The history of the Kiev metro can be tracedsince the end of the nineteenth century, when the first attempts were made to design it. But those plans were destined to remain only on paper. The first stations of the Kiev Metro opened to passengers only in 1960. The radical reconstruction of the transport infrastructure of the city was an integral part of the restoration of the city, which was badly damaged during the Great Patriotic War and the German occupation. The Kiev metro stations were built, mainly at the expense of the Union budget, with the involvement of specialists and engineering technologies of the Moscow School of Design and Construction of the Underground. The Kiev metro was the third in the country after Moscow and Leningrad.
Since the opening of the first subway line has passedmore than half a century. Without this type of transport it is already impossible to imagine modern Kiev. The map, the metro stations on which are distributed fairly evenly and in the center of the city, and along its outskirts, makes it possible to make sure of the correctness of decisions taken in the post-war period on the basic scheme of the Kiev metro. There are ten administrative districts in the city, and you can get to any of them by metro. The project initially meant its further adjustment as the city developed along both banks of the Dnieper. The stations of the Kiev Metro, according to the original scheme, were located only on three lines. Further development of the Kiev Metro is carried out both in the continuation of these three lines, and in the creation of new ones. Currently, the Kiev Metro has five lines, one of which is being actively built, and the other is in the design stage.
The decisive influence on the way the stations lookKiev metro, was the era in which they were designed and built. In them, you can easily find similarities with the architectural solutions of the stations of the Moscow and Leningrad subway. However, there are a number of features, one of which is the almost complete absence in Kiev of the ground vestibules of metro stations. Most often an exit to the city from the metro is combined with an underground passage across the street.