*** Welcome to piglix ***

Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line

 6  Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line
MM L6 - Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya.png
Overview
Type Rapid transit
System Moscow Metro
Locale Moscow
Termini Novoyasenevskaya (southwest)
Medvedkovo (northeast)
Stations 24
Daily ridership 1,283,024
Operation
Opened 1 May 1958
Owner Moskovsky Metropoliten
Operator(s) Moskovsky Metropoliten
Character Underground
Rolling stock 81-717/714,
81-717.5/714.5
81-717.5M/714.5M
Technical
Line length 37.8 kilometres (23.5 mi)
Track gauge 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 2732 in)
Electrification Third rail
Route map
Medvedkovo
Babushkinskaya
Sviblovo yard
Sviblovo
Botanichesky Sad  14  (OSI)
VDNKh  13  (OSI)
Alekseyevskaya
Rizhskaya Rizhsky railway station Rzhevskaya railway station
Prospekt Mira  5 
Sukharevskaya
Turgenevskaya  1   10 
Kitay-gorod  7 
Tretyakovskaya  2   8 
Oktyabrskaya  5 
Shabolovskaya
Leninsky Prospekt  14  (OSI)
Akademicheskaya
Profsoyuznaya
Novye Cheryomushki
Kaluzhskaya (closed)
Kaluzhskoye yard
Kaluzhskaya
Belyayevo
Konkovo
Tyoply Stan
Yasenevo
Novoyasenevskaya  12 

The Kaluzhsko–Rizhskaya Line (Russian: Калу́жско-Ри́жская ли́ния, IPA: [kɐˈluʂskə ˈrʲiʂskəjə ˈlʲinʲɪjə]) is a line of the Moscow Metro, that originally existed as two separate radial lines, Rizhskaya and Kaluzhskaya opened in 1958 and 1962, respectively. Only in 1971 were they united into a single line as the central section connecting the stations Oktyabrskaya to Prospekt Mira was completed. It was also the first line in Moscow to have a cross-platform transfer. The Rizhsky radius is roughly aligned with a northern avenue Prospekt Mira, while the Kaluzhskiy radius generally follows a southwestern street Profsoyuznaya Ulitsa. Presently, the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line is the third busiest in the system with a passenger traffic rate of 1.015 million per day. It has a bi-directional length of 37.6 kilometres (23.4 mi), and a travel time of 56 minutes, typically it is coloured orange on Metro maps and numbered 6.

The Kaluzhsko–Rizhskaya Line was the first one in Moscow to be built in the time of the new epoch, when contrary to the old time-consuming manual work that produced the most famous stations in the system the De-Stalinization policies of Nikita Khrushchev forced the modernisation and development of new saving techniques.

Nonetheless the overall layout of the Metro was completed in 1954 when the ring became fully operational. Moscow Metro planners immediately drew new areas of development which would come in radii starting at the ring. The first such radius became the Rizhsky, which would expand northwards from the Botanichesky Sad (now Prospekt Mira) station along the Mira avenue past the Rizhsky Rail Terminal and terminate at the newly built All-Russia Exhibition Centre. Construction began in the mid 1950s and in 1958 the first four stations of the new radius opened. Already the first stations show a clear transition away from the Stalinist elements in architecture, where it is obvious how the original project was altered to make it simpler and aesthetic. New construction methods, such as shortening the station vault diameters from 9.5 to 8.5 metres and new element junction methods dramatically reduced the building time.


...
Wikipedia

...