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Eliseevsky (deli)

Company


Owners:
Realty4Sale

Content

Owners

History

2023: Change of ownership

On April 13, 2023, it became known that the Eliseevsky deli on Tverskaya in Moscow was bought by Realty4Sale (R4S). The new owner of one of the oldest stores in the Russian capital may open a large food hall in its place.

According to the Kommersant newspaper, the Moscow mayor's office tried to sell the Eliseevsky, which opened the doors back in 1901, for eight years. The rental rights of the object changed hands several times. So, from 2005 to 2021, the operator of the trading platform was the Scarlet Sails network of the family of developer Maxim Blazhko. And in 2022, the store was managed by the structures of Yakov Yakubov, who previously owned many retail facilities on Tverskaya, as well as the Corona and Golden Palace casinos.

Eliseevsky

In 2015, when the Moscow mayor's office began looking for a buyer for Eliseevsky, the cost of the center was estimated at at least 2.5 billion rubles. Then it was about the sale of premises with a total area of ​ ​ 5.3 thousand square meters. In the event of an agreement with R4S, the rights to halls and other premises with a total area of ​ ​ 3 thousand square meters will be transferred. According to market participants, the value of the transaction may remain at the level of 2.5 billion rubles.

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R4S 's interest in the object on Tverskaya is no coincidence. The company owns commercial real estate in the center of Moscow, where it also implements a number of development projects, including the restoration of the house of the merchant Buloshnikov on Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street, the former estate of Anna Neklyudova on Malaya Bronnaya, the development of the site on the site of the iconic Simachev Bar in Stoleshnikov Lane, Kommersant notes.
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According to available information, R4S expects to open a gastronomic space on the site of Eliseevsky. However, experts say, the implementation of such a project can be fraught with a number of difficulties. A residential building may not have technical equipment for such purposes, and residents may complain about noise and smells from catering kitchens. In addition, there will be problems with the organization of parking lots for visitors.[1]

1952

Seller in the sausage department of the Eliseevsky deli. Moscow. USSR. 1952

Notes