789
Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2021 (Russian) (July 31, 2017). Retrieved July 31, 2021. Archived July 31, 2021. - ↑ 12
Law “On the organization of local self-government in the territory of the Stupinsky municipal district” - ↑ 12
Law of the Moscow Region “On classifying the city of Stupino, Stupinsky district of the Moscow region, as a city of regional subordination of the Moscow region, abolishing the Stupino district of the Moscow region and amending the Law of the Moscow region “On the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow region”” - ↑ 12
Law of the Moscow Region No. 11/2013-OZ dated January 31, 2013 “On the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow Region” - Handbook on the administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004. - M.: Kuchkovo Pole, 2011. - 896 p. — 1500 copies. — ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8.
- ↑ 1234567
(Moscow region. Total area of municipal land - All-Union Population Census of 1959. The actual population of cities and other settlements, districts, regional centers and large rural settlements as of January 15, 1959 by republics, territories and regions of the RSFSR (unspecified)
. Retrieved October 10, 2013. Archived October 10, 2013. - All-Union population census of 1970. The actual population of cities, urban-type settlements, districts and regional centers of the USSR according to census data as of January 15, 1970 by republic, territory and region (unspecified)
. Retrieved October 14, 2013. Archived October 14, 2013. - All-Union Population Census of 1979. The current population of the RSFSR, autonomous republics, autonomous regions and districts, territories, regions, districts, urban settlements, village-district centers and rural settlements with a population of over 5,000 people (unspecified)
. - All-Union population census of 1989. Population of the USSR, RSFSR and its territorial units by gender (undefined)
. Archived from the original on August 23, 2011. - All-Russian population census 2002. Volume. 1, table 4. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements - regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3 thousand or more (unspecified)
. Archived from the original on February 3, 2012. - Alphabetical list of settlements in municipal districts of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2006 (unspecified)
(RTF+ZIP). Development of local self-government in the Moscow region. Access date: February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012. - The size of the permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban settlements and regions as of January 1, 2009 (unspecified)
. Retrieved January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014. - Population census 2010. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, city districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements (Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Access date: December 16, 2013. Archived April 28, 2013.
- Moscow region. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2009-2016
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 (unspecified)
. Retrieved May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) (undefined)
. Retrieved November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013. - Table 33. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 (unspecified)
. Access date: August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 (unspecified)
. Access date: August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2021 (Russian) (October 5, 2018). Date accessed: May 15, 2021. Archived May 8, 2021.
- Database of indicators of municipalities of the Moscow region
- Information about the area from the official website of the Administration
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 The size of the rural distribution
on the territory of the Moscow region (results of the All-Russian population
census 2010). Volume III (undefined)
(DOC+RAR). M.: Territorial body of the Federal State Statistics Service for the Moscow Region (2013). Retrieved October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013. - ↑ 1 2 3
Estimation of the permanent population of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2021 and on average for 2021 for municipalities
(unspecified)
. Mosoblaststat. Access date: April 20, 2021. - The permanent population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2021 (Russian). Date accessed: April 27, 2021. Archived May 2, 2021.
- Church of the Life-Giving Trinity in Shchapovo (unspecified)
. Temples of Russia. Access date: March 19, 2013.
Gender and age composition
According to the 2010 census data, the female population (3,824 thousand people) is noticeably higher than the male population (3,270 thousand people); Moreover, in the age group from 0 to 24 years, the male population predominates over the female population. In cities, the predominance of the female population over the male population is more pronounced (844 men per 1000 women) than in rural settlements (902 men per 1000 women). The average age of the population is 40.3 years (male - 37.3; female - 42.9); Thus, the population of the Moscow region is slightly older than the Russian average (39 years). The demographic burden in the Moscow region is 611 people of non-working age per 1000 of working age - slightly lower than the Russian average (623). In the Moscow region, small households predominate with an average number of members of 2.5 - more than half of households consist of one or two people.
Ratio of men and women (Rosstat data)
Comments
- Krasnaya Zarya was included in the village
- Maryinka
and
Kharino were included in the working settlement - Ekimatovo
and
Mikhnevo
, as well as
the village of Mekhkolonny-20,
were included in the working settlement ;
and in 2004, according to the Decree of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated August 9, 2004 No. 172-PG, - the village of Astafyevo
. - Myshenskoye-2 was included in the village
- Until 2003, the village was called Yaganovo station
, renamed according to the Resolution of the Moscow Regional Duma of July 9, 2003 No. 22/64-P. - , the settlement of the branch of the Obraztsovo state farm
and the villages of
Bolshoye Obraztsovo
and
Maloe Obraztsovo
were included in the city of Stupino ;
and according to the Decree of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated March 15, 2004 No. 33-PG - the urban-type settlement of Prioksk
. - , the settlement of the Khonyatino state farm branch was included in the village
Employment
The total number of labor resources in the Moscow region in 2010 was 4.1 million people. The level of registered unemployment is traditionally low; in 2012 there were 2.7% of the unemployed in the region. The income of the population of the Moscow region is lower compared to the population of Moscow, but in the 2000s this gap narrowed significantly (2001 - 5.2 times, 2006 - 3.6 times). At the same time, the wages of public sector workers in the Moscow Region are 1.3 times higher than the Russian average (according to this indicator, the subject ranks 2nd in the Central Federal District after Moscow); The average per capita income of the region's population is also higher than the Russian average. The cost of living in the fourth quarter of 2012 was 7,223 rubles.