Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Prospekt Mira (Koltsevaya Line)

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Owned by
  
Moskovsky Metropoliten

Structure type
  
1 island platform

Platform levels
  
1

Opened
  
30 January 1952

Architectural style
  
Stalinist architecture

Platforms in use
  
1

Line(s)
  
5  Koltsevaya Line

Depth
  
40 metres (130 ft)

Parking
  
No

Station code
  
069

Level
  
1

Tracks
  
2

Prospekt Mira (Koltsevaya Line) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Komsomolskaya, Novoslobodskaya, Taganskaya, Sukharevskaya, Rizhskaya

Prospekt Mira (Russian: Проспе́кт Ми́ра) is a station of the Moscow Metro's Koltsevaya Line. Opened on 30 January 1952 as part of the second stage of the line, it is a pylon design by architects Vladimir Gelfreykh and Mikhail Minkus.

Map of Prospekt Mira

Originally called Botanichesky Sad (Ботанический Сад) after the Botanical Garden of Moscow State University which are located nearby, the theme of this station develops the connotation of the name in the overall colour tone. The pylons are faced with flared white marble, and are topped with ceramic bas-relief frieze made of floral elements. In the centre are medallion bas-reliefs (work of G.Motovilov) featuring the different aspects in the development of agriculture in the Soviet Union. The station walls are laid with dark red Ural marble and chessboard floor pattern is made of grey and black granite. The ceiling vault is decorated with casts, and lighting comes from several cylindrical chandeliers.

The station's vestibule is built into the ground floor of a multi-story building on the corner of Mira Avenue and Protopopovsky lane. Designed by A.Arkin, its façade features sculptures and an original clock over the two archways. Inside, opposite the escalator hall is a large smalt artwork Mothers of the World by A.Kuznetsov.

In 1958, the wall at the end of the station was dismantled to make way for a transfer to the new station Botanichesky Sad on the Rizhskaya Line. In 1966 both stations were renamed after to avoid confusion with the larger Moscow Botanical Garden of Academy of Sciences, which would eventually see the station Botanichesky Sad be named after that in 1978.

In May 2015, the vestibule of the station was closed for one year, due to major refurbishments works, reopened on 16 May 2016.

References

Prospekt Mira (Koltsevaya Line) Wikipedia


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