Bulvar Rokossovskogo

Bulvar Rokossovskogo
Moscow Metro station
Location Bogorodskoye District
Eastern Administrative Okrug
Moscow
Russia
Coordinates 55°48′53″N 37°44′03″E / 55.8148°N 37.7342°E / 55.8148; 37.7342Coordinates: 55°48′53″N 37°44′03″E / 55.8148°N 37.7342°E / 55.8148; 37.7342
Owned by Moskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s)  1  Sokolnicheskaya Line
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Connections Bus: 3, 75, 80, 86, 265, 775, 822
Tram: 2, 4, 7, 13, 29, 33, 36, 46
Construction
Structure type Shallow column triple-vault
Depth 8 metres (26 ft)
Platform levels 1
Other information
Station code 001
History
Opened 1 August 1990 (1990-08-01)
Previous names Ulitsa Podbelskogo
Services
Preceding station   Moscow Metro   Following station
toward  Salaryevo
Sokolnicheskaya LineTerminus
Route map
Bulvar Rokossovskogo 14  (OSI)
Cherkizovo yard
Cherkizovskaya 14  (OSI)
Preobrazhenskaya Ploshchad
Sokolniki
Krasnoselskaya
Severnoye yard
Komsomolskaya Leningradsky railway stationYaroslavsky railway stationKazansky railway station  5 
Krasnye Vorota
Chistye Prudy  6  10 
Lubyanka  7 
Okhotny Ryad  2  ( 3 )
Biblioteka Imeni Lenina  3   4   9 
Kropotkinskaya
Park Kultury  5 
Frunzenskaya
Sportivnaya 14  (OSI)
Luzhniki Metro Bridge
Vorobyovy Gory
Universitet
Prospekt Vernadskogo
Yugo-Zapadnaya
Troparyovo
Rumyantsevo
Salaryevo
Salaryevo yard
Location
Bulvar Rokossovskogo
Location within Moscow Ring Road

Bulvar Rokossovskogo (Russian: Бульва́р Рокоссо́вского, English: Rokossovsky Boulevard), previously Ulitsa Podbelskogo (Russian: У́лица Подбе́льского, English: Podbelsky Street), is a Moscow Metro station in the Bogorodskoye District, Eastern Administrative Okrug, Moscow, Russia. It is on the Sokolnicheskaya Line, serving as its eastern terminus. The station was opened in 1990.[1]

History

Name

The station was originally named "Ulitsa Podbelskogo" after the Podbelskogo Street (itself named after Vadim Podbelsky), keeping its name even after the street was renamed in 1991 to Ivanteyevskaya Street. On 10 April 2014 Moscow City Commission on Names has announced plans to rename the station to "Bulvar Marshala Rokossovskogo",[2] after the Rokossovsky Boulevard located nearby (named itself after Konstantin Rokossovsky). On 8 July, the station was officially renamed to "Bulvar Rokossovskogo".[3]

Future plans

Rather than continuing the straight path of the Sokolnicheskaya Line to the northeast, Bulvar Rokossovskogo was built to the northwest of Cherkizovskaya, forming a right angle with the rest of the line. This would allow Bulvar Rokossovskogo to eventually become part of a planned second ring line around the city, at which time the Sokolnicheskaya Line could presumably be further extended in its original direction.

Beyond Bulvar Rokossovskogo are reversal sidings which are planned to become part of the future "Big Ring" line. A junction between Bulvar Rokossovskogo and Cherkizovskaya is used by southbound trains entering and leaving the Cherkizovo depot (№ 13), since the depot is directly connected only to the southbound tunnel.


Design

Station platform

Bulvar Rokossovskogo is a shallow column tri-vault station. The station was designed by architects Nina Aleshin and Natalya K. Samoilova and applied the following theme: ferroconcrete pillars faced with white marble; anodized aluminum arranged in geometric patterns on the walls and two identical entrance vestibules located on either side of Moscow's Circular Railway near the Otkrytoe Shosse.

References

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