55°46′43″N 37°39′23″E / 55.77861°N 37.65639°E
Krasnoselsky District (Russian: Красносе́льский райо́н is a district of Central Administrative Okrug of the federal city of Moscow, Russia. The district recorded a population of 47,256 (2010 Census);[1] and 45,229 (2002 Census).[2]
Most of the district's territory is occupied by railroads, rail yards, and the three rail terminals around Komsomolskaya Square. It also contains a narrow sector of central Moscow, extending north-east from Lubyanka Square within the boundaries of Myasnitskaya Square and Bolshaya Lubyanka Street. However, the famous KGB-FSB Lubyanka building is technically part of Meshchansky District.
The boundary between Krasnoselsky and southbound Basmanny District passes through Red Gates Square and Novaya Basmannaya Street, thus Krasnoselsky District contains the northern edge of historical Basmannaya Sloboda, including the church of Saint Peter and Paul, built in 1705–1723 to a draft by Peter I.
The Black Angel of Glory on the coat of arms commemorates the loss of Red Gates in 1927, while the white Y denotes the three railroads that converge in Komsomoskaya Square.