Paveletskaya

Павелецкая
Moscow Metro station
General information
LocationZamoskvorechye District
Central Administrative Okrug
Moscow
Russia
Coordinates55°43′50″N 37°38′16″E / 55.7305°N 37.6377°E / 55.7305; 37.6377
Owned byMoskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s)#2 Zamoskvoretskaya line Zamoskvoretskaya line
Platforms1 island platform
Tracks2
ConnectionsTram: A, 3, 38, 39
Bus: Б (along the Garden ring), 913, с920, с932. Night routes: н8.
Construction
Structure typePylon station
Depth33.5 metres (110 ft)
Platform levels1
ParkingNo
Other information
Station code030
History
Opened20 November 1943 (1943-11-20)
Passengers
200219,220,900
Services
Preceding station Moscow Metro Following station
Novokuznetskaya
towards Khovrino
Zamoskvoretskaya line Avtozavodskaya
Taganskaya
anticlockwise / outer
Koltsevaya line
transfer at Paveletskaya
Dobryninskaya
clockwise / inner
Location
Paveletskaya is located in Central Moscow
Paveletskaya
Paveletskaya
Location within Central Moscow

Paveletskaya (Russian: Павелецкая) is a Moscow Metro station on the Zamoskvoretskaya line, located in the Zamoskvorechye District, Central Administrative Okrug. The station has entrances to the Paveletsky rail terminal and the Garden ring. It was opened in 1943 and was designed by S.V. Lyashchenko and E.S. Demchenko. Paveletskaya features tall white marble pillars decorated with the hammer and sickle and a high, arched ceiling. The walls are faced with white marble.

Construction history

The long run between Teatralnaya (then Ploshchad Sverdlova, opened in 1938) and Avtozavodskaya was opened January 1, 1943. Work on Novokuznetskaya and Paveletskaya continued throughout 1943, and these two stations were opened 20 November 1943. Novokuznetskaya was commissioned as a completed station (most of its 1943 interiors surviving to date); Paveletskaya was built to a design by Alexey Dushkin as a temporary deep (33.5 meters underground) pylon station of London type - with two side platforms, but without a central hall.[1]

Work on converting Paveletskaya to a fully functional station commenced in 1950; the station was reopened February 21, 1953. Fragments of original pylons were retained in the southern end of the station; the rest was expanded to a spacious column type hall of the same structure as Mayakovskaya. Bronze-coloured inserts with hammer and sickle motive, the sole example of figurative art in this station, were actually painted ceramic castings.

Accidents

  • On 20 April 1987, at 19:55 local time, fire erupted in a northbound train approaching Paveletskaya. The train reached Paveletskaya, all passengers disembarked safely (the sole injury was a subway worker hospitalized with smoke poisoning). However, the train burnt out completely, damaging the interiors in the southern end on the station. It had to be partially rebuilt again.[2]
  • On 6 February 2004, at 08:40 local time, 40 passengers were killed in a terrorist attack on a train that left Avtozavodskaya for Paveletskaya.
  • On 15 January 2007, both Paveletskaya stations were evacuated due to a fire in the tunnel connecting them. No injuries were reported.[3]

Transfers

Incoming train on the platform

References

  1. Photograph of 1943 platform hall
  2. Пожар в поезде на станции "Павелецкая". Izvestia (in Russian). metro.molot.ru. 20 April 1987. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  3. Polishchuk, Kristina (16 January 2007). Дым без огня. В метро произошел очередной пожар (in Russian). Rossiyskaya Gazeta. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
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