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Avtovo (Saint Petersburg Metro)

Coordinates: 59°52′02.37″N 30°15′40.87″E / 59.8673250°N 30.2613528°E / 59.8673250; 30.2613528
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Avtovo
Saint Petersburg Metro station
Station Hall
General information
Coordinates59°52′02.37″N 30°15′40.87″E / 59.8673250°N 30.2613528°E / 59.8673250; 30.2613528
Owned bySaint Petersburg Metro
Line(s)Line 1 (Saint Petersburg Metro) Kirovsko–Vyborgskaya Line
PlatformsIsland platform
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
Depth12 m (39 ft)
History
OpenedNovember 15, 1955
Services
Preceding station   St Petersburg Metro   Following station
Template:STPETERSBURGMETRO lines

Depot 4 Severnoye
Devyatkino—Lavriki railroad
Devyatkino
Grazhdansky Prospekt
headshunt
Akademicheskaya
future line branching
Politekhnicheskaya
Ploschad Muzhestva
eroded tunnels
Lesnaya
Vyborgskaya
headshunts
Ploshchad Lenina
Chernyshevskaya
service siding to line 2
Ploshchad Vosstaniya
Vladimirskaya
Pushkinskaya
to track 1 of line 2
Tekhnologichesky Institut
to track 2 of line 1
Baltiyskaya
Narvskaya
headshunts
 ЗСД 
Western High-
Speed Diameter
Kirovsky Zavod
Avtovo
Dachnoye Depot
Avtovo Depot
Dachnoye (defunct)
Leninsky Prospekt
Prospekt Veteranov
headshunts

Avtovo (Russian: А́втово) is a station on the Kirovsko-Vyborgskaya Line of the Saint Petersburg Metro.[1] Designed by architect Yevgenii Levinson [ru], it opened as part of the first Leningrad Metro line on November 15, 1955.[2] In 2014, The Guardian included it on the list of 12 most beautiful metro stations in the world [1].

Avtovo's unique and highly ornate design features columns faced with ornamental glass manufactured at the Lomonosov factory.[3] Although the original plan envisaged using glass on all of the columns in the station, white marble was substituted on some due to time constraints. This marble was supposed to be temporary, but it has never been replaced. The walls are faced with white marble and adorned on the north side by a row of ornamental ventilation grilles. At the end of the platform a mosaic by V.A. Voronetskiy and A.K. Sokolov commemorates the Leningrad Blockade (1941-1944) during the Second World War.

Unlike the other stations on the first line, Avtovo is a shallow-level station, constructed using the cut and cover method. It belongs to the shallow column class of underground stations.

Avtovo has as its entrance vestibule a large Neoclassical building with a domed cupola, located on the east side of Prospekt Stachek [ru].

Avtovo entrance vestibule

References