Kurskaya-Koltsevaya

Kurskaya-Koltsevaya

Kurskaya ( _ru. Курская) is a Moscow Metro station, located on the Koltsevaya Line. Opened on 1 January, 1950, the station is built to a design of architects G.Zakharkov and Z.Chernysheva under the supervision of famous architect Ivan Zholtovsky who were awarded the Stalin Prize in 1950 for the design. The station is a rare Deep column station built in the 1950s style of Stalinist Architecture.

The design features four rows of collumns which support the vaults, though column is in fact "doubled" hence their wide appearnce. In the centre of the station is a large open space with a large vault topping it that rests on four pylons forming an arbour, from which a staircase leads off as a transfer to Kurskaya-Radialnaya of the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line. Another interesting detail of the station is the lack of sculptures and artwork, instead however this compensated by small details such as Torchiere (now removed) in the arbour which light the granite stairwell and hidden lamps in the nieches of the vault, which is covered by a bronze frieze symbolising the dawn and blossoming of Mother Russia. Additional lighting is provided by eight elegant conical chandeliers with fluorescent tubes. The floor is laid with red and grey granite, and the walls and columns with white "koyelga" marble.

The station's large vestibule is located right next to the north, and adjacent to Kursky Rail Terminal, hence the name of the station, and serves both the ring and radial stations, this contains a large circular underground lobby in the centre of which is a bronze sculpture of wheat (inclining Kursk as the centre of the Chernozem region), this is also linked to the 1938 vestibule of the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya station, allowing for a transfer there. The interior of the surface structure, adorned with citations from the Anthem of the Soviet Union once contained a large statue of Joseph Stalin (sculptor N.Tomsky), this was removed in 1961. On 3 July, 2008 the vestibule was closed for a period of a year to replace escalators, upgrade and renovation. The station's second entrance to Zemlyanoy Val opened in December 1995, is a shared underground vestibule, which also doubles as a tranfer to Chkalovskaya of the Lyublinskaya Line.

Possibly the most intersting detail of the station is large metalic plaque on the station wall, adorned with artwork has an inscription: "Kurskaya, large ring, 1945-1949". This implies the original plan to have the Koltsevaya Line follow the Sadovoye Koltso, (the large ring) and then a smaller ring line to follow the Boulevard Ring (the small ring). Given the fact that Kurskaya was originally a terminus for the line, however even before the opening of the station the plan was revised for the Koltsevaya line's northern route to deviate from the ring, and for the smaller ring project to be abandoned.

Evidence of the line's former terminus status is seen behind the station with the presence of reversal sidings, there is also a service branch that links to Chkalovskaya's reversal sidings.

External links


*ru icon [http://russos.livejournal.com/290087.html#cutid1 extensive gallery by Russsos]
*ru icon [http://www.mosmetro.ru/pages/page_6.php?id_page=216 Moskovsky Metropoliten] -Description and photographs
*ru icon [http://news.metro.ru/f56.html News.Metro.ru] -Description and photographs
*ru icon [http://www.metro.ru/stations/koltsevaya/kurskaya/ Metro.ru] -Description and photographs
*ru icon [http://www.metrowalks.ru/moscow/station-5-6 Metrowalks.ru] -Photographs
*ru icon [http://www.mymetro.ru/cgi-bin/list.pl?lng=ru&a=1&b=5&c=01 Mymetro.ru] -Description and photographs
*en icon [http://www.kartametro.info/?hl=EN&ms=Kurskaya&z=17&t=k KartaMetro.info] — Station location and exits on Moscow map (English/Russian)

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