Patriarshiye Ponds (Patriarch's Ponds, Патриаршие пруды), nicknamed Patriki (Патрики), is an affluent residential area in downtown Presnensky District of Moscow, Russia. For the last 200 years, there has been only one pond, although, as the name of Tryokhprudny Pereulok (Трёхпрудный переулок, lit. Three-Pond Lane) suggests, there used to be more. The area of the existing pond is ; the depth is about two meters. Because of the area's proximity to Tverskaya Street business district, the area is popular with expatriates.
At the turn of the century, cheap rental buildings around the pond were occupied by the University students. During the December 1905, the area was held by left-wing student militia and became a war zone. The Ponds also housed Moscow's first hospital for children (the Filatov Hospital, which later relocated to nearby Garden Ring).
From the later 1930s to the 1950s, the lowrise buildings were torn down. The two most important Soviet-era buildings constructed were Moscow lions house main.jpg, a luxurious residence for Red Army Marshals (1945, designed by Zholtovsky workshop) and the 1935 Luxury penthouse patriarch.jpg, a yellow postconstructivist high-rise by Vladimir Vladimirov (the building, conceived by Panteleimon Golosov, was completed in part. See original design). The boathouse on the ponds was built in wood in 1946. It was not until the 1980s that it was rebuilt in stone.
In 2000-2002, the controversial Patriarch Apartments were built (design by Sergei Tkachenko); this 13-story building, crowned with a 1/50 scale model of Tatlin's Tower is also known as Alla Pugacheva home.