Moscow Metro – Oktyabrskaya – Line 5

Oktyabrskaya - Line 5 - by Ludvig14

Oktyabrskaya – Line 5 – by Ludvig14

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Oktyabrskaya – Line 5

Oktyabrskaya (Октя́брьская) is a station on the Koltsevaya line of the Moscow Metro. Opened on 1 January 1950, Oktyabrskaya was part of the first segment of the fourth stage.

Oktyabrskaya - Line 5 - 01

Oktyabrskaya – Line 5 – 01

Designed by Leonid Polyakov, who took the mid-19th century Neoclassical triumphal Empire style as the basis, incorporated the themes of the 1812 Victory over Napoleon to match the 1945 Soviet victory in the Second World War, applying it to the standard pylon tri-vault design.

Oktyabrskaya - Line 5 - 03

Oktyabrskaya – Line 5 – 03

Both the central and platform vaults are divided by arches which have large medallions which contain bas-reliefs of Soviet Army soldiers surrounded by ornaments. The pylons contain bas-relief centred ventilation grilles which are flanked by two anodized aluminium torches that give the overall golden glow to the bright grey marble that faces them. The station walls are ceramic tiles and are decorated with relief images of gilded wreaths and stars. The end of a central hall contains a miniature triumphal arch with a metallic gate behind which there’s a small room with a blue ceiling, symbolising the time of a peaceful life. The floor of the station is laid with grey and red granite and the perimeter of the central hall is also bordered by a pattern of bright and dark marble.

Oktyabrskaya - Line 5 - 04

Oktyabrskaya – Line 5 – 04

The station has a large vestibule on the Octyabrskaya square (until 1922 – Kaluzhskaya square, named after the city of Kaluga) on the Garden Ring and hence the station’s original name Kaluzhskaya (Калужская), renamed on 6 June 1961 to its present name (though the square’s historic name was restored in 1992). The vestibule, on the exterior, contains large bas-reliefs of trumpeters that are lit by lamps concealed as columns underneath. Inside, the ticket and escalator halls are decorated with casts and bas-reliefs containing battle banners, weapons and figures of the Soviet Army and women symbolizing glory (work by G.Motovilov). In 1989 the stand-alone structure was built in the Moscow Institute of Steel and Alloys.

Oktyabrskaya - Line 5 - 02

Oktyabrskaya – Line 5 – 02

In 1962, a set of staircases were added to the central hall for a transfer to the newly opened Oktyabrskaya of the Kaluzhsko–Rizhskaya line.

Text above from Wikipedia.

Oktyabrskaya entrance

Oktyabrskaya entrance

More pictures of the entrance and the ticket hall have recently been added to the slide show below.

Oktyabrskaya

Date of opening;

1st January 1950

Construction of the station;

pier, three-span, deep

Former name;

Kaluzhskaya (before 6th June 1961)

Architect of the underground part;

L. Polyakov

Transit to Station Oktyabrskaya of the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line

The basis of the station is massive pylons with cornices, which support quite flat vaults. The pylons are faced with Ural ivory-coloured marble with dark inclusions. The walls are faced with light yellowish tiles and raised ceramic gilded stars and laurels. The floor is covered of red granite with light grey edging and laurels made of black gabbro on this background. Moulded belts stretch throughout the vaults with wreaths at the ends in which are side-views of warriors and plates as if for their names, but they are empty. Torch lamps illuminate the station with calm light; its atmosphere calls to be unhurried and do not disturb eternal peace of unknown heroes. The perspective of the hall opening from the escalators ends with a sky-blue arch with a lattice gate. The arch may be perceived either a sanctuary part of a church crypt or the midday sky or, maybe, Heaven.

Ground pavilion

The ground pavilion is a classic triumphant arch built in a constructivist building. Two sculptures of military buglers (sculptor G. Motovilov) are placed above the entrance. The architecture of the cash hall copies the Janus Arch (Rome) with four arched portals. The escalator is covered with a hip-roof; modelled girls with funeral wreaths in their hands are placed on the vault.

Text from Moscow Metro 1935-2005, p71

Location:

GPS:

55.7297°N

37.6091°E

Depth:

40 metres (130 ft)

Opened:

1 January 1950

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Novoslobodskaya -Line 5

Novoslobodskaya - Line 5 - by Alex 'Florstein' Fedorov

Novoslobodskaya – Line 5 – by Alex ‘Florstein’ Fedorov

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Novoslobodskaya – Line 5

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 - 01

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 – 01

Novoslobodskaya (Новослобо́дская) is a Moscow Metro station in the Tverskoy District of the Central Administrative Okrug, Moscow. It is on the Koltsevaya Line, between Belorusskaya and Prospekt Mira stations. Novoslobodskaya was opened on 30 January 1952. From 21 November 2020 to 4 March 2022, the entrance of the station is closed for reconstruction.

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 - 03

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 – 03

Alexey Dushkin, the station’s architect, has long wished to utilise stained glass in decoration of a metro station, and the first drawings date to pre–World War II times. In 1948, with the aid of a young architect Alexander Strelkov, Dushkin came across the renowned artist Pavel Korin, who agreed to compose the artworks for the panels. The rest of the station was designed around the glass panels. Dushkin, taking the standard pylon layout designed the overall impression to resemble that of underground crypt.

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 - 04

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 – 04

It is best known for its 32 stained glass panels, which are the work of Latvian artists E. Veylandan, E. Krests, and M. Ryskin. Each panel, surrounded by an elaborate brass border, is set into one of the station’s pylons and illuminated from within. Both the pylons and the pointed arches between them are faced with pinkish Ural marble and edged with brass molding. At the end of the platform is a mosaic by Pavel Korin entitled ‘Peace Throughout the World’. The stained glass panels, the mosaic, the brass trim, and the elegant conical chandeliers were all carefully cleaned and restored in 2003.

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 - 02

Novoslobodskaya -Line 5 – 02

The vestibule is an imposing structure with a grand portico, located on the northeast corner of Novoslobodskaya and Seleznevskaya streets.

Text above from Wikipedia.

Novoslobodskaya

Date of opening;

30th January 1952

Construction of the station;

deep, pier, three-span

Architects of the underground part;

A. Dushkin and A. Strelkov

Transition to station Mendeleevskaya

The most striking element of the station decoration is stained-glass windows illuminated from within. It seems that such decoration of the station should make it slightly Gothic but no Gothic is there at all. There is an underground epic chamber with windows opening to Fairyland. The comparatively narrow pylons of the station widen upward, toward the hall and platforms, and gradually go into the vaults. The broad passes between the pylons are also arched. The connecting curve of the pass vaults and station vaults is decorated with golden cord in relief, which highlights the horseshoe-shaped arch. The same golden cord borders carinate arches above the horseshoe-shaped passes. It forms an arcade of kokoshniks in the central hall.

Latvian craftsmen in Riga by P. Korin’s cartoons manufactured stained-glass windows. Medieval Russia has no idea of stained glass windows. Hence Korin’s works are not stylization but the first works of the new Russian epic style of arts and crafts. There are fantastic flowers, growing from antique vases, cooing pigeons, florid ornaments. There are medallions in the upper part of each stained-glass window. Twenty six of them have geometric patterns and five-pointed ruby stars. Other six are devoted to the integrity of workers, peasants, and intellectuals. They are ‘Pianist’, ‘Painter’, ‘Power Engineer’, ‘Harvesting’ (pay attention to umbrellas over tractors), ‘Geographer’, and ‘Architect’. A stunning mosaic panel is on the blind end of the station – a woman with a child in her arms going toward onlookers by flourishing earth. The baby turns up his arms to pigeons flying toward banner ‘Peace Throughout the World!’ On the background, a huge five-pointed star, golden sickle and hammer rise over the planet as the sun.

The pylons, passes, walls, and passageways to the escalators are faced with light Ural marble, grey and yellow with dark inclusions, of the Karkodinskoye Deposit. The floor of the station is a chessboard made of plates of grey granite and black gabbro. The station is illuminated with chandeliers along with illuminated stained-glass windows.

Text from Moscow Metro 1935-2005, p84

Location:

GPS:

55.7799°N

37.6028°E

Depth:

40 metres (130 ft)

Opened:

30 January 1952

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Mendeleevskaya – Line 9

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - Mikhail (Vokabre) Shcherbakov

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – Mikhail (Vokabre) Shcherbakov

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery

Moscow Metro – Mendeleevskaya – Line 9

Compassion

Compassion

Mendeleyevskaya (Менделе́евская) is a Moscow Metro station on the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line. It is located in the Tverskoy District of central Moscow.

It was opened on 31 December 1988. The station was designed by Nina Aleshina and Natalya Samoilova on the theme of Dmitri Mendeleev and his works.

Its depth is 48.5 meters (159 ft). The transfer to the Novoslobodskaya station of the Koltsevaya Line is available.

A stray dog named Malchik lived at the station, and after he was killed a monument Compassion (Сочувствие) was erected in the station.

Text from Wikipedia.

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 01

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 01

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 02

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 02

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 03

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 03

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 04

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 04

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 05

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 05

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 06

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 06

Mendeleevskaya - Line 9 - 07

Mendeleevskaya – Line 9 – 07

Location:

GPS:

55.7810°N

37.6011°E

Depth:

48.5 metres (159 ft)

Opened:

31 December 1988

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Moscow Metro – a Socialist Realist Art Gallery