The average metro train doesn’t go beyond a few stories underground. But sometimes the geology and the geography of the region, such as the presence of rivers and swamps, forces engineers to go deep underground. The Arsenalna, a station on Kiev Metro's Sviatoshynsko-Brovarska Line, is such an exception.
Arsenalna station is located 105.5 meters below the surface, making it the deepest metro station in the world. If you made a vertical shaft on earth as deep, you could drop the entire Statue of Liberty into it and still have more than twelve meters of headroom left to drop other stuff. To board a subway train at this station, commuters have to take two seemingly never-ending escalators to the bottom. The journey takes up to five minutes.
The escalator at Arsenalna metro station. Photo credit: AMY/Wikimedia
Arsenalna’s unusual depth is attributed to Kiev's geography. The station entrance lies at top of a steep valley next to the Dnieper River whose high banks rise above the rest of the city. Arsenalna’s adjacent station, Dnipro, lies just above ground level close to the river bank before the metro line dives into the ground under Dnieper’s high banks. In order to avoid a steep descent, the Arsenalna station had to be built on the same level which required the station’s entrance to be at the top of the banks, more than a hundred meters above.
Arsenalna metro station. Photo credit: Antares 610/Wikimedia
Arsenalna metro station. Photo credit: AsDur/Flickr
Arsenalna metro station. Photo credit: MrEdPhoto/F4/Flickr
The world’s second deepest metro station is located on Saint Petersburg Metro, which is one of the deepest metro systems in the world and the deepest by the average depth of all the stations. The system's deepest station, Admiralteyskaya, is located 86 meters below ground. The Saint Petersburg Metro including Admiralteyskaya has some of the longest escalators in the world, exceeding 130 meters.
Admiralteyskaya metro station. Photo credit: Wikimedia
Escalator at Admiralteyskaya metro station. Photo credit: da885/Flickr
The former Soviet Union has some of the most deepest underground metros in the world. Park Pobedy, located on the Moscow Metro, lies 84 meters underground, warranting it the third position in the ‘list of deepest metro stations in the world’. The Moscow Metro is also the deepest in Russia, having a maximum depth of 97 meters.
Like many Russian subway stations, Park Pobedy is beautifully decorated.
Park Pobedy. Photo credit: jaime.silva/Flickr
Park Pobedy. Photo credit: Paula Funnell/Flickr
Park Pobedy. Photo credit: Paula Funnell/Flickr
Yet another contender to the title of the world’s deepest metro system is Pyongyang Metro, in North Korea’s secretive capital city, with tracks lying at over 110 meters underground. Commuters ride down to the PuhÅng Station—one of only two that foreigners are allowed entry— on escalators accompanied by the “sound of revolutionary anthems booming from antique loudspeakers.” The journey takes nearly four minutes.
Because of its depth, the metro stations double as bomb shelters, with blast doors in place at hallways. The metro is so deep that the temperature of the platform remains a constant 18°C all year.
Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: BRJ INC/Flickr
Murals of ultra-nationalistic themes decorate walls at stations of Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: Marcelo Druck/Flickr
Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: Clay Gilliland/Flickr
Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: Stephen/Flickr
Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: Tatyana/Flickr
Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: Uri Tours/Flickr
Pyongyang Metro. Photo credit: Dan Sloan/Flickr
Other deep stations worth mentioning are:
- Washington Park in Portland, Oregon, the United States. Located at 79 meters, it the deepest transit station in North America.
- Hampstead station, on the London Underground network, located at 58.5 meters below ground level. It is the deepest station of the London Underground.
- NámÄ›stà MÃru, of the Prague Metro, is the deepest metro station of the Czech Republic. It lies 53 meters below surface.
cool
ReplyDeleteIf that were in NYC, it would be broken for weeks at a time and nobody would bother using the station.
ReplyDeleteWow, aren't you clever?
DeleteThe Forest Glen Metro station in a Maryland suburb of Washington, DC is 60 meters deep, and was second only the the Russian stations when it was built in the '70s.
ReplyDeleteCheck out the Epping Station in Sydney, which is 97 metres down.
ReplyDeleteCheck out Iszrak Nahum Station in Jerusalem/Israel - 80 Meters underground
ReplyDeleteArsenalna station in Kiev is deepest in Europe, but not in the world.
ReplyDeleteDeepest in the world are stations in North Korea :-)
Istanbul M7 Yıldız metro station is 71 meters down the floor.
ReplyDelete