Moscow Metro Park Kultury Парк культу́ры

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SEE MY FACEBOOK HISTORY GROUP : Park Kultury is a station on the Koltsevaya Line of the Moscow Metro. Although the line is circular and continuous operation, the Park Kultury is seen as the starting point due to it being the original terminus of the line, from its opening on 1 January 1950 to 14 March 1954, when the ring (fourth stage) was completed. The station is a standard pylon-trivault, that was built in the flamboyance of the 1950s. Architect Igor Rozhin (who would then design the Luzhniki Stadium) applied a classic sport recreational theme to match the connotation with the ancient-Greek inspired transfer station. This includes large and imposing pylons faced with grey marble that came directly from Georgia. The floor is laid with black and grey granite tiles imitating a carpet. The walls are faced with white marble and labrodite. Decoratively the station contains 26 circular bas-reliefs by Iosif Rabinovich which depict sporting and other leisure activities of the Soviet youth. The white vault of the station contains intricate geometry which repeat that of the pylons, and along the apex are suspended a set of intricate hexagonal chandeliers. Rozhin later admitted that he made a grave error in choosing to place the chandeliers amid the pylons, not between them, that way he would have avoided giving the bas-reliefs a double shadow. At the end of the station is a large marble wall with a small profile bas-relief of Maxim Gorky. The station was initially called Park...

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