Leninskaya Line

Leninskaya Line (Russian: Ле́нинская), is a line of the Novosibirsk Metro. It consists of eight stations over 10.5 kilometres (6.5 mi) of track.[1] It bisects the city on a northwest-southeast axis before making a 90 degree turn and crossing the river Ob river on a closed bridge.

Leninskaya Line
Zayeltsovskaya
Gagarinskaya
Krasny Prospekt
Ploshchad Lenina
Oktyabrskaya
Rechnoy Vokzal
Sportivnaya
Studencheskaya
Ploshchad Marksa
Ploshchad Stanislavskogo

Leninskaya was the first line of the Metro and opened in 1986 with five stations. It expanded twice, in 1991 and 1992, adding three stations before financial difficulties slowed the development of new stations.

Timeline

SegmentDate opened
Krasniy Prospekt-Studencheskaya 7 January 1986
Studencheskaya-Ploshchad Marksa 26 July 1991
Krasniy Prospekt-Zaeltsovskaya 2 April 1992

Transfers

#Transfer toAt
2 Dzerzhinskaya Line Krasniy Prospekt

Rolling stock

The line is served by the city's single depot Eltsovskoe, and currently 18 four carriage 81-717/714 trains are assigned to it.

Recent developments and future plans

Since the 1990s, there have been several moves to expand the line to Ploshchad Stanislavskogo. Initially, the city planned to start construction in 2010;[2] however there has been no construction. In 2014, the city indicated that it would move forward on planning for two new stations on the Dzerzhinskaya Line instead.[3] In 2018, the mayor of Novosibirsk stated that it was necessary to build Ploshchad Stanislavskogo to relieve automobile traffic. The mayor estimated the cost to complete three new stations would be about 20 billion rubles.[4]

gollark: Fire big laser into one end, some sort of solar panel at the other?
gollark: I mean, technically you are sending energy down?
gollark: Fine, catwhatever then.
gollark: But then you can't send power.
gollark: If it's in geosynchronous orbit, we can make a space elevator *and* provide good internet access at the same time, actually!

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.