Kashirskaya

Kashirskaya
Moscow Metro station complex

Kashirskaya western hall
Coordinates 55°39′18″N 37°38′55″E / 55.6551°N 37.6487°E / 55.6551; 37.6487Coordinates: 55°39′18″N 37°38′55″E / 55.6551°N 37.6487°E / 55.6551; 37.6487
Owned by Moskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s)  2  Zamoskvoretskaya Line
11A  Kakhovskaya Line
Platforms 2 island platforms
Tracks 4
Connections Bus: 148, 150, 162, 164, 192, 220, 263, 269, 275, 280, 291, 298, 299, 607, 608, 701, 709, 738, 742, 820
Trolleybus: 11, 11к, 67, 67к, 71.
Construction
Structure type Shallow column ("centipede")
Depth 7 metres (23 ft)
Platform levels 2
Parking No
Other information
Station code 025
History
Opened 11 August 1969 (1969-08-11)
Traffic
Passengers (2002) 25,261,650
Services
Preceding station   Moscow Metro   Following station
Zamoskvoretskaya Line
toward  Kakhovskaya
Kakhovskaya LineTerminus
Location
Kashirskaya
Location within Moscow Ring Road

Kashirskaya (Russian: Каширская) is a cross-platform station complex on the Moscow Metro. It was opened on 11 August 1969 as part of the Kakhovsky radius extension, and from 1983 was an interchange between the Kakhovskaya and the Orekhovskaya branches of the Zamoskvoretskaya Line. Since 1995 it is officially classed as two stations after the Kakhovskaya Line's separation, and also becoming the terminus of it.

Layout and design

Diagram of the track layout

The station consists of two parallel halls of identical pillar-trispan (centipede) design typical of the 1960s stations. Decoratively the halls differ from each other no more than from any other centipede stations built at the time. The eastern hall work of architects Nikolay Demchinsky and Yuliya Kolesnikova, features a grey marble coat on the rectangular pillars, white ceramic tiles on the walls (with a black socle on the tracks) and red granite floor with an asphalt on the platform edge.

The western hall is identical except the pillars are faced with brown marble, the floor is laid with grey granite instead of red and the ceramic wall has a slightly indigo shade instead of pale white. (work of architects Nina Alyoshina and Nataliya Samoylova). The station's design focus comes from its name which is ultimately derived from the Kashira Hydroelectric Station located in Kashira and for the Moscow Engineering Physics Institute located nearby. Both halls feature large metallic artworks by Z.Vetrova based on the theme of electrification.

Location

The station is located on a major transport artery in the south of Moscow, the intersection of the Andropova Avenue and the Kashirskoye Highway, both roads later become the M4 and M6 (European routes E115 and E119) respectively and continue to the Russian south. The station is also situated on a point where two Moscow's districts meet up: Nagatino-Sadovniki and Moskvorechye-Saburovo.

As a result, from its opening it was prone to a large passenger traffic, particularly prior to the opening of the Orekhovo branch. To deal with this the station's entrance designs were altered from the usual underground vestibules to two surface ones (architect M.Fainshteina) which also double as a transfer point between the halls. For a more direct transfer there is also a central passage with a staircase out of the middle of the platform directly linking the two halls.

One of the main reasons why the Kakhovskaya Line was split off from the Zamoskovoretskaya was the track layout. In 1969 both platforms were opened with one track used on each one. In 1983 the extension to Orekhovo only continued the unused tracks without making provisions for a comfortable branch service. The result was that only the northbound platform offered cross-platform interchange, which was unnecessary as the tracks would join anyway (see diagram). The southbound tracks branched only after the station, and the passengers wishing to change the direction of the travel had to wait for the correct train on one side of the platform. (The ratio was 1:1 initially and 2:1 after the Orekhovo branch expanded to Krasnogvardeyskaya in 1985).

There were varying proposals to solve the problem, including building a second junction prior to the southbound platform, but this would have been impossible without any disruption to the service, an alternative scenario including switching the whole line from right to left-hand side travel, but this was also dropped out of practical reasons, one of which was that all of the Russian Metro trains had driver doors on the left only.

The solution was to separate the Kakhovskaya branch into a separate line which took place on 20 November 1995 a reversal (turnback) siding was built north of the station allowing for the Kakhovskaya Line to separate. However, as the siding was built next to the Kolomenskoye Nature Reserve, environmental groups insisted it does not extend into it. This forced the siding to be slightly shorter, enough to accommodate the six car train of the Kakhovskaya Line but not long enough for the eight car train of the Zamoskvoretskaya Line.

It is planned that the tracks of the Kakhovskaya line will be extended as part of the future large ring project. The actual path is disputed and the variation is either eastwards to Bratislavskaya and then to follow the path of the Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line to Pechatniki or directly to Pechatniki via a more northeast path (both featuring at least one interim station). The latter would be more practical, but Bratislavskaya has already a provision for the future transfer set in its ensemble.

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