Ploshchad Revolyutsii | |
Name Lang: | ru |
Native Name: | Площадь Революции |
Native Name Lang: | ru |
Type: | Moscow Metro station |
Address: | Tverskoy District |
Borough: | Moscow |
Country: | Russia |
Coordinates: | 55.7566°N 37.6216°W |
Structure: | Pylon station |
Platform: | 1 island platform |
Levels: | 1 |
Tracks: | 2 |
Parking: | No |
Architect: | Alexey Dushkin |
Architectural Style: | Stalinist Architecture, Socialist Realism |
Code: | 045 |
Owned: | Moskovsky Metropoliten |
Map Type: | Central Moscow |
Alternativemap: | Central Moscow grayscale.png |
Map Overlay: | Central Moscow metro lines.svg |
Map State: | collapsed |
Ploshchad Revolyutsii (Russian: Площадь Революции) is a station in the Moscow Metro, in the Tverskoy District of central Moscow. The station is named after Revolution Square (Resurrection Square until 1918), under which it is located. It is on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line.
When the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line was first built, the tracks from Ploshchad Revolyutsii extended westward to Aleksandrovsky Sad rather than Arbatskaya. When the westward extension of the line was completed in 1953, trains were rerouted through the new segment.
The station opened in 1938, its architect was Alexey Dushkin. The station features red and yellow marble arches resting on low pylons faced with black Armenian marble. The spaces between the arches are partially filled by decorative ventilation grilles and ceiling tracery.
The station contains 76 statues in the socialist realism style. Originally, 80 sculptures were created for the space—10 pairs, each replicated 4 times throughout the station. Today, nine pairs are in the archways, and a copy of the final pair ("The Pioneers") appears on each of the two platforms, bringing the total number of statues to 76.[1] Each arch is flanked by a pair of bronze sculptures by Matvey Manizer depicting the people of the Soviet Union, including soldiers, farmers, athletes, writers, aviators, industrial workers, and schoolchildren. The series is meant to be considered in order, symbolizing Russia's transformation from the pre-revolutionary past, through the revolution, into the (then) contemporary era. The order of sculpture pairs are:
Several of the sculptures are widely believed to bring good luck to those who rub them. The practice is targeted at specific areas on individual sculptures, including the soldier's pistol, the patrolman's dog, the roosters, and the female student's shoe.[2]
From this station, passengers can transfer to Teatralnaya on the Zamoskvoretskaya Line and Okhotny Ryad on the Sokolnicheskaya Line, but the latter can be reached only through Teatralnaya as there is no direct transfer.