The women's dormitory on the estate of the merchant's daughter A.M. Tagunova existed long before 1897, when the Vladimir women's community was formed on its basis by decree of the Holy Synod. On 55 dessiatines of land donated by Tagunova, there was a two-story wooden cell building with a house church for 14 sisters living there, as well as a cattle hut, a cattle yard, a feed shed, a brick factory and an apiary. In 1897, a wooden fence with a wooden bell tower on pillars in its eastern corner was built. The community also owned a stone outbuilding in Ivanovo-Voznesensk. Among the later buildings, the large brick Nativity of the Mother of God Church, built in 1907-1912, stood out. In the 1920s, the community was liquidated, and its revival as a courtyard of the Murom Trinity Monastery began only in 2007. Residential and utility buildings, a bell tower, and churches were built. In 2016, the courtyard became an independent women's monastery.