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Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya Line
Planernaya
Planernaya
Skhodnenskaya
Skhodnenskaya
Tushinskaya
Tushinskaya
Stadion Spartak (Reserved)
Stadion Spartak
Shchukinskaya
Shchukinskaya
Oktyabrskoye Pole
Oktyabrskoye Pole
Polezhaevskaya
Polezhaevskaya
Begovaya
Begovaya
Ulitsa 1905 Goda
Ulitsa 1905 Goda
Krasnopresnenskaya
Barrikadnaya
Barrikadnaya
Tverskaya (Metro)
Chekhovskaya
Pushkinskaya (Moscow Metro)
Pushkinskaya
Lubyanka (Metro)
Kuznetsky Most (Metro)
Kuznetsky Most
Kitay-Gorod (Metro)
Kitay-Gorod (Metro)
Kitay-Gorod
Taganskaya-Koltsevaya
Marksistskaya
Taganskaya-Radialnaya
Taganskaya
Krestyanskaya Zastava
Proletarskaya
Proletarskaya
Volgogradsky Prospekt
Volgogradsky Prospekt
Tekstilshchiki
Tekstilshchiki
Kuzminki (Metro)
Kuzminki
Ryazanskiy Prospekt
Ryazanskiy Prospekt
Vykhino
Vykhino
Zhulebino
Zhulebino
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Tekstilshchiki station

Tekstilshchiki (Russian: Текстильщики) is a station on Moscow Metro's Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya Line. The station was opened on 31 December 1966 as a part of the Zhdanovsky radius, and is named after the Tekstilshchiki District is it situated in (and the later is named for several textile manufactures built there in the 19th century).

The station was designed by Robert Pogrebnoy and is built to a standard pillar-trispan design. Apart from the grey wavy marble on the pillar and the grey granite floor the station stands out with its walls. Instead of the common ceramic tiles, for the first time in Moscow Metro tempered coloured glass was used of red (top and bottom) and indigo (centre) colours. The glass is held by a cellular aluminium frame.

The distance from the previous station Volgogradsky Prospekt was the longest in the Moscow Metro (3.5 km) until 2007, when the Trubnaya station was opened, then this distance became the longest again as the Sretensky Bulvar station was opened, but in 2008 the Strogino station was opened, and the Krylatskoye-Strogino distance became the longest. A part of the distance from Volgogradsky Prospekt is travelled on the surface. The surface section ends just before the station and daylight can be seen in the tunnels. Just outside the tunnel portal is a piston junction and a siding. The station is located under the platform of the Kursk-bound railway. A direct access to the railway platform is possible from the station's western vestibule. The station's eastern vestibule allows access to the Lyublinskaya street and the Volgogradsky avenue. The entrances are a solid concrete glazed pavilion (architects A.A. Marova and A.B. Bogatyreva). Originally the platforms had lanterns showing the edge, later covered by cement.

The daily passenger traffic for the station is 103,100 people.

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