Trubnaya, Moscow Metro station
Trubnaya is a metro station in central Moscow, part of the Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya line and one of the deepest on the network. It has an island platform between two tracks, with beige marble walls, dark green marble columns, and polished granite floors laid in geometric patterns.
Planning for the station started in the 1980s but was interrupted in 1991 when the Soviet Union collapsed, leaving the project on hold for over a decade. Work resumed in 2005, and the station opened in 2007.
The station takes its name from Trubnaya Square above, once known as an old marketplace and now a busy junction in central Moscow. The stained glass panels along the walls show scenes from old Russian cities and catch the eye of anyone walking through the platform.
The station sits in central Moscow and can be reached through several entrances, with signs in both Cyrillic and Latin script to help visitors find their way. Buses and trolleybuses run nearby, making it easy to continue to other parts of the city on foot or by surface transport.
The marble floor of the platform contains small fossils from ancient plants and animals, a detail that most passengers walk over without noticing. A connecting corridor links this station to Tsvetnoy Bulvar on a different line, allowing transfers without going back to street level.
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