Mansion at Zaprudnaya Street 2-1
1010 m2
2 floors and lower ground floor
bare-shell2 409 $ m2
The manor house is located in a park-like setting in a quiet village in the Naro-Fominskiy district of the Moscow Region. Nearby are the Kazan Church and a small pond. The beach on the Oka River is a 20-minute drive away. The building offers convenient access to the M-4 and the Kashirskoye Highway.
The Taraskovo Estate is first mentioned in 1760, when it was owned by landowner Anna Alexandrovna Khrushcheva. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the estate belonged to the noble Glebov family. They replaced the service buildings, constructed the two-story house that still stands today, and added a kitchen wing. The Glebovs were closely connected with Leo Tolstoy. In 1901, they married their eldest daughter, Alexandra, to the writer’s younger son, Mikhail. After the October Revolution in 1918, the estate was nationalized, and a collective farm named 'Taraskovo' was established on the property. In the 1930s, the house was converted into a rural club, and later it housed the local collective farm office. In 1973, the mansion was recognized as a regional cultural heritage site and placed under state protection. In the early 1990s, the main house suffered significant damage from a fire. Since then, the building has remained abandoned and in a dilapidated condition until its restoration in 2016.

