Loo Microdistrict Explained

Loo (Russian: Лоо; Adyghe; Adygei: Лэуп) is a microdistrict of Lazarevsky City District of the city of Sochi, Krasnodar Krai, Russia, located 18km (11miles) from the city center. Loo railway station is one of the stations on the North Caucasus Railway, subsidiary of Russian Railways and can be reached by the M27 highway.

History

The name "Loo" derives from the name of an Abazin feudal family, Lau or Loo. Until 1864, Ubykhs from the Vardane community lived in the Loo river valley. On the sea coast was the aul of Ismail Barakai Dzepsh, one of the Ubykh leaders during the Caucasian War. Since 1872, the Loo river basin is the property of Vardane.

The ruins of a medieval Abkhaz temple, known as the Loo Temple, were preserved in the mountains near Loo, approximately 200m (700feet) high. The northern wall of the temple, being built from limestone blocks, was preserved better than the remaining parts. The temple is 11m (36feet) wide and 20m (70feet) long, and the thickness of the temple walls exceeds 1m (03feet).

On August 7, 2008, a terrorist attack occurred on the beach of Loo, in which two people were killed and 15 people were injured. Eight people were hospitalized. The unidentified exploding device went off on the city beach at 10:10 Moscow Time. One of the people that died was a female resident of Kyiv born in 1986, the other was a male resident of Rostov-on-Don born in 1977.

Leisure in Loo

In recent years, a number of private hotels and cottages appeared in Loo.