Prospekt Bolchevikov (en russe : Проспе́кт Большевико́в) est une station de la ligne 4 du Métro de Saint-Pétersbourg. Elle est située dans le raïon de la Neva à Saint-Pétersbourg en Russie. Mise en service en 1985, elle est desservie par les rames de la ligne 4 du métro de Saint-Pétersbourg.
Gallery
Sponsored
Location
58 m
Prospekt Bolshevikov is a station on the Line 4 of Saint Petersburg Metro, opened on December 30, 1985.
252 m
The Ice Palace is an arena in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was built for the 2000 IIHF World Championship and opened in 2000. It holds 12,300 people.
The Ice Palace is primarily used for ice hockey and was the home arena for SKA Saint Petersburg from 2005 until 2024, when the team moved into the new SKA Arena, the largest hockey arena in the world. It hosted the IIHF European Champions Cup in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008. It is also used for concerts, exhibitions and as a skating rink. After only one season in the SKA Arena, SKA Saint Petersburg temporarily returned to the Ice Palace.
1.6 km
Ulitsa Dybenko, meaning "Dybenko street", is the terminus station of Line 4 of Saint Petersburg Metro, opened on October 1, 1987. It is the current terminus of the Pravoberezhnaya line of St. Petersburg metro, until the construction of the Kudrovo metro station is finished in 2028. The station is located in the eastern part of the city, on the right bank of the Neva River, at the intersection of Prospect Bolshevikov and Dybenko Street.
The Dybenko Street metro station is the only one in Saint-Petersburg whose name mentions the street, "Dybenko street", itself named after Pavel Dybenko, a Ukrainian Bolshevik revolutionary and a leading Soviet officer and military commander, like many other streets of the Nevsky District that were named in association with the history of the revolutionary movement in Russia.
The decoration of the station is also related to revolutionary struggle, most notably a mosaic at the end of the platform, depicting of a woman holding a rifle with her left hand a sign in Russian in her right hand that reads “Freedom. Peace. The brotherhood. Equality. Labor.” Six other mosaic panels are distributed in the columns between platforms, depicting banners, flames, the hammer and the sickle, wheat and bayonets, common imagery of Soviet Russia.
The station has a ground-based lobby in the form of a quadrangle with a high granite portal, arranged on the cut corner, which is oriented to the junction. The lobby was made by architects VG Khil'chenko and KG Leont'yev. Unlike other Saint Petersburg metro stations, the lobby of Ulitsa Dybenko is "designed without panoramic glazing, without windows and doors. Which is logical for a ground-based anti-nuclear defense system." The station's depth is 63 meters and has a total traffic of 1576 persons per month.
2.0 km
St. Petersburg–Ladozhsky, is the newest and most modern passenger railway station in Saint Petersburg, Russia, opened in 2003. It is the only major through station in the city, the other 4 are termini. It serves routes to the north and east previously served by Moskovsky railway station, as well as some lines previously served by Finland Station, Vitebsky station and Baltiysky station. Some trains originating in Moscow and bound for other cities via Saint Petersburg also use the station.
2.1 km
Ladozhskaya is a station on the Line 4 of Saint Petersburg Metro, opened on December 30, 1985.