Moscow Metro – Kropotkinskaya – Line 1

Kropotkinskaya - Line 1

Kropotkinskaya – Line 1

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Kropotkinskaya – Line 1

This was one of the first stations to open and was called ‘Dvorets Sovietov’ or ‘Palace of the Soviets’.

At the time the area was called Kropotkinskaya Gate and street (now it is Prechistenka Gate Square and Prechistenka Street.) On March 15, 1941 the station was awarded the Stalin Prize, 2nd degree in architecture and construction. In the design, the station was known as ‘Kropotkinskaya Vorota’ or Kropotkinskaya Gate. But the station was called ‘Dvorets Sovietov’ or ‘Palace of the Soviets’ until 8 October 1957.

In 1991-92, it was proposed to rename the station ‘Prechistenka’ and this did occur.

Kropotkinskaya - 02

Kropotkinskaya – 02

In the mid 1990’s a proposal was made to change the name to ‘Christ the Savior Cathedral’ but this did not happen.

In 2008 a proposal was made to change the name to ‘Patriarshy’, but this has not happened.

Kropotkinskaya - 03

Kropotkinskaya – 03

Text above from Wikimapia.

Kropotkinskaya (Russian: Кропо́ткинская) is a station on the Sokolnicheskaya Line of the Moscow Metro. One of the oldest Metro stations, it was designed by Alexey Dushkin and Yakov Lichtenberg and opened in 1935 as part of the original Metro line, named after Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin.

Kropotkinskaya - 04

Kropotkinskaya – 04

The station was originally planned to serve the enormous Palace of the Soviets (Dvorets Sovetov), which was to rise nearby on the former site of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. Kropotkinskaya was therefore designed to be the largest and grandest station on the first line. However, the Palace project was cancelled by Nikita Khrushchev in 1953, leaving the Metro station as the only part of the complex that was actually built.

Kropotkinskaya - 05

Kropotkinskaya – 05

Kropotkinskaya was constructed in a massive open trench measuring 176 metres (577 ft) long by 25 metres (82 ft) wide. The tunnels from Biblioteka Imeni Lenina were constructed using the cut and cover technique. The combination of unrestricted space and dry soil made for ideal conditions, and construction of the station took only 180 days from start to finish. Kropotkinskaya was completed in January 1935 and opened five months later, on 15 May 1935. The station was named Dvorets Sovetov until 1957, when it was renamed in honour of Peter Kropotkin, a geographer, philosopher, and anarchist theoretician born in the vicinity.

Kropotkinskaya - 06

Kropotkinskaya – 06

Since it was to serve as the gateway to the Palace of Soviets, great care was taken to make Kropotkinskaya suitably elegant and impressive. The station has flared columns faced with white marble which are said to have been inspired by the Temple of Amun at Karnak. Contrary to popular opinion, the marble used in the station did not come from the demolished Cathedral. The spacious platform is covered with squares of gray and red granite and the walls, originally tiled, are now faced with white Koyelga marble. The station is illuminated by concealed lamps set into the tops of the columns.

Kropotkinskaya - 07

Kropotkinskaya – 07

A model of the station won two Grand Prix awards at expositions in Paris (1937) and Brussels (1958). In March 1941 the designers and engineers were also awarded the Stalin prize of the USSR of the second order for architecture and construction.

Kropotkinskaya - 08

Kropotkinskaya – 08

Kropotkinskaya opened with only one entrance vestibule, located at the end of Gogolevskiy Boulevard. This U-shaped structure was designed by S.M. Kravets and features two separate pavilions joined by a central arch. In late 1950s the station was given a slight reconstruction replacing the original cast of the upper pillars was replaced by marble and the floor was relayed with granite. The reconstruction finished with a new entrance which faces the Cathedral and Moskva River which was opened on 16 July 1960.

Text above from Wikipedia.

Kropotkinskaya station

Kropotkinskaya station

Across the road from the original entrance can be found a statue of Frederick Engels.

Kropotkinskaya

Date of opening;

15th May 1935, known as Dvorets Sovetov (Palace of Soviets) until the 20th March 1957

Construction of the station;

shallow, column, three-span

Architects of the underground part;

A. Dushkin and Ya. Lichtenberg

Grand-prix of the World Industrial Exhibition of 1937 (Paris), Grand-prix of the World Exhibition of 1958 (Bruxelles), The state premium of USSR ‘For architecture and construction’ (1941)

The first name of the station was connected with an ambitious project of the former USSR leaders. It was projected to build a huge public, political, administrative, cultural and educational centre – Palace of Soviets, on the bank of the Moskva River, over Prechistinskaya Naberezhnaya, between Vsekhsvyatsky Pereulok and Soymonovsky Proyezd, at the place of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior destroyed in 1931. An international competition was announced. For example, Le Corbusier presented the project of a building in which ‘human masses’ had to enter the conference hall ‘turning around turbine blades. However it was not considered advanced enough. The winner (architect A. Dushkin) projected to build an enormous sky-scraper with a statue of Lenin on the roof. Searchlights were projected in his eyes and a reading hall for 150 persons in his skull.

The huge Palace of Soviets required an appropriate metro station. Kropotkinskaya was built in time. But only the foundation of the palace was built and the assembling of metal structures began (were dissembled for defence) before World War II. After the war, it was decided to cancel the construction of the palace. In 1957 the station was renamed to Kropotkinskaya.

Everyone who appears there has an inexpressible, anxious and religious feeling. If not being distracted and hurried, one can feel the state of underground weightlessness, flight among clouds. The architect failed to build a temple of earth power – Palace of Soviets, similar to the Tower of Babel but created a temple of underground heaven, similar to Karnaka.

The station has two lines of columns – broadening-up massive square and elegant decahedral in turn. The columns ‘open’ from the caps closing in and forming a hipped roof. Vaults disappear dissolving in height. The effect is reinforced by illumination. Lamps are hidden in the column caps while their rays are directed upward. They spread by facets of white domes, making the feeling of endless space above head. The impression is intensified by colour spectrum – snow-white plastered vaults, cloud-white slightly fancy marble of the walls and columns from the Koyelginskoye Deposit. The floor is covered with pastel grey and pink granite from Vyborg as on a chessboard.

Text from Moscow Metro 1935-2005, p66

Location;

Khamovniki District

GPS;

55°44’43″N

37°36’12″E

Depth;

13 metres (43 ft)

Opened;

15 May 1935

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Krasnye Vorota – Line 1

Krasnye Vorota - 01

Krasnye Vorota – Line 1

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Krasnye Vorota – Line 1

Krasnye Vorota (Russian: Кра́сные воро́та, English: Red Gate) is a Moscow Metro station in the Krasnoselsky District, Central Administrative Okrug, Moscow, Russia. It opened on 15 May 1935 as one of the initial ten stations of the Metro. It is on the Sokolnicheskaya Line, between Chistye Prudy and Komsomolskaya stations.

Krasnye Vorota - 02

Krasnye Vorota – 02

Work began on Krasnye Vorota in the spring of 1932 and proceeded smoothly despite fears that the untested three-arch design would collapse under the weight of the soil. The station opened without a delay on 15 May 1935.

Krasnye Vorota - 03

Krasnye Vorota – 03

During planning, there were several working names including Krasnovorotskaya Ploshchad, and Krasnovorotskaya. The station’s name means Red Gate in Russian and comes from the square where the famous triumphal archway, Red Gate, once stood. The arch, which celebrated Russia’s victory in the Battle of Poltava, was demolished in 1927; but the name of the square remained until 1941.

Krasnye Vorota - 04

Krasnye Vorota – 04

In 1962, authorities renamed the station Lermontovskaya in honour of the Russian author Mikhail Lermontov. The square was renamed for Lermontov in 1941. There is still a bust of Lermontov at the end of the platform. The name reverted to Krasnye Vorota on 25 August 1986.

Krasnye Vorota - 05

Krasnye Vorota – 05

In 1952 the first turnstile in the Moscow Metro system was installed at this station.

Architects Ivan Fomin and N. Andrikanis [although I’ve seen elsewhere that the architect was Nikolai Ladovsky – this will be updated if definitive information becomes available] designed the station. It was one of Moscow’s first four deep-level stations, and one of the first two to employ a three-arched design with three parallel, circular tunnels. In this type of station, the outer tubes (which house the tracks and platforms) are separated from the larger central hall by heavy pylons. This design was planned to be used for the first time on the four central-city stations on the first Metro line, Krasnye Vorota, Chistye Prudy, Lubyanka, and Okhotnyi Ryad. However, due to construction difficulties a simpler two-arched design was implemented at Lubyanka and Chistye Prudy.

Krasnye Vorota - 06

Krasnye Vorota – 06

Krasnye Vorota has off-white tiled walls and pylons faced with dark red Shrosha marble from Georgia. A model of the station was exhibited at the 1938 World’s Fair in Paris, where it was awarded a Grand Prix.

Krasnye Vorota - 07

Krasnye Vorota – 07

Krasnye Vorota has two entrances. The southern is a subterranean vestibule with mezzanine stairwells and a distinctive shell-like pavilion designed by Nikolai Ladovsky, that stands on the south side of the Garden Ring (with an open Red Gates plaza in front of it), on the intersection of Myasnitsky drive, Boyarsky side-street and Khoromny lane.

Krasnye Vorota - 08

Krasnye Vorota – 08

The second entrance was built into the ground floor of the Red Gate skyscraper, designed by architect Alexey Dushkin and opened on 31 July 1954.

Text from Wikipedia.

Location;

Krasnoselsky District, Central Administrative Okrug

GPS;

55.7690°N

37.6487°E

Depth;

31 metres (102 ft)

Opened;

15 May 1935

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Chistye Prudy – Line 1

Cristye Purdi - 01

Cristye Purdi – 01

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Chistye Prudy – Line 1

Chistye Prudy (Russian: Чистые пруды, English: Clean Ponds) is a Moscow Metro station in the Basmanny District, Central Administrative Okrug, Moscow. It is on the Sokolnicheskaya Line, between Lubyanka and Krasnye Vorota stations. Chistye Prudy was opened on 15 May 1935 as a part of the first segment of the Metro. The station lies beneath Myasnitskaya Street, close to Turgenevskaya Square and the Clean Ponds, after which the station was named. It was the deepest station in Moscow Metro from 1935 until 1938.

Though planned to be a three-vaulted station with a full-length central hall (similar to Krasnye Vorota and Okhotny Ryad), Chistye Prudy was built instead according to a London Underground type design with two passages at either end of the station connecting the platforms. The outer platform vaults were finished to give the impression that a central hall did in fact exist, with what appeared to be a row of dark marble pylons. However, all of the archways except those at either end of the platform were barricaded. The architect of the initial station was Nikolai Kolli who worked with Le Corbusier on the nearby Tsentrosoyuz building.

Cristye Purdi - 02

Cristye Purdi – 02

During World War II the station was closed and its platforms were fenced off with plywood for use as the headquarters of the Joint Staff and PVO Air Defence. All trains bypassed this station.

Chistye Prudy’s central hall was built in 1971 so that the station could become a transfer point to the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line. The architects for this project were N. Shukhareva, L. Popov, and A. Fokina. The new portion of the station was finished to resemble the original sections as closely as possible, maintaining its original character. Escalators were built in the centre of the platform to connect to Turgenevskaya.

Cristye Purdi - 03

Cristye Purdi – 03

Chistye Prudy is finished with dark grey Ufalei and white Koelga marble, with a dark granite platform. In 1989 the station’s outer walls were refinished with marble rather than ceramic tile to approximate the original design even more closely.

The station was named Kirovskaya from its opening until 1990, and there is still a bronze bust of Sergey Kirov at the end of the platform. In 1992 it was briefly called Myasnitskaya, but renamed a few days later into its current name.

Cristye Purdi - 04

Cristye Purdi – 04

The station retains its original entrance, a glazed art deco pavilion, situated at start of the Chistoprudny boulevard with entrances from both sides: to the ponds on the boulevard and towards the Myasnitskiye Vorota square.

The pavilion links up to the subterranean vestibule and ticket hall. During the reconstruction in 1971, a subway was built directly linking the underground space with the new network of entrances for the Turgenevskaya station, which makes it possible to walk from one station vestibule to the other without descending into the platform halls.

Cristye Purdi - 05

Cristye Purdi – 05

The station’s transfer to Turgenevskaya of the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line is done via a tunnel that begins underneath Chisye Prudy’s platform. Transfer to the Sretensky Bulvar station of the Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line, opened on 13 January 2008.

The name ‘Chistye Prudy’ also refers to the neighbourhood surrounding the Metro station. This area is sometimes called Chistye Prudy or Pokrovka (referring to the street by the same name). In the 16th century, Pokrovskye Vorota (Pokrov Gates) stood at the current intersection of Pokrovka Street and Chistoprudny Boulevard.

Cristye Purdi - 06

Cristye Purdi – 06

The Chistye Prudy neighbourhood is famous for the beautiful Chistoprudny Boulevard and the pond after which the area is called—Chisty Prud (Clean Pond). In medieval times, several ponds stood on the location of the current single pond. They were used as refuse dumps and were fittingly called Griyaznye Prudy (Dirty Ponds). Under Peter the Great’s reign, his friend and advisor Menshikov dredged the ponds, unified them into one pond and renamed them Chistye Prudy (Clean Ponds).

There is the only tram line in Moscow Center near there. Namely, route 39 tram starts from Chistye Prudy station’s area and allows to ride near several landmarks of Moscow’s city centre in one go.

Text from Wikipedia.

One of the rare stations where the old historical caption “M E T R O” has remained.

Location;

Basmanny District, Central Administrative Okrug

GPS;

55.7657°N

37.6388°E

Depth;

35 metres (115ft)

Opened;

15 May 1935

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery