Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line

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 10  Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line
MM L10 - Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya.png
Overview
Type Rapid transit
System Moscow Metro
Locale Moscow
Termini Maryina Roshcha (North)
Zyablikovo (South East)
Stations 17
Operation
Opened 28 December 1995
Owner Moskovsky Metropoliten
Operator(s) Moskovsky Metropoliten
Character Underground
Rolling stock 81-717.5M/714.5M
81-720.1/721.1
81-717.6/714.6
Technical
Line length 24.7 kilometres (15.3 mi)
Track gauge 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 2732 in)
Electrification Third rail
Route map
Seligerskaya
Verkhniye Likhobory
Okruzhnaya
Fonvizinskaya
Butyrskaya (2016)
Maryina Roshcha
Dostoyevskaya
Trubnaya
Sretensky Bulvar
Chkalovskaya
Rimskaya
Krestyanskaya Zastava
Dubrovka
Kozhukhovskaya
Pechatniki
Volzhskaya
Lyublino
Bratislavskaya
Maryino
Borisovo
Shipilovskaya
Zyablikovo

Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line (Russian: Любли́нско-Дми́тровская ли́ния, IPA: [lʲuˈblʲinskə ˈdmʲitrəfskəjə ˈlʲinʲɪjə]) (Line 10) is the line of the Moscow Metro. It was known as "Lyublinskaya Line" (Любли́нская ли́ния) before 2007. First opened in 1995 as a semi-chordial radius it is at present in process of being extended through the centre and northwards. At present the line has 24.7 kilometres of track and 17 stations.

History

Plans

In the early 1980s, the Moscow development plan put forward several ideas about solving the build-up that came as a result of the radial-ring alignment which has determined the development of the Moscow Metro since the mid-1950s. In the previous programme the radial lines, with an ever-increasing build-up of passengers, were forced to use the central transfer points and those on the ring, severely overcrowding the system.

In attempt to solve this problem, the future Lyblinskaya line was designed so that some of its transfer points would be outside the Koltsevaya Line. This meant it would begin at the ring before extending south to the Kursky Rail Terminal, Perovsky, and Zhdanovsky. The ultimate goal of the line was to then bring the metro to the new developing districts of Maryino and Lyublino in the south-east of Moscow.

The initial design when bringing the new line to the new districts was to follow Lyublinskaya Street, not far from the bank of the Moskva River. However after several debates, this was altered and the line would continue westwards until it reached Volzhsky Boulevard and only then turn southwards towards the districts of Lyublino. Although this left out the possibility of railway transfer with Kursksaya, it did allow the metro to enter into the heart of the region more thoroughly.

1990s and later

The change in plans, combined with the financial crises that beset the metro construction in 1990s, meant that the first stage opened with delays. In late 1995 the first section finally opened, and a year later it would reach Maryino. Several problems were encountered with the construction, particularly for Dubrovka. This station was left incomplete due to nearby factories heating up the soil, which prevented the freezing of the underground water to allow the construction of an escalator tunnel. However in the late 1990s, because of the financial crises which paralyzed most of the industries, the metro-builders were able to complete the station.

Despite the delays, the line demonstrated some of the newest methods for metro-building. Deep-level stations were built on a monolithic concrete plate instead of a conventional tubual base. Also the new wall-column design was introduced on two of the deep-level stations and a single-deck for the shallow ones. New finishing materials, such as a fibreglass vaults, were introduced to offer more reliable hydroisolation.

The development of further extensions, was for many years delayed and paralyzed by the lack of finances, and only in 2005 construction was resumed on the long awaited second stage towards the city centre, with Trubnaya being the first to open on August 30, 2007. Sretensky Bulvar was opened on this section on December 29 the same year.

The second segment of central extension was opened on June 19, 2010 (construction was resumed only in early 2007) and included two stations Dostoyevskaya and Maryina Roshcha.

In a separate case, a three station extension from Maryino to Zyablikovo (Lyublinsky (southern) radius) began in 1997, but in 2000 the construction sites of the stations Borisovo, Shipilovskaya, and Zyablikovo was abandoned. The importance of this is that Zyablikovo will be a transfer to the Krasnogvardeyskaya station of the Zamoskvoretskaya Line. In 2008 construction finally resumed and the stations were opened on 2 December 2011, together with the transfer to the Krasnogvardeyskaya station.

Timeline

Segment Date opened Length
ChkalovskayaVolzhskaya 1995-12-28 12.1 km
VolzhskayaMarino 1996-12-25 5.4 km
Dubrovka 1999-12-11 N/A
ChkalovskayaTrubnaya 2007-08-30 3.7 km
Sretensky Bulvar 2007-12-29 N/A
TrubnayaMaryina Roshcha 2010-06-19 3.5 km
MaryinoZyablikovo 2011-12-02 4.5 km
Total: 17 stations 24.7 km

Interchanges

# Transfer to At
1 Sokolnicheskaya Line Sretensky Bulvar
2 Zamoskvoretskaya Line Zyablikovo
3 Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line Chkalovskaya
5 Koltsevaya Line Chkalovskaya
6 Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line Sretensky Bulvar
7 Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya Line Krestyanskaya Zastava
8 Kalininskaya Line Rimskaya
9 Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line Trubnaya

Rolling stock

The line is served by the Pechatniki depot (#15). 81-717/714 (including .5 and .5M modifications) wagons are used since the opening of the line. In 1998-2004 some new 81-720/721 (and .1) "Yauza" trains were received, but now their production is stopped. Some "Yauza" are still working, but all the new rolling stock used on the line is 81-717/714.6.

Future plans

Construction on Dmitrovsky (northern) radius extension, unlike other sections was never started, and there are still debates on the exact path of the future radius. Nonetheless the most likely one is a four station extension from Marina Roshcha to Likhobory with interim Sheremetyevskaya, Butyrsky Khutor Petrovsko-Razumovskaya, where a provision for a cross-platform transfer with the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line exists. This is planned to be inaugurated by 2013.

Afterwards the line will continue northwards to the housing districts of Beskudnikovo, Degunino and Lianozovo. It is believed that the full radius will be operational by 2020, and by this time an extension to the Severny district, beyond the MKAD, might be realised, although this might be in the form of light metro.

Footnotes