Three new metro lines will appear in Moscow by 2030 – Kommersant

Three new metro lines will appear in Moscow by 2030 – Kommersant

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On February 19, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin spoke about the prospects for the development of Moscow’s rail frame until 2030. It is planned, in particular, to complete and open three new metro lines – Troitskaya, Rublevo-Arkhangelskaya and Biryulevskaya. Four new stations will appear on existing lines – “Yuzhny Port” (Lyublinsko-Dmitrovskaya line), “Golyanovo” (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya), “Potapovo” (Sokolnicheskaya) and “Suvorovskaya” (Koltsevaya).

125 MCC and MCD stations will be brought to the standard of the Moscow City Station (includes the construction of a building with elevators and escalators with the possibility of comfortable transfers to other modes of transport). Now more than 80 stations have station status.

It is also planned to include the Yaroslavl and Paveletsk railway lines in the Moscow tariff system. These directions were to become part of the MCD-5 Pushkino-Domodedovo with a tunnel under the city center. The project has been postponed indefinitely due to technical difficulties; the mayor’s office is still developing individual sections of MCD-5. You can already use the Troika card to pay for travel on electric trains, but for now you cannot use free transfers to the metro/MCC, as on other diameters – this, apparently, is what the city authorities are planning to introduce. Fares for travel, suggests the head of the All-Russian Association of Passengers Ilya Zotov, may decrease as a result, as happened after the launch of other diameters.

Sergei Sobyanin also announced plans to organize clocked train movement by 2030 as part of the development of the Central Transport Hub (CTU). It is planned that electric trains from Tula, Yaroslavl, Vladimir and other cities will run towards Moscow once every 20–30 minutes (currently once every 45–180 minutes). At the same time, some trains will reach MCD hubs, where some passengers will be able to transfer to trains of the diameter system. The CTU development program is now in the Russian government.

Ivan Tyazhlov

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