LT2017 m. Vilniaus g. 37 sklypo PV dalyje KVP atliko detaliuosius tyrimus ir ištyrė 93,7 m2 dydžio plotą. Archeologiniai tyrimai šiame sklype vyko ne vieną kartą. 2013 m. T. Poška atliko detaliuosius tyrimus į P nuo 2017 m. tyrimų vietos. Jų metu fiksuotas 4,4 m storio kultūrinis sluoksnis. Tyrimų vietoje aptikta Vilniaus gynybinės sienos bei griovio, užpilto XVIII a. pabaigoje-XIX a. pradžioje, dalis (ATL 2013 metais, 2014, p. 370–374). 2014–2015 m. įrengiamų vandentiekio, nuotekų ir elektros trasų vietose žvalgomuosius tyrimus ir žvalgymus atliko J. Stankevičiūtė ir P. Vutkinas (ATL 2014 metais, 2015, p. 638, 460; ATL 2015 metais, 2016, p. 563, 412). Šių tyrimų metu fiksuoti XIX–XX a. sluoksniai, kuriuose rasta ir ankstyvesnių XVII a. radinių. [...] [p. 444].
ENIn 2017, an excavation was conducted (a total of 93.7 m2 ) at the site of old garages from the second half of the 20th century on the plot at Vilniaus st. 37, Vilnius. A 1.8–3 m thick, 16th–20th century cultural layer with structures sunk up to 1.3 m into the natural soil was recorded during the investigation. The upper, 1–1.6 m thick, archaeologically worthless cultural horizon dates to the 19th–20th centuries; below it a 16th–17th century, 0.4–1.2 m thick cultural horizon with contemporaneous finds was excavated. A layer preliminarily dated to the 16th century lay above the natural soil in the E part of the plot. The remains: an arched foundation and a slab foundation, of a second half of the 19th century building were unearthed in the central and E parts of the plot. The silicate brick garages had been erected on these foundations in the second half of the 20th century. Part of the Vilnius City defensive ditch, or so it is conjectured, was excavated in the S part of the plot. The ditch was filled in the 19th century but its bottom layer, which contains finds, dates to the third–fourth quarters of the 16th century. A part of a pit earlier than the ditch was excavated to the N of the ditch. Its top was filled with grey soil containing dung and peat, in which an especially large quantity of late 15th early 16th century pottery finds, animal bones, and leather cuttings were found, and the lower part with clay containing no finds. The pit’s purpose remains undetermined.