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Lyublinskaya Line
Yubileynaya
Seligerskaya
Verkhniye Likhobory
Okruzhnaya
Petrovsko-Razumovskaya (Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line)
Petrovsko-Razumovskaya
Fonvizinskaya
Butyrskaya
Maryina Roshcha
Maryina Roshcha
Dostoyevskaya
Dostoyevskaya
Tsvetnoy Bulvar
Trubnaya
Trubnaya
Chistiye Prudy
Turgenevskaya
Sretensky Bulvar
Sretensky Bulvar
Kurskaya-Radialnaya
Kurskaya-Koltsevaya
Chkalovskaya
Chkalovskaya
Ploshchad Ilicha
Rimskaya
Rimskaya
Proletarskaya
Krestyanskaya Zastava
Krestyanskaya Zastava
Dubrovka (Metro)
Dubrovka
Kozhukhovskaya
Kozhukhovskaya
Pechatniki
Pechatniki
Volzhskaya
Volzhskaya
Lyublino (Metro)
Lyublino
Bratislavskaya
Bratislavskaya
Maryino
Maryino
Borisovo
Shipilovskaya
Krasnogvardeyskaya
Zyablikovo
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Trubnaya station main hall

Trubnaya (Russian: Трубная) is a station of the Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line of the Moscow Metro. Opened on the 30 August 2007 it was part of the long awaited extension of the line northwards. It offers a transfer to the Tsvetnoy Bulvar station of the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line.

Construction of the station began as far back as 1984, during the building of Tsvetnoy Bulvar which set provisions for the future station, and during the late 1980s was fully underway with plans to open by the late 1990s. However the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 put a long delay to construction which at time stood frozen and despite a few slow restarts remained derelict. Only in 2005 when proper financing finally arrived did the works picked up and finished the station.

Architecturally the station is a tri-vault wall column design with a monolithic concrete plate on the floor. The theme, work of architects V.Fillipov, S.Petrosyan, A.Ruban, T.Silakadze, T.Petrova and S.Prytkova, is based on Moscow and old Russian cities. The portals, cornices and station walls are faced with warm beige marble. Contrasting with that is the dark green marble used for columns, and for panels between the portals as well as for panels on the station walls. The floor features a geometric layout which repeats the portals out of polished dark green, black and light grey granite. Lighting is achieved by hidden fluorescent lamps behind the portal cornices which unite every four passages between the central and the platform halls. The vaults of the central (9.5 metre diameter) and the platform halls are covered with white fibreglass to offer extra hydroisolation.

Decoration of the station is centered on the 12 wall columns. Each of these feature a wooden bench surrounded by a black ironwork frame that supports four spherical lamps on the top, giving the impression of a traditional Moscow boulevard. However the central feature of this is an illuminated stained glass mosaic with an image of a historic Russian city (such as Rostov, Novgorod, Yaroslavl and others), all work of Zurab Tsereteli. The author is also responsible for two large mosaics which decorate the portals of the escalator tunnels upon leaving the station.

Transfer to Tsvetoy Bulvar is achieved in a two part process that involves and ascend into an interim hall and then a walk to the older station. The vestibule of the station is located under the intersection of the Tsvetnoy Boulevard and the Boulevard Ring and the Trubnaya square for which the station is named.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 55°46′03″N 37°37′18″E / 55.76750001°N 37.6216666767°E / 55.76750001; 37.6216666767




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