词条 | Novy Uoyan |
释义 |
|en_name=Novy Uoyan |ru_name=Новый Уоян |loc_name1= |loc_lang1=Buryat |image_skyline=Novy Uojan.jpg |image_caption=Novy Uoyan railway station |coordinates={{coord|56|09|N|111|44|E|display=inline,title}} |map_label_position=bottom |image_coa= |coa_caption= |image_flag= |flag_caption= |anthem= |anthem_ref= |holiday= |holiday_ref= |federal_subject=Republic of Buryatia |federal_subject_ref=[1] |adm_data_as_of=July 2013 |adm_district_jur=Severo-Baykalsky District |adm_district_jur_ref=[1] |adm_selsoviet_jur=Novy Uoyan Urban-Type Settlement |adm_selsoviet_type=Urban-type settlement |adm_selsoviet_jur_ref=[1] |adm_ctr_of=Novy Uoyan Urban-Type Settlement |adm_ctr_of_ref= |inhabloc_cat=Urban-type settlement |inhabloc_cat_ref=[1] |inhabloc_type= |inhabloc_type_ref= |mun_data_as_of=October 2014 |mun_district_jur=Severo-Baykalsky Municipal District |mun_district_jur_ref=[5] |urban_settlement_jur=Novy Uoyan Urban Settlement |urban_settlement_jur_ref=[5] |mun_admctr_of=Novy Uoyan Urban Settlement |mun_admctr_of_ref=[1] |leader_title= |leader_title_ref= |leader_name= |leader_name_ref= |representative_body= |representative_body_ref= |area_of_what= |area_as_of= |area_km2= |area_km2_ref= |pop_2010census=3963 |pop_2010census_ref=[2] |pop_density= |pop_density_as_of= |pop_density_ref= |pop_latest= |pop_latest_date= |pop_latest_ref= |established_date=mid-1970s |established_title= |established_date_ref= |current_cat_date=1976 |current_cat_date_ref= |prev_name1= |prev_name1_date= |prev_name1_ref= |postal_codes=671732 |dialing_codes= |dialing_codes_ref= |website= |website_ref= |commonscat= |date=January 2015 }}{{Infobox |title=Novy Uoyan population |label1=2010 Census |data1=3,963[2] |label2=2002 Census |data2=4,957[3] |label3=1989 Census |data3=9,547[4] |label4=1979 Census |data4=5,312[5] }}Novy Uoyan ({{lang-ru|Но́вый Уоя́н}}) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Severo-Baykalsky District of the Republic of Buryatia, Russia, located in the basin of the Upper Angara River, {{convert|550|km|sp=us}} from Ulan-Ude, the capital of the republic. As of the 2010 Census, its population was 3,963.[6] HistoryIt was founded in the mid-1970s in conjunction with the construction of the Baikal–Amur Mainline (BAM), near the settlement of Uoyan on the left bank of the Upper Angara.{{citation needed|date=January 2015}} The railway station and the settlement were constructed by workers from the then Lithuanian SSR, as sections of the track were given patronage of Komsomol brigades from various parts of the Soviet Union. Urban-type settlement status was granted to it in 1976.{{citation needed|date=January 2015}} Regular traffic on the railway section between Severobaykalsk and Novaya Chara in northern Zabaykalsky Krai began in 1989. Completion of the BAM did not, however, bring the expected economic development, and with the economic crisis in the late 1980s, the population almost halved between 1989 and 2002. Administrative and municipal statusWithin the framework of administrative divisions, the urban-type settlement (inhabited locality) of Novy Uoyan is incorporated within Severo-Baykalsky District as Novy Uoyan Urban-Type Settlement[7] (an administrative division of the district).[8] As a municipal division, Novy Uoyan Urban-Type Settlement is incorporated within Severo-Baykalsky Municipal District as Novy Uoyan Urban Settlement.[9] EconomyNovy Uoyan is an important station on the Baikal–Amur Mainline, which presents the only real economic activity. The BAM crosses the Upper Angara close to the settlement via a {{convert|350|m|ft|adj=mid|-long|sp=us}} bridge. There are proposals to build a {{convert|700|to|800|km|mi|adj=mid|-long|sp=us}} connection between the BAM and the Trans-Siberian Railway through Buryatia, with a northern terminus at Novy Uoyan, beginning either at Novoilyinsky, or from Mogzon in Zabaykalsky Krai. This section would be mainly intended to service mining developments, such as the lead and zinc Ozyorninskoye mine, which could be reached from the south by 2012.[10] ReferencesNotes1. ^{{OKTMO reference|81 645 156}} 2. ^1 {{ru-pop-ref|2010Census}} 3. ^{{ru-pop-ref|2002Census}} 4. ^{{ru-pop-ref|1989Census}} 5. ^{{ru-pop-ref|1979Census}} 6. ^{{ru-pop-ref|2010Census}} 7. ^1 2 3 4 Resolution #431 8. ^Law #2433-III 9. ^1 2 Law #985-III 10. ^Gudok (newspaper of the Russian Railways). Sergey Mikhalyov. Рудный путь (Ore Route). October 16, 2008 {{ru icon}} Sources
2 : Urban-type settlements in Buryatia|1970s establishments in the Soviet Union |
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