Vyatskoye village is a unique urban–planning complex of the XVIII-XIX centuries. The planning and spatial structure of which was based on the function of a large shopping center.
An active landscape element in the overall composition of the village is the Ukhtomki (Ukhtanki) riverbed, which divides Vyatskoye in half and defines the microrelief of its territory.
The center of the village's composition is a significant area of the former Shopping Area, formed by a stone square of a two-story urban mud building.
The architectural dominant of both the square and the entire southern part of the village is the Resurrection Church (1750). The architectural and spatial character of the northern part of the village is determined by the Assumption Church (1780) and the building of streets supporting the general geometric composition of Vyatsky (Krestyanskaya and Seredskaya Streets, sections of 1st and 2nd Embankments). At the same time, a number of streets follow the picturesque bends of the riverbed.
In 1911, in the center of the village, in honor of the fiftieth anniversary of the abolition of serfdom, Vyatka peasants, at their own expense, installed a sculpture of Emperor Alexander II by the famous sculptor Opekushin.
The buildings of Vyatka secondary School are architectural monuments of the XX century. The first stone school building in Vyatka was built at the expense of peasants in 1908. The school was named the "Higher four-grade Urban College named after Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich."
One of the main urban planning accents of Vyatka is the principle of manor building, which was the basis for the formation of the family way of life and preserved the traditions and culture of the Russian peasantry.
Currently, residential estates have been reconstructed in the village.:
• stone residential building — the former house of the merchant I. I. Galochkin, an architectural monument of the middle of the XIX century;
• stone apartment building — the former home of photographer V. N. Kokoshkin, an architectural monument of the late 19th century;
• stone residential building — the former house of the merchant S. I. Savelyev, an architectural monument of the middle of the XIX century;
• the stone residential building is the former home of the hereditary honorary citizen F. F. Bogorodsky, an architectural monument of the late 19th century.