Novoslobodskaya
Architecture and art
Alexey Dushkin, the station's architect, has long wished to utilise stained glass in decoration of a metro station, and the first drawings date to pre–World War II times. In 1948, with the aid of a young architect Alexander Strelkov, Dushkin came across the artist Pavel Korin, who agreed to compose the artworks for the panels. The rest of the station was designed around the glass panels.
It is best known for its 32 stained glass panels, which are the work of Latvian artists E. Veylandan, E. Krests, and M. Ryskin. Each panel, surrounded by an elaborate brass border, is set into one of the station's pylons and illuminated from within. Both the pylons and the pointed arches between them are faced with pinkish Ural marble and edged with brass molding. At the end of the platform is a mosaic by Pavel Korin entitled "Peace Throughout the World."
Transfers
From this station it is possible to transfer to Mendeleyevskaya station on the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line.
Gallery
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Platform.
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Lighting.
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Artwork on the platform.
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Rusich train on the platform. Note the upper pass is the transfer walkway to the Mendeleyevskaya on the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line
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One of the decorative glass panels.
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Image on a 1952 stamp
Notes
External links
Media related to Novoslobodskaya (Moscow Metro) at Wikimedia Commons