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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Moscow’s metro mixes Lenin, WiFi and selfie spots

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MOSCOW: Rub a dog’s nose for luck. Look back to Russia’s 1917 Bolshevik revolution. Marvel at a mosaic spaceman. Maybe even watch a ballet.


Moscow’s metro is one of the busiest and most visually stunning underground systems in the world. It is a tourist site in its own right.


Created as a showcase for the Soviet Union, its elaborate, spacious stations are adorned with mosaics, marble statues and stained glass that tell the story of the communist state.


When it opened in 1935, the metro had just 11 stations and attracted 285,000 curious riders on the first day. Today there are 206 stations and up to nine million passengers a day.


The Moscow metro’s immaculate stations are a mix of old and new. Get off at Ploshchad Revolutsii (Revolution Square) and you will see passengers going up to a statue of a border guard and rubbing his dog’s nose for luck. There are four such statues in the station, and all the dogs have shiny noses from the constant rubbing.


The metro was originally named after Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, and the Bolshevik leader’s image was and still is found in stations throughout the metro: in statues, mosaics and a giant bust of Lenin on the wall in Ploshchad Ilyich (Ilyich Square) metro station.


The image of his successor Josef Stalin was also seen on the metro until Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev denounced him in 1956, prompting the dismantling of statues of him all over the Soviet Union. At Dobryninskaya metro station, a mosaic shows a happy crowd holding up a photo of a cosmonaut. The photo previously depicted Stalin and the cosmonaut was parachuted in to hide the disgraced leader.


A statue of Stalin was removed from Kurskaya metro station in central Moscow, but a quote from the Soviet national anthem: “Stalin reared us on loyalty to the people. He inspired us to labour and heroism” was controversially restored to the metro’s entrance in 2009.


At Kievskaya, a station built in 1954 when Ukraine was firmly a part of the Soviet Union, a vivid mosaic dedicated to Russian-Ukrainian friendship occupies one wall.


The metro has been expanding fast in the last few years, and modernising with one eye on the World Cup that Russia will host in 2018.


It now has free WiFi and announcements in English are gradually being introduced across the numerous lines.


In the more tourist-friendly stations, “selfie spots” have been designated on the floor to help passengers get the best photo with a metro architectural highlight in view.


A ballet version of Dostoyevsky’s novel “The Idiot” was recently performed in the metro station named after the author.


Another visible change is the controversial replacement of many of the elderly women who used to sit in a booth at the bottom of the seemingly endless escalators. They were famous for telling passengers off if they sat down on the escalator steps.


— Reuters


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