Primorskaya (Saint Petersburg Metro) Explained

Primorskaya
Address:Vasileostrovsky District
Borough:Saint Petersburg
Country:Russia
Structure:Underground
Platform:1 (Island platform)
Depth:≈710NaN0
Tracks:2
Opened:28 September 1979
Electrified:Third rail
Owned:Saint Petersburg Metro
Map State:collapsed

Primorskaya (Russian: Примо́рская) is the station of the Nevsko–Vasileostrovskaya Line (Line 3) of the Saint Petersburg Metro. It was designed by V.N. Sokolov, M.I. Starodubov and V.A. Penno and opened on 28 September 1979. The opening of the station, situated in the western part of Vasilievsky Island, was designed to coincide with the expansion of the local neighborhoods. Like many stations built during the Cold War era, it was designed to double as a fallout shelter. Thus, the underground portion of the station features a set of blast doors a few meters before the escalator. The station's exit vestibule was eventually expanded to house one of the system's communication centers. The building also hosts a metro museum and Metropoliten cafe.

Local landmarks

It is also fairly close to Novosmolenskaya Cemetery, the city's first cemetery.

Recent developments and plans

The station is slated to have a transfer link to the Pravoberezhnaya Line. The station it will link to will probably be called Primorskaya II.

The extension of the line north to Novokrestovskaya and Begovaya opened on 26 May 2018.[1] [2]

Transit links

References

  1. Web site: Перспективы развития метрополитена. Saint Petersburg Metro. Russian. 20 January 2018.
  2. News: В Петербурге назвали сроки открытия пяти новых станций метро. rbc.ru. Russian. 20 January 2018.

External links