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Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line
Shchyolkovskaya
Shchyolkovskaya
Pervomayskaya (Metro)
Pervomayskaya
Izmaylovskaya (Metro)
Izmaylovskaya
Pervomayskaya (closed)
Pervomayskaya (closed)
Partizanskaya
Partizanskaya
Semyonovskaya (Metro)
Semyonovskaya
Elektrozavodskaya
Elektrozavodskaya
Baumanskaya
Baumanskaya
Kurskaya-Koltsevaya
Chkalovskaya
Kurskaya-Radialnaya
Kurskaya
Teatralnaya
Ploshchad Revolyutsii
Ploshchad Revolyutsii
Biblioteka Imeni Lenina
Alexandrovsky Sad
Borovitskaya (Metro)
Arbatskaya (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line)
Arbatskaya
Smolenskaya (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya)
Smolenskaya
Kiyevskaya (Filyovskaya)
Kiyevskaya-Koltsevaya
Kiyevskaya (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya)
Kiyevskaya
Park Pobedy (Moscow Metro)
Park Pobedy
Slavyansky Bulvar
Slavyansky Bulvar
Kuntsevskaya
Kuntsevskaya
Kuntsevskaya
Molodyozhnaya (Moscow Metro)
Molodyozhnaya
Krylatskoe
Krylatskoye
Troitse-Lykovo
Strogino (Metro)
Strogino
Myakinino
Myakinino
Volokolamskaya (new)
Volokolamskaya
Mitino
Mitino
Pyatnitskaya
Rozhdestveno
Rozhdestveno
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Elektrozavodskaya modern view
Electrozavodskaya before reconstruction
File:Elektrozavodskaya1950s.jpg
Vintage view 1950s, note the faint medalion of Joseph Stalin in the bas-relief at the end

Elektrozavodskaya (Russian: Электрозаводская, literally the Electricity Factory), located on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line, is one of the most spectacular and better-known stations on the Moscow Metro. Built as part of the third stage of the Moscow Metro and opened on 15 May, 1944 during the Second World War, the station is one of the iconic symbols of the system, famous for its architectural decoration which is work of architects Vladimir Schuko (who died whilst working on the station's project in 1939) and Vladimir Gelfreich, along with participation of his student Igor Rozhin.

Named after the electric light bulb factory nearby, the preliminary layout included Schuko's idea of making the ceiling covered with six rows of circular incandescent inset lamps (of which there were 318 in total). However the outbreak of World War II halted all works until 1943 when construction resumed. Gelfreich and Rozhin finished the design by adding an addition theme to the station the struggle of the home front during the war, which is highlighted by the 12 marble bas-reliefs on the pylons done by Georgiy Motovilov. The rest of the station's interior features most of the 1930s plans including powder-ballada marble on the rectangular pylons (the outside faces have sconces and decorative gilded grilles depicting the hammer and sickle), red salietti marble on the station walls, a dark olive duvalu marble on the socle and a chessboard layout on the main platform floor of granite and labradorite.

The station's hexagonal shaped vestibule, features a domed structure on a low drum, on the corner niches of which are six medallions with bas-reliefs of main pioneers in electricity and electrical engineering: William Gilbert, Benjamin Franklin, Mikhail Lomonosov, Michael Faraday, Pavel Yablochkov, and Alexander Popov along with their pioneering apparatus. The interior of the vestibule is further punctuated by the same bright red salietti marble. Outside the vestibule in the archway there is a sculpture to the metro-builders by Matvey Manizer.

The station's legacy was that it serves as a bridge between the pre-war art deco-influenced Stalinist Architecture as seen on the second stage stations and their post-war counterparts on the Koltsevaya Line. Both Genrikh and Rozhin were awarded the Stalin Prize in 1946 for their work.

The station serves the Basmanny district and is located on the Bolshaya Semyonovskaya Street, next to the Yauza River. The railway station Elektrazavodskaya of the Kazan direction is also located nearby. In May 2007, the station was closed for a year during which the escalators were completely replaced, along with the floor panels. Most of the details and finishes including Motovilov's bas-reliefs were refurbished. The station was reopened on 28 November 2008.

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