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Sokolnicheskaya Line: Encyclopedia BETA


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Sokolnicheskaya Line



The Sokolnicheskaya Line (), formerly Kirovsko-Frunzenskaya, was the first line of the Moscow Metro, dating back to 1935. The line was opened to connect the northern Sokolniki park with the three main railway stations, the Kremlin, and the state library before moving on to the future site of the Palace of Soviets and onto the Gorky Park of Culture and Leasure. Since then it has extended into the northeastern districts of Preobrazhenskoye and Bogorodskoye and more significantly the southwestern ones of Khamovniki, Lomonosovsky and Troparyovo. Presentely the line compromises 26 kilometres of track with 19 stations and carries a daily load of 1.7 million passengers.

Timeline

SegmentDate openedLength
Sokolniki â€" Park KulturyMay 15, 19358.4 km
Park Kultury â€" SportivnayaMay 1, 19572.5 km
Sportivnaya â€" UniversitetJanuary 12, 19594.5 km
Universitet â€" Yugo-ZapadnayaDecember 30, 19634.5 km
Sokolniki â€" Preobrazhenskaya PloschadDecember 31, 19652.5 km
Preobrazhenskaya Ploschad â€" Ulitsa PodbelskogoAugust 3, 19903.8 km
Vorobyovy Gory â€" after reconstructionDecember 14, 2000N/A
Total19 Stations26.2 km

Name changes

StationPrevious name(s)Years
Krasniye VorotaKrasniye Vorota19351962
Lermontovskaya19621986
Chistiye PrudyKirovskaya19351990
Myasnitskaya1990
LubyankaDzerzhinskaya19351990
Okhotny RyadOkhotny Ryad19351955
Imeni L.M. Kaganovicha19551957
Okhotny Ryad19571965
Prospekt Marksa19651990
KropotkinskayaDvorets Sovetov19351957
Park KulturyTsentralnyi Park Kultury i Otdykha Imeni Gorkogo19351980
Vorobyovy GoryLeninskie Gory19572002

Transfers

#Transfer toAt
2Zamoskvoretskaya LineOkhotny Ryad
3Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya LineBiblioteka Imeni Lenina
4Filyovskaya LineBiblioteka Imeni Lenina
5Koltsevaya LineKomsomolskaya, Park Kultury
6Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya LineChistiye Prudy
7Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya LineLubyanka
9Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya LineBiblioteka Imeni Lenina

Rolling stock

Two depots are assigned to the line, the Severnoe (No.1) and the Cherkizovo (No.13). Starting in 1997 both depots have been upgrading to the new 81-717.5M/714.5M trains (all factory fresh). Cherkizovo currently operates 22 seven-carriage trains of the type. Severonoe's upgrade was slower and presently 28 of its 35 seven-carriage trains are the new models, the rest being the old Ezh, Ezh1 and the Em-508 and Em-509.

Recent developments and future plans

Many of the older stations on the line have received renovations to keep them in good condition, such as the replacement of ceramic tile with marble in Krasnoselskaya's vestibule, new lighting in Kropotkinskaya and Okhotniy Ryad. A new exit was also added to Kropotkinskaya in 1998. Vorobyovy Gory was reopened in 2002 after 16 years of repair work made it safe for use again.

Extensions are planned at both ends of the line. In the south, one station, Troparyovo, is planned. Further extensions in the north are hampered by the position of Ulitsa Podbelskogo and Cherkizovskaya, which were built so they could become of a projected second ring line which has been in planning since the 1960s. As a result the Cherkizovskaya's tunnels have provisions for a second perpendicular station, that would allow the line to continue eastwards to the destrict of Golyanovo and meet the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line and Shchyolkovskaya. However, this cannot happen and the project looks as distant today as it did 40 years ago.



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