Lakhta railway station

RZhD, OktZhD, SPbZhD, Russia
Saint Petersburg Finlyandsky - Beloostrov through Sestroretsk
Legend
Vyborg
Zelenogorsk
Solnechnoye
line Sestroretsk spur line (1871-1873)
line Miller's line (1873-1886)
To Sestroretsk
42.7
43.0 Beloostrov
Pesochny
Lanskaya
33.3 Razliv
30.1 Alexandrovskaya
Kirovskaya Small October railway
Sub Staraya Derevnya Line 4
Severny factory
Vyborg
Beloostrov
Udelnaya
5.0 Lanskaya
St Engineering objects
Sub Ploshchad Lenina Line 1
0.0 Finlyandsky Rail Terminal Saint Petersburg
Distances in kilometers
   
Lakhta railway station Russian: Станция Лахта
Commuter service passenger and cargo station

Lakhta railway station in 1900s
Station statistics
Lines Saint Petersburg Finlyandsky - Beloostrov through Sestroretsk
Connections Historical Primorskaya line
Levels hight
Platforms 2, side
Tracks 2
Other information
Opened 1894[1]
Rebuilt 1952
Electrified 1952[2]
Code 03891
Fare zone 3

Lakhta railway station (Russian: Ста́нция Ла́хта) is a railway station that was opened Lakhta settlement and now is in St. Petersburg, Russia.

It was built on the Joint-stock company of the Prinorskaya St.-Peterburg-Sestroretsk railway and was opened on July 12, 1894. When it opened, it was the terminal station. On October 31, 1894 the line was lengthened to Razdelnaya (now Lisy Nos railway station).[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Chepurin, Sergey; Arkady Nikolayenko (May 2007). "Sestroretsk and Primorskaya railways(Сестрорецкая и Приморская железные дороги)" (in ru). http://terijoki.spb.ru/trk_about.php3. http://terijoki.spb.ru/railway/rw_dir_sestr.php#red. Retrieved 2009-02-21. 
  2. ^ "Chronology of input of sites (Хронология ввода участков)" (in ru). Ortyabrskaya mafistral (Saint Petersburg: ZAO Publishing House "OM-Express") (# 109 (13989)). 03 december 2005. http://oktmag.spb.ru/archive/?aday=03&amonth=12&ayear=2005. Retrieved 14 february 2009. 
Preceding station   Primorskaya Railway   Following station
Primorskaya line in 1894
Local
Terminus
Primorskaya line in November 1894
Local
Terminus
Primorskaya line in 1894 - 1900
Local