Varshavskaya

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Kakhovskaya Line
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Varshavskaya
Kakhovskaya
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Varshavskaya Station
Varshavskaya Station

Varshavskaya (Russian: Варшавская) is a station on the Moscow Metro's Kakhovskaya Line. The station was opened on August 11, 1969 as part of the Zamoskvoretskaya Line and up until 1995 was served by it. Today it is the only interim station on the shortest line of the Metro.

The station was designed by architects Nina Alyoshina and Nataliya Samoylova to a typical 1960s Moscow pillar-trispan design - "sorokonozhka" (centipede) and features two rows of 40 square pillars which flare towards the top faced with pink-yellow marble. A floor laid with grey granite of various shades and asphalt on the platform edges. The walls are covered by indigo ceramic tiles and blue marble socle. In addition there are several mettalic artworks depicting silhouette images of famous landmarks in the city of Warsaw (work of Kh.Rysin, A.Lapin, D.Bodniyek)

A train on Varshavskaya
A train on Varshavskaya

The station is located next to two important southbound arteries - the Varshavskoye Highway and the Varshavskaya Railway station of the Moscow Railway - Paveletsky direction, ironically neither actually are pointed in Warsaw's direction and neither reach the city. The eastern vestibule has subways leading directly to the rail platforms, whilst the western vestibule is situated under the T-junction of the highway and the Chongarsky Boulevard that comes off it.

Behind the station is a branch that leads to the Zamoskvoretskoye depot which serves both the Kakhovskaya and the Zamoskvoretskaya lines. Because of this, on occasion there is a direct service from Varshavskaya to all northbound stations on the Zamoskvoretskaya Line and vice-versa. Trains that do that are singled out by being eight rather than six cars long.


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