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Entrance to Kropotkinskaya
Sokolnicheskaya Line
Ulitsa Podbelskogo
Ulitsa Podbelskogo
Cherkizovskaya
Cherkizovskaya
Preobrazhenskaya Ploshchad
Preobrazhenskaya Ploshchad
Sokolniki (Metro)
Sokolniki
Krasnoselskaya
Krasnoselskaya
Komsomolskaya-Koltsevaya
Komsomolskaya-Radialnaya
Komsomolskaya
Krasniye Vorota
Krasniye Vorota
Turgenevskaya
Sretensky Bulvar
Chistiye Prudy
Chistiye Prudy
Kuznetsky Most (Metro)
Lubyanka (Metro)
Lubyanka
Teatralnaya
Okhotnyi Ryad
Okhotny Ryad
Arbatskaya (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line)
Alexandrovsky Sad
Borovitskaya (Metro)
Biblioteka Imeni Lenina
Biblioteka Imeni Lenina
Kropotkinskaya
Kropotkinskaya
Park Kultury-Koltsevaya
Park Kultury-Radialnaya
Park Kultury
Frunzenskaya (Moscow Metro)
Frunzenskaya
Sportivnaya
Sportivnaya
Vorobyovy Gory (Moscow Metro)
Vorobyovy Gory
Universitet
Universitet
Prospekt Vernadskogo (Moscow Metro)
Prospekt Vernadskogo
Yugo-Zapadnaya
Yugo-Zapadnaya
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Kropotkinskaya (Russian: Кропоткинская) is a station on the Sokolnicheskaya Line of the Moscow Metro. One of the better-known Metro stations, it was designed by Alexey Dushkin and Ya.G. Likhtenberg and opened in 1935 as part of the original Metro line.

The station was originally planned to serve the enormous Palace of Soviets (Dvorets Sovetov), which was to rise nearby on the former site of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. Kropotkinskaya was therefore designed to be the largest and grandest station on the first line. However, the Palace project was cancelled by Khrushchev in 1953, leaving the Metro station as the only part of the complex that was actually built.

Kropotkinskaya was constructed in a massive open trench measuring 176 metres long by 25 metres wide. The tunnels from Biblioteka Imeni Lenina were constructed using the cut and cover technique. The combination of unrestricted space and dry soil made for ideal conditions, and construction of the station took only 180 days from start to finish. Kropotkinskaya was completed in January 1935 and opened five months later, on May 15. The station was named Dvorets Sovetov until 1957, when it was renamed in honour of Peter Kropotkin.

Since it was to serve as the gateway to the Palace of Soviets, great care was taken to make Kropotkinskaya suitably elegant and impressive. The station has flared columns faced with white marble which are said to have been inspired by the Temple of Amon at Karnak. Contrary to popular opinion, the marble used in the station did not come from the demolished Cathedral. The spacious platform is covered with squares of gray and red granite and the walls, originally tiled, are now faced with white Koyelga marble. The station is illuminated by concealed lamps set into the tops of the columns.

A model of the station won two Grand Prix awards at expositions in Paris (1937) and Brussels (1958). In 1941 the designers and engineers were also awarded the Stalin prize of the USSR for architecture and construction.

Kropotkinskaya opened with only one entrance vestibule, located at the end of Gogolevskiy Boulevard. This U-shaped structure was designed by S.M. Kravets and features two separate pavilions joined by a central arch. In late 1950s the station was given a slight reconstruction replacing the original cast of the upper pillars was replaced by marble and the floor was relayed with granite. The reconstruction finished with a new entrance which faces the Cathedral and Moskva River which was opened on 16 July 1960.

Because of the demise of the Palace of Soviets project, much of Kropotkinskaya's planned ridership never materialized. Currently the station serves about 42050 passengers daily, many of them tourists visiting the newly rebuilt Cathedral or the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts.

In the distant future the station is planned become a transfer to the Kalininskaya Line. The future station will be called Ostozhenka or Kadashevskaya.

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Coordinates: 55°44′42″N 37°36′05″E / 55.74497501°N 37.60150001°E / 55.74497501; 37.60150001




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