What would Moscow look like if Petrograd remained Russia’s capital?

Today, Moscow is Russia’s largest city and one of the most expensive cities in the world. As a capital of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation it has played a pivotal role in global affairs and was host to many important events; the cityscape changed drastically since the start of the 20th century with many parts being rebuilt over the years due to either war-damage or the city’s growth or plans to remodel parts of Russia’s capital.

Yet at the start of the last century Moscow wasn’t a national capital and was indeed referred to as an “overgrown village”.

What do you think Moscow might look like today if St. Peterburg/Petrograd/Leningrad remained the country’s capital? What importance might the city play for Russian & global affairs in such an ATL?
 
For global affairs, next to none.
Internally, it is to be said that it's in a nice central position. It might still have become a very important rail node, with all that that entails. However, the choice could also go to Jaroslavl or Vladimir.

That is all assuming that WWII ends as per OTL. If the Soviets, so to speak, have put all their eggs in the Leningrad basket, then it's not beyond the Germans in 1941 to have just two separate, mutually unsupporting axes of advance (the second heading to the breadbasket in the South). That might make for a worse than OTL Barbarossa - or for a relatively swift and complete encirclement of Leningrad, and its subsequent fall.
This conquest of the capital might in turn bring about a collapse of the state, with momentous effects on WWII - and, therefore, on the history of the Soviet Union and of Russia after that.
 
The reasons to move the capital were to make it less vulnerable - I would think this not only plays when we consider Finland or the Baltics, but also the Navy? HOw hard was it purged after it rebelled at Kronstadt? Were there possibilities it might rise again?
 
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