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Kiyevskaya (Koltsevaya Line)

Kiyevskaya
Киевская
Moscow Metro station
Kievskaya KL 2010.jpg
Location Dorogomilovo District
Western Administrative Okrug
Moscow
Coordinates 55°44′41″N 37°33′52″E / 55.7446°N 37.5644°E / 55.7446; 37.5644Coordinates: 55°44′41″N 37°33′52″E / 55.7446°N 37.5644°E / 55.7446; 37.5644
Owned by Moskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s)  5  Koltsevaya Line
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Connections Bus: 77, 119, 132, 157,
240, 791, 818, 900
Trolleybus: 7, 17, 34, 39
Construction
Structure type Pylon station
Depth 53 metres (174 ft)
Platform levels 1
Parking No
Other information
Station code 077
History
Opened 14 March 1954; 63 years ago (1954-03-14)
Services
Preceding station   Moscow Metro   Following station
anticlockwise / outer
Koltsevaya Line
clockwise / inner
Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line
Transfer at: Kiyevskaya
Filyovskaya Line
Transfer at: Kiyevskaya
toward  Kuntsevskaya
Filyovskaya Line
Transfer at: Kiyevskaya
Location
Kiyevskaya is located in Central Moscow
Central Moscow metro lines.svg
Kiyevskaya
Kiyevskaya
Location within Central Moscow

Kiyevskaya (Russian: Ки́евская) is a Moscow Metro station in the Dorogomilovo District, Western Administrative Okrug, Moscow. It is on the Koltsevaya Line, between Park Kultury and Krasnopresnenskaya stations. It is named after the nearby Kiyevsky Rail Terminal. The design for the station was chosen in an open competition held in Ukraine; the entry submitted by the team of E. I. Katonin, V. K. Skugarev, and G. E. Golubev placed first among 73 others and it became the final design. Kievskaya features low, square pylons faced with white marble and surmounted by large mosaics by A.V. Myzin celebrating Russo-Ukrainian unity. Both the mosaics and the arches between the pylons are edged with elaborate gold-colored trim. At the end of the platform is a portrait of Vladimir Lenin.

The entrance to the station, which is shared with both of the other two Kievskaya stations, is built into the Kiev railway station. With the completion of the segment of track between Belorusskaya and Park Kultury in 1954 the Koltsevaya Line became fully operational with trains running continuously around the loop for the first time.

One of the station's entrances is topped by a reproduction of an Art Nouveau Paris Metro entrance by Hector Guimard, given by the Régie autonome des transports parisiens in 2006 in exchange for an artwork by Russian artist Ivan Lubennikov installed at Madeleine station in Paris.


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Wikipedia

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