Prospekt Gagarina (Kharkiv Metro)

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Kholodnogorsko-Zavodskaya
Kholodnaya Gora
Yuzhny Vokzal
Tsentralny Rynok
Sovetskaya
   
Prospekt Gagarina (Kharkiv Metro)
Prospekt Gagarina
   
Metrostroitelei Imeni G.I. Vashchenko (Kharkiv Metro)
   
Sportinaya (Kharkiv Metro)
Sportivnaya
   
Zavod Imeni Malysheva (Kharkiv Metro)
Zavod Imeni Malysheva
   
Moskovsky Prospekt (Kharkiv Metro)
Moskovsky Prospekt
   
Marshala Zhukova (Kharkiv Metro)
Marshala Zhukova
   
Imeni Sovetskoi Armii (Kharkiv Metro)
Imeni Sovetskoi Armii
   
Imeni A.S. Maselskogo (Kharkiv Metro)
Imeni A.S. Maselskogo
   
Traktorny Zavod (Kharkiv Metro)
Traktorny Zavod
   
Proletarskaya (Kharkiv Metro)
Proletraskaya
 
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Central hall one way
Central hall one way

The Prospekt Gagarina or Prospekt Haharina (Ukrainian: Проспект Гагаріна; Russian: Проспект Гагарина) is a station on Kharkiv Metro's Kholodnogorsko-Zavodskaya Line. Opened on August 23, 1975, it is located in the southern part of the city's center, at the beginning of the Prospekt Haharina street, for which the station is named, and near the Kharkiv-Levada Railway Station and the nearby autostation, which accounts for the station's fairly large passenger traffic.

During the planning stage of the metro station, the station was to be called Levada. Also, the station was to be decorated in traditional Ukrainian motifs and lettering. On the walls there were supposed to be mosaics depicting grasses and flowers. However, the oblast governing board did not approve of the plans, and some time before the grand opening of the station, the architectural details were taken off, to be replaced with a more standard type of station.

Central hall other way
Central hall other way

The station is lain shallow underground and is a pillar-trispan, with square columns. The station itself was designed by V.A Spivachyk and P.G. Chechelnitskiy; engineered by P.A. Bochikashvili and V.S. Kotov; and decorated by A.F. Pronin and G.V. Tischenko. For the most part, blank marble was used, although grey granite was also used for the background of the station's name, which is seen in large aluminum letters. The lighting comes from groups of lamps placed in between the "ribs" (bars) of the ceiling. The floor has been paved with polished flags of grey and black granite.

Coming from the side of the station vestibule, the walls are made of light-rose coloured marble, Gazgan. The station has no escalators, since it is put shallow, and instead has wide stairs, above which are installed architectural stained glass windows depicting the triumph of the first man in space, Yuri Gagarin.

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