Finland Station

Finlyandsky Rail Terminal
regional rail, international rail

Finland Rail Terminal
Station statistics
Address 5 Lenin Square, Saint Petersburg, Russia
Coordinates 59.956118 N,30.357424E
Connections metro station Ploshchad Lenina
Structure at-grade
Platforms 5 island platforms
Tracks 10
Other information
Opened 1870
Rebuilt 1960
Electrified 1952
Code 03820
Fare zone 0
Traffic
Passengers () 12 million p.a.

Finlyandsky Rail Terminal (Russian: Финля́ндский вокза́л, Finlyandsky vokzal), also known as the Finland Station, is a railway station in St. Petersburg, Russia handling transportation to northern destinations including Helsinki and Vyborg.

Trains from Helsinki arrive at the terminal, except for a transit train to Moscow which runs through Ladoga Rail Terminal. The terminal is also a part of high speed rail line between Saint Petersburg and Helsinki (see Karelian Trains).

The main entrance to the metro station Ploshchad Lenina is in the main building of Finland Station.

Contents

History

The station was built by Finnish State Railways as the eastern terminus of the Riihimäki-Saint Petersburg railroad. It was designed by Swedish architects and opened in 1870. The terminal formerly contained a special pavilion for Russian royalty.

The station was owned and operated by Finnish railways until early 1918, when the last train, carrying station personnel and equipment, as well as some of the last Finns escaping revolutionary Russia, left for Finland. Later, ownership of the station was exchanged for Russian property in Finland, including the Alexander Theatre in Helsinki.

The station is famously known for the arrival of Vladimir Lenin by train from Germany on 3 April 1917 to start the October Revolution. The event is commemorated by the Soviet statue of Lenin dominating the square in front of the station. This event is also referred to in the title of Edmund Wilson's book To the Finland Station (1940), a well-known study of revolutionary thought.

After the turmoil of the July Days, when workers and soldiers in the capital clashed with government troops, Lenin had to flee to Finland for safety, to avoid arrest. Lenin secretly returned from Finland disguised as a railway worker and protected by Eino Rahja and Alexander Shotman on 9 August 1917. Both times Lenin crossed the Russian-Finnish border on the engine #293 driven by Finnish engineer Hugo Jalava (Гуго Эрикович Ялава). The steam locomotive was decades later donated by Finland to the Soviet Union, and is now installed as a permanent exhibit at the station.[1]

During the Siege of Leningrad in 1941-43, the Finland Station was the only Leningrad rail terminus that remained in use. The railway would connect Leningrad with a station near the western shore of Lake Ladoga, to which supplies from the non-occupied parts of the Soviet Union would arrive from across the lake, by boat or over the lake ice, via the so-called Road of Life.

In the 1950s, the old station building was demolished and replaced with a new one, inaugurated in 1960. The turreted building is decorated with sculptures glorifying the October Revolution and incorporates a portico preserved from the original 1870 edifice.

Before Dawn on Wednesday 1 April 2009 a bomb exploded in the statue of Lenin, creating a 80 cm-100 cm hole in the back of the statue.[2]

Trains and destinations

Long distance

Train number Train name Destination Operated by Notes
033/034 Repin (rus: Репин) Helsinki Russian Railways Terminated on December 13, 2010
035/036 Sibelius (fin: Sibelius) Helsinki Finnish State Railways Terminated on December 13, 2010

Other destinations

Country Destinations
Russia Vyborg

High-speed rail

Train number Train name Destination Operated by
151/152 155/156 Allegro (fin: Allegro rus: Аллегро) Helsinki / Karelian Trains

Suburban destinations

Suburban commuter trains (elektrichka) connect Finlyandsky Rail Terminal with towns of Sestroretsk, Zelenogorsk, Primorsk and Vyborg.

See also

References

External links

Media related to Finlyandsky Rail Terminal at Wikimedia Commons
RZhD, OktZhD, SPbZhD, Russia
Finlyandsky Rail Terminal. Local train routes and Fare zone
Legend
Svetlogorsk
Lesogorsky
Prudy
Kamennogorsk
Hannilla
Mogino
Vozrozhdeniye
Borovinka
Gvardeyskoye
Krasny Sokol
Vysotsk
Lenijarvi
Pikhtovoye
Borodinskoye
Martosovo
Sortavala
Sokolinskoye
Buslovskoye
Popovo
Lushaika
Sovetsky
Zhitkovo
Pribylovo
Veshchevo
Bor
Perovo
Kuznechnoye 16
Kapeaslymi 16
152 km 16
148 km 16
Priozersk 15
Vyborg
Sinevo 14
Mullupelto 14
Lazorevka
Otradnoye 13
Verkhnecherkasovo
13
Primorsk
Volkhovstroy I 13
117 km
Pupistevo 12
Lebedevka
106 km 12
Gavrilovo
Sukhodolye 12
Yermilovo
Gromovo 12
Leypyasuo
11
106 km
Novy Byt 11
Kuolemojarvi
Losevo 11
Kirillovskoye
10
Tarasovskoye
Voybokalo 10
86 km
Petjajarvi 10
Zakhodskoye
Zhikharevo 9
Kanneljarvi
78 km 9
Yappilya
Sosnovo 9
Mesterjarvi
73 km 9
Gorkovskoye
Nazia 8
72 km
69 km 8
70 km
67 km 8
Privetenskoye
Orekhovo 8
Lembolovo
7
54 km
Apraksin 7
Vaskelovo
Mikhaylovskaya 7
63 km
Nevskaya Dubrovka 7
Roshchino
37 km 7
Molodyozhnaya
Teplobetonnaya 7
Ushkovo
Chernaya Rechka 7
Mga 6
Ladozhskoye ozero
45 km 6
44 km
Gory 6
Vaganovo
Pavlovo-na-Neve 6
Borisova Griva
Geroyskaya 6
47 km
Sady 6
Gruzino
Petrokrerost 6
Zelenogorsk
19 km 6
Irinovka
5
Rakhia
Ostrovki 5
39 km
20 km 5
Peri
Manushkino 5
Oselki
16 km 5
Komarovo
19 km 5
Repino
Dunay 5
Solnechnoye
Radchenko 5
Kurort
Proba 5
Kavgolovo
Koltushi 4
Beloostrov
Myaglova 4
Sestroretsk
Kirpichny zavod 4
Razliv
Shcheglova 4
Tarkhovka
Kornevo 4
Alexandrovskaya
Romanovka 4
Gorskaya
Toksovo 4
Kuzmololovo
7 km 3
Kapitolovo
5 km 3
Dibuny
Zanevsky post 3
Pesochnaya
Melnichny Ruchey 3
Levashovo
Vsevolozhskaya 3
Pargolovo
Berngardovka 3
Lisy Nos
Kovalevo 3
Olgino
Post Kovalevo 3
Lakhta
Lavriki 3
Yakhtennaya
Devyatkino 3
Shuvalovo
2
Ozerki
Murino 2
Udelnaya
Ruchyi 2
Staraya Derevnya
Rzhevka 2
Novaya Derevnya
Piskaryevka 2
Lanskaya
Kushelevka 1
Saint Petersburg
Finlyandsky Rail Terminal 0
Fare zone
Preceding station   Finnish Railways   Following station
toward Kouvola
Kouvola-Saint Petersburg Terminus
Preceding station   Saint Petersburg Railway Division   Following station
Terminus Direct to Beloostrov through Sestroretsk
Local
toward Beloostrov