Krylatskoye (Moscow Metro)

Krylatskoye (Russian: Крылатское) is a Moscow Metro station in the Krylatskoye District, Western Administrative Okrug, Moscow. It is on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line, between Strogino and Molodyozhnaya stations. Before 2008 it was the terminus of the Filyovskaya Line.

Krylatskoye

Крылатское
Moscow Metro station
LocationOsenny Boulevard
Krylatskoye District
Western Administrative Okrug
Moscow
Russia
Coordinates55.7567°N 37.4081°E / 55.7567; 37.4081
Owned byMoskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s) Arbatsko–Pokrovskaya line
Platforms1 island platform
Tracks2
ConnectionsBus: 129, 229, 688, 732, 829
Trolleybus: 19
Construction
Structure typeShallow single-vault
Depth9.5 metres (31 ft)
Platform levels1
ParkingNo
Other information
Station code066
History
Opened31 December 1989 (1989-12-31)
Traffic
Passengers (2009)13,369,220
Services
Preceding station   Moscow Metro   Following station
Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line
Location
Krylatskoye
Location within Moscow Metro

Building

It is a shallow-level, vault-type station with a unique asymmetrical design. The curved ceiling rests on a white marble wall on one side of the platform, but on the other it reaches all the way down to the tracks. Wedge-shaped niches containing light fixtures run transversely across the ceiling, with the wide ends on the side with the wall. This has the effect of making one side of the platform brighter than the other. The decorative theme of the station is "gymnastics and sport".

Krylatskoe was designed by N. Shumakov, G. Mun, and A. Mosichuk and opened in 1989.

gollark: Real programmers travel back in time to the start of the universe and alter its initial conditions such that a program they want is simply created later.
gollark: ```mrustc works by compiling assumed-valid rust code (i.e. without borrow checking) into a high-level assembly (currently using C, but LLVM/cretonne or even direct machine code could work) and getting an external code generator to turn that into optimised machine code. This works because the borrow checker doesn't have any impact on the generated code, just in checking that the code would be valid.```
gollark: Mostly designed to stop trusting trust attacks and allow porting, but it could work.
gollark: https://github.com/thepowersgang/mrustc
gollark: There's a Rust→© compiler.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.