The
Moscow Metro ( , ), which spans almost the entire
Russian capital
, is the world's second most heavily
used rapid-transit system.
Opened in 1935, it is well known for the ornate design of many of
its
stations, which contain
outstanding examples of
socialist
realist art.
Description of the Metro

A map of the Moscow Metro
In total,
the Moscow
Metro has of
route length, 12 lines and 177 stations; on a normal weekday it
carries over 7 million passengers. Passenger traffic is
considerably lower on weekends bringing the average daily passenger
traffic during the year to 7.0 million passengers per day. The
Moscow Metro is a
state-owned
enterprise.
The system operates according to an enhanced
spoke-hub distribution
paradigm, with most rail lines running between central Moscow
and its suburbs. The Koltsevaya line forms a circular ring that
connects the spokes and facilitates passenger movements between
lines without having to travel all the way into the central
city.
Each line is identified by an alphanumeric index (usually
consisting of just a number), a name, and a colour. The voice
announcements refer to lines by name, while in colloquial usage
they are mostly referred to by colour, except the
Kakhovskaya Line (number 11) which has been
assigned shade of green similar to that of the
Zamoskvoretskaya Line (number 2),
Koltsevaya Line (number 5) and
Butovskaya Line (number L1). Most
lines run radially through the city, except the
Koltsevaya Line (number 5), which is a
20-km-long ring connecting all the radial lines and a few smaller
lines outside. On all lines, travellers can determine the direction
of the train by the gender of the announcer: on the ring line, a
male voice indicates clockwise travel, and a female voice
counter-clockwise. On the radial lines, travellers heading toward
the centre of Moscow will hear male-voiced announcements, and
travellers heading away will hear female-voiced announcements. In
addition, there is an abundance of signs showing all the stations
that can be reached in a given direction.
The system was built almost entirely underground, although some
lines (numbers 1, 2 and 4) cross the
Moskva
River, while line number 1 also crosses the
Yauza River by bridge. Fewer than 10% of the
stations are at or above the surface level.
The surface sections
of the Metro include the western part of Filyovskaya Line continuing as Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line between
Kievskaya and Molodyozhnaya
(eight surface stations), and the Butovskaya Light Metro Line (L1)
with 4 elevated stations. The other surface stations are Vykhino, Izmaylovskaya
and Vorobyovy
Gory
(the latter is unique in the world being built into
a lower level of a bridge). There are several short surface stretches,
including those between the stations Avtozavodskaya and Kolomenskaya
(where a new station Technopark is going to be built),
and between Tekstilshchiki and
Volgogradsky
Prospekt.
The Moscow Metro is open from about 5:30 until 1:00 (the opening
time may vary at different stations according to first train
schedule, but all stations close for entrance simultaneously at
1:00). During rush hours, trains run roughly every 90 seconds on
most lines. At other times during the day, they run about every two
to three and a half minutes, and every six to ten minutes late at
night. As trains are so frequent, there is no timetable available
to passengers.
The lines of the Moscow Metro
The colours in the table correspond to the colours of the lines in
the map above.
Metro lines
| English Name |
Index
and colour
|
Russian Name |
First Opened |
Latest
addition
|
Length |
Stations |
|
1 |
|
1935 |
1990 |
26.2 km |
19 |
|
2 |
|
1938 |
1985 |
36.9 km |
20 |
|
3 |
|
1938 |
2008 |
37.7 km |
18 |
|
4 |
|
1958 1 |
2006 |
14.7 km |
13 |
|
5 |
|
1950 |
1954 |
19.4 km |
12 |
|
6 |
|
1958 |
1990 |
37.6 km |
24 |
|
7 |
|
1966 |
1975 |
35.9 km |
19 |
|
8 |
|
1979 |
1986 |
13.1 km |
7 |
|
9 |
|
1983 |
2002 |
41.5 km |
25 |
|
10 |
|
1995 |
2007 |
21.2 km |
12 |
|
11 |
|
1995 2 |
|
3.4 km |
3 |
|
L1
3 |
|
2003 |
2003 |
5.5 km |
5 |
|
Total: |
292.2 km |
177 |
|
Notes
1 Four central stations of
Filyovskaya Line Alexandrovsky Sad
(formerly Named after Komintern), Arbatskaya
,Smolenskaya
and Kiyevskaya were originally opened
in 1935/37, when they were a branch of Sokolnicheskaya Line.
Between 1938 and 1953, they were part of Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line.
The stations were closed between 1953 and 1958 and then reopened as
part of the (new) Filyovskaya Line.
A branch
line of Filyovskaya Line is now in operation, as of July, 2009,
starting from Alexsandrovsky Sad Station, going on Filyovskaya Line
till Kiyevskaya Station, where it departs to stop at the new
Vuistavochna Station (in front of the Expo Center, renamed from
Delovoy Tsentr or Mezhdunarodnaya Station) and Mezhdunarodnaya
Station (in front of Moscow
International Business Center
, renamed from Moscow City
Station).
2 All the three stations of the Kakhovskaya Line were
built in 1969. Initially they were an integral part of the
Zamoskovoretskaya Line until 1983, becoming a branch of it until
1995. In 1995, they were split off from the Zamoskovoretskaya Line
and used to form the Kakhovskaya Line.
3 L in
L1 does
not stand for
Light Rail
but, somewhat confusingly, for "
Light
Metro" — lines that are built mainly above-ground and with
shorter platforms. These lines, as a result, do not need expensive
tunnelling and are supposed to be
financially "light".
However, "light" and "normal" metro lines use interoperable rolling
stock. See
Butovskaya Light
Metro Line for further explanation.
The
Moscow
Monorail
is a
4.7 km, 6 station monorail line
between Timiryazevskaya
and VDNKh
that opened
in January 2008. Before the official opening, the monorail
operated in an "excursion mode" since 2004. Trains departed every
20 minutes between 8:00 and 20:05. Tickets cost four times the
normal price (50 rubles, ~$2.10). Since 2008 intervals have been
shortened and the price is equal to the metro ticket price.
Ticketing
In the Soviet time, the cost of a single journey was 5
kopecks (1/20 of
Soviet
ruble). The cost of journeys has been steadily rising since
1991. Inflation caused the price to rise considerably to 22
Russian rubles per trip (taking into
account the
1998
revaluation of the ruble by a factor of 1000). At the same
time, one may get a considerable discount (up to 40%) per journey
when buying a ticket with multiple trips.
Tickets are available for a fixed number of journeys, irrespective
of the distance travelled and the number of transfers. Monthly and
yearly tickets are also available. Once a passenger has entered the
Metro system, there are no further ticket checks - one can ride any
number of stations and make transfers freely. Fare enforcement
takes place entirely at the points of entry.
The Moscow Metro used magnetic cards (contact cards) for tickets
with a fixed number of journeys (up to 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 60 and 70
journeys for 30 days from the day of the first journey) until
January 2008. As of February 2009 the cost of 1 ride is 22 rubles
(69 US cents); there are small discounts starting with 5-ride
cards. Magnetic cards were introduced in 1993 as a test and were
used as unlimited tickets between 1996 and 1998. The sale of
magnetic cards stopped 16 January 2008. In January 2007, Moscow
Metro began replacing magnetic cards with fixed number of journeys
by
contactless
cards. Smartcards have been used in Moscow Metro since 1998 and
are called Transport Cards. Transport Cards were available as
'unlimited' and 'social' tickets. The unlimited card can be
programmed for 30, 90, and 365 days.
The social cards are
free for elderly people (who are officially registered as residents
of Moscow
city or
Moscow
region
) and some privileged categories of citizens; they
are available to school pupils and students at a heavily reduced
price (255 rubles (about $US 8 for a month of unlimited
usage). Contactless cards are available in 1, 2, 5, 10, 20
and 60 journeys denominations.
The Moscow Metro became the first metro system in Europe to fully
implement
smartcards on September 1,
1998. The sale of tokens ended on 1 January 1999 and they stopped
being accepted in February 1999. Magnetic cards stopped being
accepted in late
2008, making Moscow metro
world's first major public transport system to run fully on
contactless automatic fare collection system based on
Philips NXP
MIFARE technology.
Fares for a single trip, 1935-2009
*Not taking into account 10X denomination of 1947. In fact, fare became 10 times
larger.
History

Soldiers helping with construction of
the Metro

Arbatskaya
(Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya)
The first
plans for a rapid transit system in Moscow date back in the times
of the Russian
Empire
, but they were postponed by World War I, the October Revolution and the Russian Civil War. It was not until
June 1931 that the decision to start construction of the Moscow
Metro was taken by the Central Committee of the
USSR Communist Party.
The first lines were built under the 1930s Moscow general plan
designed by
Lazar Kaganovich, and
the Metro was initially (until 1955) named after him ("Metropoliten
im. L.M. Kaganovicha").
Advice was given by the London Underground, the world's oldest
metro system (partly because of this connection Gants Hill
tube station
, although not completed until much later, is
reminiscent in design of many stations on the Moscow
Metro).
First stage
The first line was opened to public on May 15, 1935 at 7am. The
line was 11 km long, and included 13 stations.
It connected Sokolniki
to Park Kultury
with a branch from Okhotny Ryad
to Smolenskaya
(the first Metro map is available here:).
The
latter branch was further extended westwards to the new station
Kiyevskaya in March 1937
(making the first Metro crossing of the Moskva River by the Smolensky
Metro Bridge
). The construction of the first stations was
based on other underground systems, and only a few original designs
were allowed: (Krasniye
Vorota
, Okhotniy
Ryad
and Kropotkinskaya
). Kiyevskaya station was the first to use
national motifs.
On May 14, 1935, the
Komsomol was awarded
the
Order of Lenin by Stalin's
suggestion for the contribution of the Komsomol members to
construction of the first Metro stage.
Second stage
The second stage was completed before the
war.
In March 1938 the
Arbatskaya branch was split in two and extended to Kurskaya
station (now the dark-blue Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line).
In
September 1938 the Gorkovskaya
Line opened between Sokol
and Teatralnaya
. Here the architecture was based on the most
popular of the stations already in existence (Krasniye Vorota,
Okhotnyi Ryad and Kropotkinskaya) and the compositions followed the
popular art deco style, though merging it with socialist visions.
The first
deep level Column station Mayakovskaya
was built at the same time.
Third stage
Building
work on the third stage was delayed but not interrupted during
World War II, and two Metro sections
were put into service: Teatralnaya
- Avtozavodskaya
(3 stations, crossing the Moskva river in a deep
tunnel) and Kurskaya
- Partizanskaya
(4 stations) were inaugurated in 1943 and 1944
respectively. War motifs replaced socialist visions in the
architectural design of the stations.
During
the Siege of
Moscow
, in the autumn and winter of 1941, metro stations
were used as air-raid shelters and the Council of Ministers moved its offices
to the platforms of Mayakovskaya
, where Stalin made public speeches on several
occasions. Chistiye Prudy
station was also walled off and the headquarters of
the Air Defence installed there.
Fourth stage
After the
war, construction started on the fourth stage of the Metro, which
included the Koltsevaya Line and a
deep part of the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line from Ploshchad
Revolyutsii
to Kievskaya
, and a surface extension to Pervomaiskaya
in the early 1950s. The exquisite decoration
and design of so much of the Moscow Metro is considered to have
reached its peak in these stations.
The
Koltsevaya Line was planned
first as a line running under the
Sadovoye Koltso (Garden Ring), a wide avenue
encircling the borders of Moscow's city centre.
The first part of the
line - from Park Kultury
to Kurskaya
(1950) - follows this avenue. But later
plans were changed and the northern part of the ring line deviates
1-1.5 km outside the Sadovoye Koltso, thus providing service
for 7 (out of 9) rail terminals.
The next part of the Koltsevaya
line opened in 1952 (Kurskaya - Belorusskaya
) and in 1954 the ring line was
completed.
There is an interesting
urban legend
about the origin of the ring line. A group of engineers approached
Stalin with plans for the Metro, to
inform him of current progress and of what was being done at that
moment. As he looked at the drawings, Stalin poured himself some
coffee and spilt a small amount over the edge of the cup. When he
was asked whether or not he liked the project so far, he put his
cup down on the centre of the Metro blueprints and left in silence.
The bottom of the cup left a brown circle on the drawings. The
planners looked at it and realized that it was exactly what they
had been missing. Taking it as a sign of Stalin's genius, they gave
orders for the building of the ring line, which on the plans was
always printed in brown. This legend, of course, may be attributed
to Stalin's
cult of personality.
In fact the line was never shown as a circle on the Metro map until
1980, long after Stalin's death. Prior to this time, the line was
depicted much closer to the shape of the actual route.
During the Cold War
The beginning of the
Cold War led to the
construction of a deep part of the
Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line. The
stations on this line are very deep and were planned as shelters in
the event of nuclear war.
After finishing the line in 1953, the upper
tracks between Ploshchad Revolyutsii
and Kiyevskaya were closed and later
reopened in 1958 as a part of the Filyovskaya Line. In the further
development of the Metro, the term "stages" was not used any more,
although sometimes the stations opened in 1957–1959 are referred to
as the "fifth stage".
During
the late 1950s, the architectural extravagance of new metro
stations was significantly toned down, and decorations at some
stations, like VDNKh
and Alexeyevskaya
, were greatly simplified compared with original
plans. This was done on the orders of
Nikita Khrushchev, who favoured a more
spartan decoration scheme. A typical layout (which quickly became
known as "Sorokonozhka" - "Centipede", which comes from the fact
that early designs had 40 concrete columns in two rows) was
developed for all new stations, and the stations were built to look
almost identical, differing from each other only in colours of the
marble and ceramic tiles. Most of these stations were built with
simplified, cheaper technologies which were not always quite
suitable and resulted in extremely utilitarian design. For example,
walls paved with cheap and simplistic ceramic tiles proved to be
susceptible to vibrations caused by trains, with some tiles
eventually falling off. It was not always possible to replace the
missing tiles with the ones of the same color, which eventually led
to infamous "variegated" parts of the paving. Not until the
mid-1970s was the architectural extravagance restored, and original
designs once again became popular. However, newer design of
"centipede" stations, with 26 columns with wider ranges between
them and more sophisticated, continued to dominate.
Recent developments
Since the turn of the century, several projects have been
completed, and more are underway.
The first one was the Annino-Butovo
extension, which consisted of extending the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya
Line from Prazhskaya to Ulitsa Akademika Yangelya (2000),
Annino (2001) and Bulvar
Dmitriya Donskogo
(2002). Afterwards a new elevated
Butovskaya Light Metro Line was
inaugurated in 2003.
Another
major project was the reconstruction of the Vorobyovy
Gory
station, which initially opened in 1959 was forced
to close in 1983 after the concrete used to build the bridge turned
out to be defective. After many years, the station was
rebuilt and re-opened in 2002.
A more
recent major project included building a branch off the Filyovskaya Line to the Moscow International Business
Centre
. This included Delovoy Tsentr
(2005) and Mezhdunarodnaya
, opened in 2006.
After
many years of building the long-awaited Lyublinskaya Line extension was
inaugurated with Trubnaya
in August 2007, with Sretensky Bulvar
in December of that year.
The major
Strogino-Mitino
extension (see future plans below) began with
Park Pobedy in 2003.
Its first stations,
an expanded Kuntsevskaya
and Strogino opened in
January 2008, and Slavyansky Bulvar
followed them in September.
Newest stations
File:SretenBulvar colorfix.jpg| Sretensky
Bulvar
(2007)File:Kuntsevskaya subway station
1.JPG|Kuntsevskaya
(2008)File:Strogino subway station 01.JPG|Strogino
(2008)File:Slavyansky bul'var - MosMetro -
Pavillion.jpg|Slavyansky Bulvar
(2008)
The system
The Moscow Metro has a
broad gauge of
1520 mm, like ordinary Russian
railways, and a
third rail
supply of 825
V DC.
The average distance between stations is
1800 m, the shortest (502 m) section being between Delovoy
Center
and Mezhdunarodnaya
and the longest (6,627 m) between Krylatskoye
and Strogino
. The long distances between stations have
the positive effect of a commercial cruising speed of
41.7 km/h.
Since the beginning of Moscow metro,
platforms have been built to be at least
155 m long, so as to accommodate eight-car trains.
The only exceptions
are certain stations of Filyovskaya line: Delovoi Tsentr
, Mezhdunarodnaya
, Studencheskaya
, Kutuzovskaya
, Fili
, Bagrationovskaya
, Filyovsky
Park
, Pionerskaya, which only
allow six-car trains (note that this list includes all ground-level
stations of Filyovskaya line, except Kuntsevskaya
).
Trains on lines 2, 6, 7, 9 and 10 consist of eight cars, on lines
1, 3, 8 of seven cars and on lines 4, 5 and 11 of six cars. All
cars (both E-series and 81-series) are 19.6 m long with four doors
on either side.
The
Moscow Metro train is identical to those used in all other
ex-Soviet Metro cities (St.
Petersburg, Novosibirsk,
Minsk
, Kiev, Kharkov, etc.)
and in Budapest, Sofia and Warsaw.
Line L1 is called the "
Light metro". It
was designed to its own standards and has shorter (96 m) platforms.
It employs newer
Rusich trains, which consist
of three articulated cars, but it can also be served by traditional
four-car trains. Rolling stock on the
Filyovskaya Line and
Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line is also
replaced with four-car and five-car Rusich trains.
The Moscow metro comprises 177 stations, of which 72 are
deep-level, and 87 are shallow. Of the deep stations, 55 are
pylon-type, 16 are column-type and one is "single-vault" (Leningrad
technology). The shallow stations comprise 65 of the pillar-type (a
large portion of them following the infamous "sorokonozhka"
design), 19 "single-vaults" (Kharkov technology) and three
single-decked. In addition there are 10 ground-level stations and
four above ground. Two of the stations exist as double halls, and
two have three tracks. Five of the stations have side platforms
(only one of them-subterranean).
The station Vorobyovy
Gory
is on a bridge. Three other metro bridges
exist but are covered or hidden. In addition there are two closed
stations and one that is derelict.
There are
also four stations, reserved for future service: Volokolamskaya of Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya
line, Delovoi
Tsentr
of Kalininskaya and Solntsevskaya lines and
Park
Pobedy
of Solntsevskaya line.Besides these, there
are two abandoned stations: old Kaluzhskaya and old
Pervomayskaya.
Moscow Metro Statistics
From the
official website.
| Passengers
(2008) |
2572.9 million passengers |
| — privileged
category |
912.6 million passengers |
| —— students and
schoolchildren |
239.0 million passengers |
| Maximum daily
ridership |
9555 thousand passengers |
| Revenue from fares
(2005) |
15997.4 million ruble |
| Route length |
292.9 km |
| Number of
lines |
12 |
| Longest line |
Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya
Line (41.2 km) |
| Shortest line |
Kakhovskaya Line
(3.3 km) |
| Longest
section |
Strogino–Krylatskoye (6.7 km) |
| Shortest
section |
Delovoy Tsentr –Mezhdunarodnaya (502 m) |
| Number of
stations |
177 |
| — transfer
stations |
60 |
| — transfer
points |
27 |
| —
surface/elevated |
15 |
| Deepest
station |
Park Pobedy (84 m) |
| Most shallow
underground station |
Pechatniki |
| Station with the
longest platform |
Vorobyevy Gory (282 m) |
| Number of stations
with a single entrance |
70 |
| Total number of
entrances |
273 |
| — with surface
vestibules |
122 |
| Total area of
cladding |
754.3 thousand sq. m. |
| — with marble
tiles |
340.1 thousand sq. m. |
| — with granite
tiles |
68.6 thousand sq. m. |
| — with different
tiles |
210.7 thousand sq. m. |
| — Other cladding
materials |
134.9 thousand sq. m. |
| Number of turnstiles with automatic control on
entrances |
2374 |
| Number of stations
with escalators |
124 |
| Number of
escalators |
631 |
| — including
Monorail stations |
18 |
| Total length of all
escalator |
65.4 km |
| Number of depot |
15 |
| Total number of
train runs per day |
9915 |
| Average speed: |
|
| — commercial |
41.71 km/h |
| — technical
(2005) |
48.85 km/h |
| Total number of
cars (average per day) |
4428 |
| Cars in service
(average per day) |
3397 |
| Total run of
cars |
679.6 million car-kilometres |
| — with
passengers |
649.5 million car-kilometres |
| Average run of cars
per day |
548.1 car-kilometres |
| Average passengers
per car |
53 people |
| Longest
escalator |
126 m (Park Pobedy) |
| Total number of
ventilation shafts |
393 |
| Number of local
ventilation systems in use |
4965 |
| Number of medical
assistance points (2005) |
46 |
| Total number of
employees |
34792 people |
| — males |
18291 people |
| — females |
16448 people |
| Timetable
fulfilment |
99.96% |
| Minimum average
interval |
90 sec |
| Average passenger
trip |
13.0 km |
Metro 2
Although this has not been officially confirmed, many independent
studies suggest that a second, deeper metro system exists under
military jurisdiction and was designed for emergency evacuation of
key city personnel in case of nuclear attack during the
Cold War.
It is believed that it consists of a single
track and connects the Kremlin
, chief HQ (Genshtab), Lubyanka (FSB
Headquarters) and the Ministry of Defence, as well as numerous
other secret installations. There are also entrances to the system
from several civilian buildings such as the Russian
State Library
, Moscow State University
(MSU) and at least two stations of the regular
metro. It is speculated that these would allow for the
evacuation of a small number of randomly chosen civilians, in
addition to most of the elite military personnel.
A suspected junction
between the secret system and normal Metro is behind the station
Sportivnaya
of the Sokolnicheskaya Line. The final
section of this system was completed in 1997.
Incidents
Although the Metro is a complex system, it has a very low rate of
accidents.
Terrorist bombing of 1977
On January 8, 1977, a bomb was reported to have killed seven and
seriously injured 33. It went off on a crowded train between
Izmailovskaya and Pervomaiskaya stations. Three
Armenians were later arrested, charged and
executed in connection with the incident.
Station fires of 1981
In June 1981, seven bodies were seen being taken out of
Oktyabrskaya station during a fire
at the station.
A fire was also reported at Prospekt
Mira station
around that time.
Escalator accident of 1982
A fatal
accident took place on 17 February 1982 due to an escalator collapse at the Aviamotornaya
station of the Kalininskaya Line. That day 8
people lost their lives, and 30 more were seriously injured, due to
the pile-up caused by the faulty emergency brakes.
Train collision of 1983
On March
30, 1983, several passengers were killed when two trains collided
in the Belorusskaya
station on the Koltsevaya Line. A senior official of
the Moscow metro told foreign reporters there had been no
accident and that the closing
of the station had been due to a breakdown of
rolling stock.
Terrorist bombing of 2004
On
February 6, 2004, an explosion wrecked a train between Avtozavodskaya
and Paveletskaya stations on Zamoskvoretskaya Line of the Metro,
killing 40 and wounding over 100. Chechen
terrorists were blamed. Later investigation
concluded that a Karachay-Cherkessian
resident, an Islamic militant,
had committed a suicide
bombing.
Moscow blackout of 2005
On May 25, 2005, a city-wide blackout halted some lines.
The
following lines continued operations: Sokol'nicheskaya,
Zamoskvoretskaya from Avtozavodskaya
to Rechnoy
Vokzal
,Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya, Filyovskaya,
Kol'tsevaya, Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya from Bitsevskiy Park
to Oktyabrskaya-Radialnaya and from
Prospekt
Mira-Radialnaya
to Medvedkovo
, Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya, Kalininskaya,
Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya from Serpukhovskaya
to Altufyevo
, Lyublinskaya from Chkalovskaya to Dubrovka. Trains did not run on Kakhovskaya
andButovskaya lines. Blackout most heavily affected
Zamoskvoretskaya and Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya lines where
initially all traffic has been disrupted due to some trains halted
in tunnels at south part of city which has been most affected by
blackout. Later, parts of these lines resumed operation in limited
mode and people from trains stopped in tunnels were evacuated. Some
lines did not suffer much from blackout since blackout mainly
affected south part of Moscow while north, east and west parts were
less affected or not affected at all.
Billboard incident of 2006
On March
19, 2006, a construction pile from an unauthorized billboard
installation was driven through the roof of the tunnel hitting a
train between the Sokol
and Voikovskaya
stations on the Zamoskvoretskaya Line. No
injuries were reported.
Expansion plans
Current
Official site. As
of 2008-2010 metro expansion program.
Presently, the Moscow Metro has a set expansion programme that is
due to be completed by 2015. Major projects include:
- Strogino-Mitino
extension: The first stage of the extension opened in
January 2008. The second stage will further extend the
line to Myakininskaya
and Volokolamskaya
in mid 2009 (4.2 km), part of the track will
include a new Metro Bridge across the Moskva River. The third and final
part will be Mitino itself with two more stations, Mitino
and
Rozhdestveno
and a new depot, to be completed by 2011.
One more
station located between Krylatskoye and Strogino, Troitse-Lykovo
will further be added.
- Brateyevo-Zyablikovo extension: A simultaneous
project of the Zamoskvoretskaya and Lyublinskaya Lines. The former will
extend by one station to Brateyevo
(2.9 km) along with a new depot, and the latter by three:
Borisovo, Shipilovskaya and Zyablikovo (4.3 km), with a transfer point
at Krasnogvardeyskaya
-Zyablikovo. The new stations will
considerably relieve the south end of the Zamoskvoretskaya Line.
Construction began back in the late 1990s, but since 2001 was
frozen, it was due to be restarted in 2008 with the potential of
opening in 2010.
- Light Metro lines. Originally developed as a
way of reducing costs by building an elevated Metro path that would
bring the Metro to distant regions of Moscow, the only one of
these, the Butovskaya Light
Metro Line has received a fare share of criticism from various
sectors. The fate of the BLLM's expansion remains under question,
whilst the Solntsevskaya Light Metro Line
initially planned to be begin construction in 2004 and be opened in
2006, having eight stations,. However in 2005 the project was
altered and two stations were dropped out of its 11.9 km
stretch, and the opening year was revised to 2010. However in 2008
the SLLM project was cancelled altogether in favour of a
conventional underground Solntsevskaya Line (see below).
The BLLM
extensions, also constantly revised and postponed, include
constructing an underground extension northwards to Bitsevsky
Park
which will offer a transfer to the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line
(5.0 km), and a southwards three station extension (also
5.0 km in length) that would include a new depot: Ulitsa Staropotapovskaya, Ulitsa Ostafyevskya, Novokuryanovo. Presently all of the
listed BLLM work has been taken off Moscow Metro's priority
expansion programme (until 2015), and there are speculations that
Moscow Metro might even consider dismantling the system in favour
of a conventional two-three station replacement by the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya
Line.
- Solntsevskaya
Line, following the cancellation of the SLLM, the
Moscow Metro reverted to an old project of bringing the Metro to
the Solntsevo district outside Moscow.
Initially foreseen as part of a major Solntsevo-Mytischinskaya
Chordial Line, the current stretch in question suggests using the
second set of tracks at Park Pobedy and
then having the line curve out to along the Michurin Avenue with
initially four stations: Mosfilmovskaya, Lomonosovsky Prospekt,
Michurinsky Prospekt and Olimpiyskaya Derevnya. This is annuounced
for 2014, and would appear to be the first stage of the line. The
second stage would compromise reaching Solntsevo itself. In the
original chordial project this included three stations, although
the present plan still calls for the line to follow the Light
Metro's path. The project would also allow to expand the
line in the other direction junctioning with the Delovoy
Tsentr
station in Moscow City
. It is unclear what will be the fate of the
line afterwards, and whether it will continue its old Chordial
path, as there is a project that has replaced it.
- Kalininskaya Line's western
extension, has the most probable chance of being realised, the line
will extend from Tretyakovskaya to Ostozhenka, Kadashevskaya, reunite the Smolenskaya stations in one single transfer
unit, and then continue westwards through the Moscow-City
business centre, where an empty set of platforms
has already been built, and then along the Khoroshovo
Highway. The project is not yet clear how it will pass onto
it, but it will eventually dock with Strogino, where a provision for the second parallel
station is being constructed right now with the opening of the
first station, and annex the line up to Mitino which will be built
by then.
- Ghost Stations. Moscow Metro does not
have ghost stations in the
conventional definition as of the three stations that were closed,
two Pervomayskaya
(1954-61) and Kaluzhskaya
(1964-74), were built as temporary inside a depot,
and closed after the parent line extended and one Leninskiye Gory,
was built on a bridge, that due to faulty concrete had to be closed
and new flyovers built to let the trains by-pass, was rebuilt anew
and opened in 2002 as Vorobyovy Gory
. However there were several stations that
were left out, some later completed yet some to this day exist as
provisions. The most famous of these was Volokolamskaya, which was actually
built but never open due to a lack of need for it. (Right now it is
planned that it might be opened sometime in 2015-2020 after the
empty Tushino
airfield is re-developed). Other stations that
have high chance of openings are Maroseyka on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line that
will offer transfer to Kitay-Gorod
, Yakimanka on the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line (transfer
to Polyanka
) and Suvorovskaya on the Koltsevaya Line that was to be built with
Dostoyevskaya
but has since been put off until the Third stage of
the LDL is complete. An exception is Tekhnopark which will be built on the Zamoskvoretskaya Line's surface
stretch in 2009, the first station that is wholly sponsored by
private investors.
According to plans of the Moscow city government and Russia's
transportation ministry, announced in September 2008, by 2015
79 km new lines, 43 new underground stations and 7 metro
depots should be added to the system.
Distant projects
It is unknown when and if these will be built, but nonetheless they
do exist:
- Chordial Lines Projects for these appeared in
the mid-1980s, which called for creating conventional radii lines,
but instead of passing through the city centre within the Koltsevaya Line they would bypass them on
the outside ( see map). After four of these were completed, they
would be used to form the new Second Ring (see below) service.
Construction began only on the Mitino-Butovskaya Line in the
early 1980s... In the wake of the 1990s crises, these massive and
ambtious projects were abandoned, and instead replaced by more
cost-effective means, including the Light Metro lines, and using
existent segments. However, despite the Mitino-Butovo chord now
replaced, the other three still have chances, the Solntsevsky
radius of the Solntsevo-Mytishchinskaya Line has now been
regenerated in its original path. It is unknown whether it would take its
intended shape by crossing up along all the northern radii before
travelling to the adjacent city of Mytishchi
along the Yaroslav Highway, as there is now a fast
connection to Mytishchi via the Sputnik rail link from the Yaroslavsky
Rail Terminal
, and now a new programme was announced to build a
line from Delovoy
Tsentr
to Savyolovskaya
which would effectively duplicate the path.
The fates of the Balashikha-Troparevskaya (south west bypass) as
well as the Khimsko-Lyuberetskaya (north east bypass) chordial
lines are unknown.
- Second (large) Ring Possibly the most famous
of the projects which dates back to the 1960s, and it does what it
says, to build a second ring line.
- The
original 1960s project called for a ring 3-6 stations on the radii
distance, and several provisions for the future line were built
including free space for the transfer at Bratislavskaya
, the whole of the Kakhovskaya Line (originally intended to
close following the opening of the Orekhovo extension in 1984, had
a flooded tunnel not kept it open since) as well as the segment
Cherkizovskaya
- Ulitsa Podbelskogo
of the Sokolnicheskaya Line (allowing it to in
turn expand westwards into Izmaylovo).
- During the 1980s chordial line programmes, the ring was instead
to be formed out of the space enclosed by them, with a circular
service operating at off-peak hours.
- In
2006 Moscow Metro announced plans for a second transfer
contour which would build a line from Delovoy
Tsentr
to Savyolovskaya
on a large diameter that would in the future become
fully enclosed into a ring one-three stations away along the radii
distance.
- However even the latter project seems to be under question, and
in light of the major priority developments in the above sections,
it is clear that the second ring is as distant today as it looked
40 years ago.
See also
References
External links
- Official
website
- The
interactive scheme of the underground
- Metro.ru —
Information, history, maps, art
- MetroWalks Moscow Photos of all metro stations
- Metro.Molot.ru — Lines, stations, plans, articles
- Моё Метро ("My
Metro") — Stations, cars, links
- Metronews — News of Moscow metropolitan
- Metroschemes — History of Moscow metro in schemes
- UrbanRail.Net
- Metro Photo
Gallery Photos of Russian metro
- Moscow Metro Photos — "faithful rendering of the
decorations of the Moscow metro, through some 450 photos and 27
panoramas"
- KartaMetro.info — Lines, stations, and exits on
Moscow map and satellite imagery. Public transportation near metro
stations.