Leningradsky Rail Terminal

Leningradsky Rail Terminal

View from Komsomolskaya Square. To the right from the station is the pavilion leading to the Komsomolskaya-Koltsevaya station of the metro (not shown).
Station statistics
Address 107140, Moscow, Komsomolskaya Square, 3
Other information
Opened 1851
Rebuilt 1903, 1977

Leningradsky Rail Terminal (Russian: Ленингра́дский вокза́л, Leningradsky vokzal) is the oldest of Moscow's nine principal railway stations. Situated on Komsomolskaya Square, the station serves north-western directions, notably Saint Petersburg. International services from the station include Tallinn, Estonia, operated by GoRail, and Helsinki, Finland.

The station was constructed between 1844 and 1851 to an eclectic design by Konstantin Thon as the terminus of the Moscow-Saint Petersburg Railway, a pet project of Emperor Nicholas I. Regular connection was opened in 1851. Initially it was known as Peterburgsky (i.e., Rail Terminal for Petersburg). Upon the Emperor's death five years later, the station was named Nikolayevsky (and the railway Nikolayevskaya) after him and retained this name until 1924, when the Bolsheviks renamed it Oktyabrsky Station (and the railway Oktyabrskaya), to commemorate the October Revolution. The present name was given a year later when the city of Petrograd became Leningrad.

Thon's design follows closely that of the station's counterpart in St. Petersburg. The monotonous regularity of rustication and pilasters is enlivened with Italianate details (ground floor windows strongly reminiscent of the Palazzo Rucellai) and an elegant clocktower at the centre (probably inspired by the Palazzo Senatorio in Rome). Even more rigorous is the exterior of the nearby Moscow Customs House (1844–1852), also by Thon. The interior of the station was modernized and renovated in 1950 and 1972.

Contents

Destinations

Long distance from Moscow

Train number Train name Destination Operated by
001/002 Krasnaya Strela (rus: Красная стрела) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
003/004 Express (rus: Экспресс) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
005/006 Nikolayevsky Express (rus: Николаевский Экспресс) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
009/010 Pskov (rus: Псков) Pskov Russian Railways
011/012 Alexander Nevsky (rus: Александр Невский) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
015/016 Arktika (rus: Арктика) Murmansk Russian Railways
017/018 Karelia (kar: Karjala, rus: Карелия) Petrozavodsk Russian Railways
019/020 Megapolis (rus: Мегаполис) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Tverskoy Express
025/026 Smena/A. Betankur (rus: Смена/А. Бетанкур) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
027/028 Severnaya Palmira (rus: Северная Пальмира) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
031/032 Lev Tolstoy (rus: Лев Толстой) Helsinki (Central) Russian Railways
033/034 Tallinn Express (est: Tallinn Express) Tallinn (Balti jaam) GoRail
037/038 Afanasiy Nikitin (rus: Афанасий Никитин) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways
053/054 Grand Express (rus: Гранд Экспресс) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Grand Service Express
063/064 Dve Stolitsy (rus: Две Столицы) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways

High-speed rail

Train number Train name Destination Operated by
151/152[1]
153/154
155/156
159/160
163/164
165/166
Sapsan (rus: Сапсан) St. Petersburg (Moskovsky) Russian Railways

Other destinations

Country Destinations
Russia Bologoe, Borovichi, Ostashkov, Tver, Velikie Luki, Veliky Novgorod, Zelenograd (Kryukovo)

Suburban destinations

Suburban commuter trains (elektrichka) connect Leningradsky Rail Terminal with towns of Khimki, Zelenograd (Krukovo), Solnechnogorsk (Podsolnechnaya), Klin, Konakovo and Tver.

Gallery

References

External links