Misplaced Pages

Myakinino

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Myakinino ( Russian : Мякининo ) is a Moscow Metro station. It is a surface-level station on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line , between Volokolamskaya and Strogino stations. The station opened on 26 December 2009.

#546453

13-601: Myakinino may refer to several places: Myakinino (Moscow Metro) , a station of the Moscow Metro Myakinino (Moscow)  [ ru ] , a village in Kuntsevo District of Moscow, Russia [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

26-562: A dacha on the bank of the Moskva River and moved there in 1934. With his move other members of the Soviet elite had their dachas built in the surroundings. Stalin conducted much of his business from his Blizhnyaya Dacha ( Ближняя дача ) ("nearby dacha"). It was heavily protected and included a double-perimeter fence, camouflaged 30-millimeter antiaircraft guns, and a security force of three hundred NKVD special troops. Stalin died at

39-644: A palace and a park were built; they were often visited by the Empress Catherine II . Kuntsevo is the site of the Church of Theotokos Orans. In the 19th century, Kuntsevo became a summer resort for the Muscovites. A summer theater was opened in 1890. Artists and writers lived and worked in Kuntsevo; among them Nikolay Karamzin , Ivan Turgenev , Vasily Perov , and Ivan Kramskoy . Kuntsevo became

52-637: A town in its own right in 1926. In 1960, it became a part of Moscow. Now a district of Moscow, it contains many factories, residential areas, and has a well-connected infrastructure. Kuntsevo is reported to be the location of the Strategic Missile Command center. The district has two metro stations: Molodyozhnaya on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line and Kuntsevskaya on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya and

65-524: The Belorussky railway station in Moscow. Heading west on the mainline, commuter trains go to Golitsyno, Moscow Oblast , Kubinka and Mozhaysk . The branch line to Usovo and the freight-only line to Rublevo leave the mainline in Kuntsevo district at Rabochiy Posolok . Soviet leaders started to settle in Kuntsevo in the 1920s. Joseph Stalin instructed his architect, Miron Merzhanov , to build him

78-665: The Filevskaya Line . Strogino metro station in neighboring Strogino District serves parts of the Myakinino area of the Kuntsevo district. The Myakinino area is also served by bus number 638 that goes from to Shchukinskaya metro station via Strogino. From Rublevo buses: Part of the southern boundary of the district is the Moscow to Smolensk Main Line main railway toward Belarus . Commuter stations on this line connect with

91-680: The Moscow Oblast administrative headquarters and the Crocus City Mall and is the first station to be built outside the city of Moscow. It is also the first station in Moscow to be constructed under a public-private partnership . Financing to build the station came from Aras Agalarov ’s Crocus Group, the developer of the nearby Crocus City Mall , Crocus Expo trade center, and the Crocus City Hall entertainment center. Agalarov sought to connect his complex to Moscow via

104-489: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Myakinino&oldid=749721022 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Myakinino (Moscow Metro) It is in Krasnogorsk , Moscow Oblast near

117-452: The mall already underway, the logistics required the plan to change from an island platform to two side platforms. The construction of the tunnel from Strogino station (previously the terminus of the line) to Myakinino started in summer 2008. The station was named after the former village of Myakinino , which is currently inside the administrative territory of Moscow City, inside Kuntsevo District , Western Administrative Okrug . The name

130-481: The metro and invested 600 million rubles ($ 20 million) to construct the station. The agreement between Crocus and the city gave ownership of the station lobbies and entryways to Crocus, while the Metro controlled everything below the escalators. This situation ultimately led to a dispute between the parties on how to pay for maintenance and required security upgrades. In 2016, Metro notified the public that it would close

143-480: The station as a result of the lack of security. Agalarov stated that he would be willing to hand ownership of the station to the Metro to allow it to make the required upgrades and prevent closure of the station. Crocus is negotiating a deal with the city that would place control of the station under a lease with an unlimited term. The initial plan for the Strogino–Mitino extension did not include Myakinino. It

SECTION 10

#1732791306547

156-491: Was approved by the government of Moscow based on the recommendation of the city's commission on territorial units, streets and Metro stations. Kuntsevo District Kúntsevo ( Russian : Ку́нцево ) is a district in Western Administrative Okrug of the federal city of Moscow , Russia . Population: 142,497 ( 2010 Census ) ; 125,100 ( 2002 Census ) . In the 18th century,

169-596: Was included in the plan after the start of construction and the decision to unite the Krylatskoye-Mitino section with the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya Line . At first, plans called for Myakinino to be a shallow single-span station with an island platform near the Moscow Oblast Administrative Complex . As part of the partnership with Crocus Group, the station was relocated to the parking garage of Crocus City Mall. With construction of

#546453