Vyborg railway station: Difference between revisions
+otheruses3; copyed |
well, if you consider the old station by Saarinen and Geselius, it was built in Finland (not Russia), and it's not there any more, so I think this category fits |
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[[Category:Railway stations in Russia]] |
[[Category:Railway stations in Russia]] |
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[[Category:Vyborg]] |
[[Category:Vyborg]] |
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[[Category:Former buildings and structures of Finland]] |
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[[fi:Viipurin rautatieasema]] |
[[fi:Viipurin rautatieasema]] |
Revision as of 19:55, 1 April 2007
Vyborg railway station (Russian: ста́нция Вы́борг; Finnish: Viipurin rautatieasema) is a railway station located in the town of Vyborg, Leningrad Oblast, Russia.
The original station building was built in 1913 but was destroyed in the Continuation War. The current station building was built in Soviet times.
Original building
The original station building in Vyborg was designed by Finnish architects Eliel Saarinen and Herman Geselius. The granite station building was built in 1913 but was destroyed in the Continuation War in 1941.
The original building bore a close resemblance to Eliel Saarinen's other famous work, the Helsinki Central railway station. In the tradition of a pair of male human figures on either side of the main entrance of the Helsinki Central station, the Vyborg station had a statue of a bear on a pedestal on either side of the main entrance.
Modern building
The modern station building, built in Soviet times, represents the typical Stalinist style. The station building has ticket sales, a café, a magazine kiosk, a currency exchange office, and deposit boxes.