The sites identified are enterprises of the Federal Agency for State Reserves (Rosrezerv) located within Russia’s Central Federal District (CFD). They are not conventional military bases; rather, they are state reserve storage and processing facilities with direct defense relevance through mobilization and emergency supply functions. The locations referenced include: (1) FGKU Kombinat "Zeleny" (Ivanovo Oblast, Ivanovsky District; office at ul. Krasnykh Zor, 44B; storage presence noted near the settlement "Zheleznodorozhny"), (2) Plant "Monolit" (Rosrezerv), Site No. 2 in the city of Vladimir (Noyabrskaya Street), (3) FGKU Plant "Vympel" in Kaluga Oblast (Duminichsky District, settlement Duminichi), also referenced as FGBU Kombinat "Vympel" Rosrezerva, and (4) Plant "Etalon" (Rosrezerv enterprise; site details not specified in the provided material). Publicly available information indicates these facilities form part of the national material reserve network that can support Ministry of Defence (MoD) and other state needs under mobilization or emergency decrees.
The Central Federal District includes key industrial and logistics regions surrounding Moscow, including Ivanovo, Vladimir, and Kaluga oblasts. It is traversed by major rail corridors (e.g., Gorky Railway through Vladimir; Moscow Railway lines in Kaluga Oblast) and federal highways (e.g., M-7 through Vladimir). The district’s central location enables rapid overland distribution of bulk commodities and critical supplies to western and central Russian regions, giving Rosrezerv sites within the CFD elevated logistical significance for both civilian emergency response and defense support.
Rosrezerv is the federal body responsible for the State Material Reserve, maintaining strategic stocks of commodities and equipment for emergencies, stabilization of markets, and mobilization support. Its storage enterprises are commonly designated as "kombinat" (combine) or "zavod" (plant) and bear codenames such as "Monolit" (Monolith), "Vympel" (Vympel), "Etalon" (Etalon), and "Zeleny" (Green). These enterprises manage dispersed warehouses and sites (often numbered, e.g., "Site No. 2"), with inventories and specific technical parameters generally not disclosed publicly. Legal-entity forms vary (e.g., FGKU — federal state-owned institution; FGBU — federal state budgetary institution), reflecting administrative arrangements rather than functional differences in storage operations.
Location: Ivanovo Oblast, Ivanovsky District, with a site indicated near the settlement "Zheleznodorozhny" (as provided). The main office is cited at ul. Krasnykh Zor, 44B (address as provided). Functionally, as a Rosrezerv combine, it is part of the state reserve storage network; no open-source disclosures specify commodity types or volumes at this site. Ivanovo Oblast is served by regional rail lines and roads connecting to Yaroslavl, Vladimir, and Moscow regions, facilitating inbound and outbound logistics. There is no public evidence indicating a permanent military garrison at this facility; its defense relevance derives from its role in mobilization supply mechanisms rather than from hosting combat units.
Location: City of Vladimir, Noyabrskaya Street (as provided). The "Site No. 2" designation indicates a subordinate warehouse site under the Rosrezerv enterprise "Monolit." Vladimir sits on the M‑7 "Volga" federal highway and on the Gorky Railway mainline, enabling efficient rail and road freight movements. Public sources identify the facility as a warehouse site of Rosrezerv; specific inventory, capacities, or site layout details are not disclosed. There is no publicly available evidence that the site is a military base; its defense relevance is logistical, supporting potential allocations to state bodies (including the MoD) upon authorized release.
Location: Kaluga Oblast, Duminichsky District, settlement Duminichi (as provided). The enterprise is referenced in open contexts both as FGKU Plant "Vympel" and FGBU Kombinat "Vympel" of Rosrezerv, reflecting administrative nomenclature. Duminichi is connected to the regional rail network of the Moscow Railway and to regional road corridors within Kaluga Oblast, supporting bulk shipments. As with other Rosrezerv facilities, inventory and technical specifications are not publicly released. No evidence indicates a standing military unit presence on site; the site’s military relevance is through mobilization and emergency supply functions.
Entity: Plant "Etalon" of Rosrezerv (as referenced). The provided material does not include a specific locality or address for this enterprise within the Central Federal District. Rosrezerv documentation and public references confirm that "Etalon" is one of its named enterprises; however, detailed site-level information (exact location, capacities, and inventory) is not publicly available. In line with other Rosrezerv entities, its role is associated with storage and turnover of state reserve material, potentially including commodities and equipment relevant to emergency response and mobilization.
All referenced sites are located within the Central Federal District at road and rail-accessible points: Vladimir (a regional hub on the M‑7 and Gorky Railway), Ivanovo Oblast’s Ivanovsky District (served by regional rail and road links), and Kaluga Oblast’s Duminichi (integrated into the Moscow Railway network and regional road system). Their proximity to Moscow and central industrial regions (roughly within a few hundred kilometers) facilitates rapid distribution to key economic and military-administrative centers. The presence of numbered sites (e.g., "Site No. 2") suggests multi-node storage schemes within single enterprises to disperse stocks and optimize transport access.
While site-specific technical data are not publicly disclosed, Rosrezerv storage enterprises typically comprise enclosed warehouse buildings, open storage yards, covered platforms, and rail sidings for bulk loading/unloading. Depending on the commodity portfolio, some locations may include specialized facilities (e.g., controlled-environment storage, tank farms for liquid fuels, or preservation/rotation workshops). Operations include periodic rotation of stocks to maintain usability, receipt and dispatch by rail and road, maintenance of storage conditions, and compliance with safety regulations for stored materials. No public sources provide confirmed, site-specific capacities or commodity lists for the identified facilities.
Under the state material reserve framework, Rosrezerv can allocate stocks by government decision to support mobilization, civil defense, and emergency response. Practically, this gives the identified facilities a defense-support function, enabling supply of fuel, foodstuffs, materials, and equipment to the MoD or other state agencies when authorized. The facilities’ locations along established rail and highway corridors in the CFD allow for relatively rapid scaling of throughput during contingencies. There is no public indication that these sites store weapons or munitions; their relevance is logistical, tied to the movement and controlled release of strategic reserves.
The enterprises are described with differing legal forms (FGKU, FGBU), which are standard designations for federal institutions in Russia and may change as part of administrative reorganizations. Rosrezerv entities frequently bear codenames (e.g., "Monolit," "Vympel," "Etalon," "Zeleny") and may operate multiple numbered sites. Address details such as "ul. Krasnykh Zor, 44B" (main office for Kombinat "Zeleny") and Noyabrskaya Street (Vladimir) are provided in the source material. A TASS link (https://tass.ru/obschestvo/12631045) is cited; its specific content is not independently verified here, but TASS has previously reported on organizational and operational matters related to Rosrezerv enterprises. Where official documents classify inventory and site technical details, such information is not publicly available.
Confidence is moderate regarding the enterprises’ existence, locations by region/locality, and their organizational role within Rosrezerv. Confidence is low regarding site-specific inventories, storage capacities, exact infrastructure layouts, security measures, and any specialized functions, as these are not disclosed in open sources. This assessment relies on the provided location cues and the known mandate of Rosrezerv. No assumptions are made about military unit basing at these sites. If authoritative public records or official releases become available, details such as precise addresses, facility footprints, and commodity categories could be updated accordingly.