Dubrovka (Metro)

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For other uses of "Dubrobka", see Dubrovka
Lyublinskaya Line
   
Marina Roshcha
Marina Roshcha
   
Dostoevskaya
Dostoevskaya
   
Tsvetnoi Bulvar
   
Trubnaya
Trubnaya
   
Sretensky Bulvar
Sretensky Bulvar
Chkalovskaya
   
Ploshchad Ilicha
Rimskaya
Krestyanskaya Zastava
   
Dubrovka (Metro)
Dubrovka
Kozhukhovskaya
Pechatniki
Volzhskaya
Lyublino
Bratislavskaya
Marino
   
Borisovo
Borisovo
   
Shipilovskaya
Shipilovskaya
   
Zyablikovo
Zyablikovo
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Pavilion
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Pavilion

Dubrovka (Russian: Дубровка ~ Oakwood) is a station on the Moscow Metro's Lyublinskaya Line. Originally the station was to open along with the first stage of the Lyublinsky radius in 1995. However problems with building an escalator tunnel in tough hydrological conditions prevented it to be opened. However as the station is located in the middle of an industrial zone, due to the economic difficulties of the late 1990s that hit Russia, most of these recently privatised industries were very short of finances and their production output was likewise stalled. This was enough to prevent additional heating of the frozen earth and finally on 11th December, 1999 the Moscow's mayor Yuriy Luzhkov opened the station. At a depth of 62.5 metres the station became the deepest in Moscow (until being beaten by Park Pobedy in 2003). The station in its design is identical to its neighbour Krestyanskaya Zastava where both are wall-columned with no underplatform service spaces.

With no solid theme, the station (work of architects Ye.Barsky, V.Fillipov and S.Belyakova) is decorated with bright monochromatic marble on the columns and walls. The floor is covered in red and black granite. The station is decorated by a bright mosaic in the end of the central hall (artist Zurab Tsereteli). The vestibule of the station is interlinked with a subway network under the Sharikopodshipnikovskaya street, with modern glazed metal and concrete pavilions. The average passenger traffic is 14,400 people per day. Behind the station there is a piston junction used for emergency reversals of trains.

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