Universitet (Kharkiv Metro)

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Saltovskaya Line

Istorichesky Muzei
   
Gosprom (Kharkiv Metro)
   
Universitet (Kharkiv Metro)
Universitet
   
Pushkinskaya (Kharkiv Metro)
Pushkinskaya
   
Kievskaya (Kharkiv Metro)
Kievskaya
   
Akademika Barabashova (Kharkiv Metro)
Akademika Barabashova
   
Akademika Pavlova (Kharkiv Metro)
Akademika Pavlova
   
Studencheskaya (Kharkiv Metro)
Studencheskaya
   
Geroev Truda (Kharkiv Metro)
Geroev Truda
 
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Central hall
Central hall

The Universitet or Universytet (Ukrainian: Університет; Russian: Университет) is a station on Kharkiv Metro's Saltovska Line. The station was opened on August 10, 1984 and is located beneath the Ploscha Svobody, the largest square in Europe and the second largest in the world after Tiananmen Square, in the center of Kharkiv. The station is named after the Kharkiv National University, which is located on top of the square.

Up until 1994 the station was called Dzerzhinskaya due to the Poloscha Dzerzhinskoho, the former name of Freedom Square. It currently forms a complex with the adjacent station Gosprom on the Alekseevskaya Line.

The station is located deep underground and is a bi-level pillar-trispan with blank marble columns. The station's second level balconiesare The station's service rooms are located on one of the second level balconies, and the other balcony is used as a underground passenger transfer for when there are fairs and concerts on the Ploscha Svobody. The underground transfer was once used for daily passenger usage during the 1980s, but was closed down during the early 1990s.

there are located on the second level. Six-meter cupolas in diameter, each hanging 12 meters apart and weighing 120 tons, are incorporated into the ceiling, in which the station's chandeliers hang. The station itself is 13 meters in width, due to the transfer point to the Gosprom station on the Alekseeyevskaya Line. The transfer itself was supposed to include escalator access to passengers, but as there was an economic crisis in the country, the escalators were abandoned and replaced with regualer stairs.

A large portrait of Felix Dzerzhinsky was located on the station which was later removed after the renovation of the station. Station vestibules are located on both ends of the station, which have been linked with a network of underground passenger tunnels which have many small shops.

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