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Volgogradsky Prospekt (Moscow Metro)

Coordinates: 55°43′31″N 37°41′13″E / 55.7253°N 37.6869°E / 55.7253; 37.6869
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Volgogradsky Prospekt

Волгоградский проспект
Moscow Metro station
General information
LocationNizhegorodsky District
South-Eastern Administrative Okrug
Moscow
Russia
Coordinates55°43′31″N 37°41′13″E / 55.7253°N 37.6869°E / 55.7253; 37.6869
Owned byMoskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s)#7 Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line
Platforms1 island platform
Tracks2
ConnectionsBus: 99, 186
Trolleybus: 27
Construction
Depth8 metres (26 ft)
Platform levels1
ParkingNo
Other information
Station code114
History
Opened31 December 1966; 57 years ago (1966-12-31)
Services
Preceding station Moscow Metro Following station
Proletarskaya
towards Planernaya
Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line Tekstilshchiki
towards Kotelniki
Out-of-station interchange
Novokhokhlovskaya
anticlockwise / outer
Moscow Central Circle
transfer at Ugreshskaya
Dubrovka
clockwise / inner
Location
Volgogradsky Prospekt is located in Moscow Metro
Volgogradsky Prospekt
Volgogradsky Prospekt
Location within Moscow Metro

Volgogradsky Prospekt (Russian: Волгоградский проспект) is a Moscow Metro station in the Nizhegorodsky District, South-Eastern Administrative Okrug, Moscow. It is on the Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya Line, between Proletarskaya and Kuzminki stations. Volgogradsky Prospekt was opened on 31 December 1966 as part of the Zhadovsky radius and is named after the nearby Avenue that leads on from the centre of Moscow into an intercity highway all the way to the southwest of Russia, although not directly to Volgograd. The station was built to a slight modification of the standard 1960s pillar-trispan decoration showing the first signs of innovative design, as architects V. Polikarpova and A. Marova did. The platform is narrowed (as the station was never designed to carry large passenger crowds). The white ceramic tiles on the walls are arranged on 45 degrees to the platform and are decorated with metallic artworks out of anodized aluminium depicting the Battle of Stalingrad (artist E. Ladygin). The pillars are faced with white marble whilst the floor with grey granite. The station has two underground vestibules with glazed concrete pavilions which allow passengers access to the Talalikhin and Novostapovskaya streets as well as directly to the AZLK automobile plant..

Station Platform
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