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Cut natter.


** There's also an interesting gaffe as the movie changed the address of one of the characters, moving their home two stations down the orange line. As a result, a scene involving a crowd rushing into the train at Anton when he tries to get off happens on Botanicheskiy Sad, a station that mostly sees passengers getting ''off'' the northbound trains, what few of them ride this far, as the main rush happens on VDNKh, the original station used in the book. Of course, only Muscovites residing that far up the orange line will even notice that.
*** That's mainly because the initial segment was based [[WriteWhatYouKnow on location of Lukianenko's own apartment]] at the time of writing in the late Nineties. Obviously, that was changed for the movie.
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* The Metrorat urban legend is true in ''AgeOfAquarius''.

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* The Metrorat urban legend is true in ''AgeOfAquarius''.''TabletopGame/AgeOfAquarius''.
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Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them. One other thing that can sometimes be confusing is the exits. Many stations have two or more exits - some leading to the surface, others to long tunnels which lead to other stations, sometimes even crossing over each other. Taking a wrong turn can put you surprisingly far from where you wanted to go. However these passages are clearly marked (in Russian) - it sometimes just takes a minute to figure out what tunnel goes where.

to:

Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them. One other thing that can sometimes be confusing is the exits. Many Most stations have two or more exits - some leading to the surface, others to long tunnels which lead to other stations, sometimes even crossing over each other. Taking a wrong turn can put you surprisingly far from where you wanted to go. However these passages are clearly marked (in Russian) - it sometimes just takes a minute to figure out what tunnel goes where.
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Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them. Unfortunately, finding the exact exit to get to desired location may be a bit more troublesome. Most stations have 2 and some 1 exit, but they often lead to an underground passage under a crossroad, and the passage system may be very complex and unnatural.

to:

Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them. Unfortunately, finding One other thing that can sometimes be confusing is the exact exit to get to desired location may be a bit more troublesome. Most exits. Many stations have 2 and two or more exits - some 1 exit, but they often leading to the surface, others to long tunnels which lead to an underground passage under other stations, sometimes even crossing over each other. Taking a crossroad, and the passage system may be very complex and unnatural.
wrong turn can put you surprisingly far from where you wanted to go. However these passages are clearly marked (in Russian) - it sometimes just takes a minute to figure out what tunnel goes where.
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The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- until recently there was exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, and only recently the second one was built (both with quite large radius of curvature and not by choice), so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. However, the more common concern is that on some such station and extremely strong wind may blow from the tunnel, strong enough to knock down a clumsy unsuspecting person. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (30 r. or ~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use and recently added "90-minutes" tickets and "Trojka" smartcards doubling for use in the other city transportation. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours, though the travel time is much more predictable than above the ground.

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The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- until recently there was exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, and only recently the second one was built (both with quite large radius of curvature and not by choice), so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. However, the more common concern is that on some such station and extremely strong wind may blow from the tunnel, strong enough to knock down a clumsy unsuspecting person. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (30 (50 r. as of 2015 or ~$1 as for now) ~$1) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use and recently added "90-minutes" tickets and "Trojka" smartcards doubling for use in the other city transportation. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours, though the travel time is much more predictable than above the ground.
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The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (30 r. or ~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

to:

The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's until recently there was exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, and only recently the second one was built (both with quite large radius of curvature and not by choice), so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. However, the more common concern is that on some such station and extremely strong wind may blow from the tunnel, strong enough to knock down a clumsy unsuspecting person. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (30 r. or ~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use.use and recently added "90-minutes" tickets and "Trojka" smartcards doubling for use in the other city transportation. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.
hours, though the travel time is much more predictable than above the ground.



Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them.

to:

Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them.
them. Unfortunately, finding the exact exit to get to desired location may be a bit more troublesome. Most stations have 2 and some 1 exit, but they often lead to an underground passage under a crossroad, and the passage system may be very complex and unnatural.
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The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture. The plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in 1880's]], but due to the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, it wasn't until Stalin that work actually began (actually thanks to Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce were finally available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.

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The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture. The plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in the 1880's]], but due to the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, it wasn't until Stalin that work actually began (actually thanks to Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce were finally available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.

Changed: 74

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[[caption-width-right:300:My liege, two blue trains seem to be loose in your réfectoire. It's just like in [[Music/RingoStarr Ringo's]] [[WesternAnimation/YellowSubmarine house!]]]]

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[[caption-width-right:300:My liege, [[caption-width-right:300:What are those two blue trains seem to be loose doing in your réfectoire. It's just like in here? What is this, [[Music/RingoStarr Ringo's]] [[WesternAnimation/YellowSubmarine house!]]]]
house?!]]]]
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There ''are'' some "ghost stations," that were built, but never used for passengers. Passengers still can see them from car windows, yet mostly without lights except from the train itself. The last full-sized ghost station is scheduled to open in 2014. After that only short evacuation chambers will remain. Unused platforms on some active stations will remain too.

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There ''are'' In the past there existed some "ghost stations," that were built, but never used for passengers. Passengers still can could see them from car windows, yet mostly without lights except from the train itself. The last full-sized ghost station is scheduled to open was opened in 2014. After that Right now, only short evacuation chambers will remain. Unused and unused platforms on some active stations will remain too.
in the "ghost" state.
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Metrorats (Метрокрысы ''Metrokrysy'') are another famous urban legend about the metro, fueled by a series of entirely fictitious stories published by newspapers to boost ratings in the early 1990s. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. The legend is so popular, that it became ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums. One of explanations for its origin is seeing a stray brown pit bull terrier in the times when the breed was near-unknown in the USSR.

to:

Metrorats (Метрокрысы ''Metrokrysy'') are another famous urban legend about the metro, fueled by a series of entirely fictitious stories published by newspapers to boost ratings in the early 1990s. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. people. The legend is so popular, that it became an ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums. One of explanations for its origin is seeing a stray brown pit bull terrier in the times when the breed was near-unknown in the USSR.
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* ''{{Firefox}}'' - this is filmed in Vienna, with a local station sign visible in one shot. Plus a funny mistake - he enters the U1 on Karlsplatz, but exits the U4 in Schönbrunn.

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* ''{{Firefox}}'' ''Film/{{Firefox}}'' - this is filmed in Vienna, with a local station sign visible in one shot. Plus a funny mistake - he enters the U1 on Karlsplatz, but exits the U4 in Schönbrunn.



* The main setting of Dmitriy Gluhovskiy's novel ''{{Metro 2033}}'' and [[VideoGame/{{Metro2033}} the game]] based on it, where it serves as a shelter for the few survivors after TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt, and monstrous abominations lurk in the tunnels.
* In ''IStepThroughMoscow'', a 1963 Soviet movie which remains quite popular in Russia, a scene is set in the Moscow Metro.

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* The main setting of Dmitriy Gluhovskiy's novel ''{{Metro ''Literature/{{Metro 2033}}'' and [[VideoGame/{{Metro2033}} the game]] based on it, where it serves as a shelter for the few survivors after TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt, and monstrous abominations lurk in the tunnels.
* In ''IStepThroughMoscow'', ''Film/IStepThroughMoscow'', a 1963 Soviet movie which remains quite popular in Russia, a scene is set in the Moscow Metro.



** A sealed off branch of the Metro is set up for a command post for the Soviet senior leadership, in ''RedStormRising''.
* Novel ''Dog Boy'' by Eva Hornung features stray dogs and the WildChild [[RaisedByWolves main character]] riding the Moscow Metro.

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** A sealed off branch of the Metro is set up for a command post for the Soviet senior leadership, in ''RedStormRising''.
''Literature/RedStormRising''.
* Novel The novel ''Dog Boy'' by Eva Hornung features stray dogs and the WildChild [[RaisedByWolves main character]] riding the Moscow Metro.
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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"'' (''Ostrozhno, dveri zakrivayutsya!''/"Caution, doors are closing!")

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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"'' (''Ostrozhno, (''Ostorozhno, dveri zakrivayutsya!''/"Caution, doors are closing!")
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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"'' (''Ostrozho, dveri zakr'vayutsya!''/"Caution, doors are closing!")

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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"'' (''Ostrozho, (''Ostrozhno, dveri zakr'vayutsya!''/"Caution, zakrivayutsya!''/"Caution, doors are closing!")
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Metrorats (Метрокрысы) are another famous urban legend about the metro, fueled by a series of entirely fictitious stories published by newspapers to boost ratings in the early 1990s. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. The legend is so popular, that it became ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums. One of explanations for its origin is seeing a stray brown pit bull terrier in the times when the breed was near-unknown in the USSR.

to:

Metrorats (Метрокрысы) (Метрокрысы ''Metrokrysy'') are another famous urban legend about the metro, fueled by a series of entirely fictitious stories published by newspapers to boost ratings in the early 1990s. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. The legend is so popular, that it became ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums. One of explanations for its origin is seeing a stray brown pit bull terrier in the times when the breed was near-unknown in the USSR.
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updated ticket price


The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (25 r. or ~$0.75 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

to:

The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (25 (30 r. or ~$0.75 ~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

to:

The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 (25 r. or ~$0.75 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. In USSR times it used common coins (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

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New stations will not use individual designs. From coins to smartcards. Old and new trains. Colour confusion with \"green\" lines. Second ring is planned, but hasn\'t advanced for decades. Metrorats: pit bull hypothesis. Ghost stations: the last one will open soon.


The system, far more underground than UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground, is best known for the station design (especially in the earlier stations, when lavishness of decoration was the point, and some recent stations), with its ornate arches, sculptures, murals, etc. It's SocialistRealism meeting urban transport and looking like a museum. Sadly, during the Khruschev's times, the architectural opulence was greatly scaled down, which led to the proliferation of the bland and boring, extremely utilitarian station designs [[FanNickname popularly dubbed]] "Sorokonozhka" ("Centipede", but literally "forty-legged"), due to the unfortunate coincidence of the typical station having forty square columns on the sides. Fortunately, the architectural chic was gradually restored, and now new stations may be less Socialist Realist, but still as artsy as they get.

to:

The system, far more underground than UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground, is best known for the station design (especially in the earlier stations, when lavishness of decoration was the point, and some recent stations), with its ornate arches, sculptures, murals, etc. It's SocialistRealism meeting urban transport and looking like a museum. Sadly, during the Khruschev's times, the architectural opulence was greatly scaled down, which led to the proliferation of the bland and boring, extremely utilitarian station designs [[FanNickname popularly dubbed]] "Sorokonozhka" ("Centipede", but literally "forty-legged"), due to the unfortunate coincidence of the typical station having forty square columns on the sides. Fortunately, the architectural chic was gradually restored, restored starting from 1970s, and now new stations may be less Socialist Realist, but still as artsy as they get.get. Now the pendulum has swung again and new stations are all planned to be near-identical to keep the costs down (as opposed to individual designs in the past). We'll see.



The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. However, in USSR times it used common coins and then special slugs. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

Speaking of the rails, The Metro runs on the same wide gauge track (1520 mm) as other Russian railways, but uses a special rolling stock that is lighter, better suited to quick loading and unloading, and pretty bad for the overground running (there's only one line with a significant overground stretch in the whole system, so why bother?). In contrast with the London system, there's only one size of the rolling stock, as both surface-dug and drilled tunnels are built to the same spec. Most trains, which were designed and (mostly) ''built'' back in Soviet times, lack air-conditioning, relying instead on special scoops on the roofs, which make cars rather drafty when they are running, and positively stifling when they're not. New trains ''do'' have [=ACs=] though, but their reliability leaves much to be desired. They are also pretty rare, as they are bought only to replace the aging ones and used only on some lines. Given the enormous passenger load the system experiences most of the time, it's the major reason why riding a Metro can be a rather unpleasant experience.

There are 12 lines, which are designated by names, numbers and colors, and the lines tend to be referred to by their colors in the colloquial speech, except when the similarly colored lines may cause confusion and in the case of the Ring line -- it's never referred to by its color (brown), but always as "Koltsevaya" ("The Ring Line"). The lines are arranged in a wheel pattern, with seven radial lines running the city end to end being spokes, the intersecting grid they form in the city center constituting a hub, and Koltsevaya line, roughly corresponding to the Garden Ring along the edge of the city center, being the rim. There are also two shorter half-length radial lines, and since the plans of having the second ring to relieve the overloaded central grid were dropped due to the lack of funds, they are replaced by the ''ad hoc''-built "chordal" lines, connecting the spokes outside of the ring, of which there are now two. [[AwesomeButImpractical Moscow Monorail]] is also often lumped here as a third chordal line (it is also run by the Metro company), but is actually a completely different affair, though there are efforts to better integrate it into the system.

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The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. However, in In USSR times it used common coins and (~$0.007 as of 1985), then inflation forced the switch to special slugs.tokens, then counterfeiting prompted the switch to magnetic cards and smartcards. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

Speaking of the rails, The Metro runs on the same wide gauge track (1520 mm) as other Russian railways, but uses a special rolling stock that is lighter, better suited to quick loading and unloading, and pretty bad for the overground running (there's only one line with a significant overground stretch in the whole system, so why bother?). In contrast with the London system, there's only one size of the rolling stock, as both surface-dug and drilled tunnels are built to the same spec. Most Old trains, which were designed and (mostly) ''built'' back in Soviet times, lack air-conditioning, relying instead on special scoops on the roofs, which make cars rather drafty when they are running, and positively stifling when they're not. not.[[note]]Actually the train design was based off pre-WW2 New York trains and hasn't changed much until 1980s. The introduction of new models was slow due to TheGreatPoliticsMessUp. [[/note]] New trains ''do'' have [=ACs=] though, but their reliability leaves much to be desired. They are also pretty rare, as they are bought only to replace gradually replacing the aging old ones since early 2000s and used only on some lines.the process may stretch up to 2020. Given the enormous passenger load the system experiences most of the time, it's the major reason why riding a Metro can be a rather unpleasant experience.

There are 12 lines, which are designated by names, numbers and colors, and the lines tend to be referred to by their colors in the colloquial speech, except when the similarly colored lines may cause confusion (there are Green diameter, Lettuce chord and Emerald segment-that-may-become-another-ring) and in the case of the Ring line -- it's never referred to by its color (brown), but always as "Koltsevaya" ("The Ring Line"). The lines are arranged in a wheel pattern, with seven radial lines running the city end to end being spokes, the intersecting grid they form in the city center constituting a hub, and Koltsevaya line, roughly corresponding to the Garden Ring along the edge of the city center, being the rim. There are also two shorter half-length radial lines, and since the plans of having the second ring to relieve the overloaded central grid were dropped are perpetually postponed due to the lack of funds, they are replaced by the ''ad hoc''-built "chordal" lines, connecting the spokes outside of the ring, of which there are now two. [[AwesomeButImpractical Moscow Monorail]] is also often lumped here as a third chordal line (it is also run by the Metro company), but is actually a completely different affair, though there are efforts to better integrate it into the system.



There is also a widely believed-in (but officially denied) UrbanLegend about a "Metro 2" system, deeper down, designed to evacuate key people from Moscow in the event of a nuclear war. Most stuff on this is on a "my brother's friend's aunt's friend worked there" basis and anything on this should be taken [[EpilepticTrees with a pinch of salt]]. However, many tunnels have spin-offs and some of them are not associated with any object on surface. Metrorats (Метрокрысы) are another famous urban legend about the metro. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. The legend is so popular, that it became ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums.

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There is also a widely believed-in (but officially denied) UrbanLegend about a "Metro 2" system, deeper down, designed to evacuate key people from Moscow in the event of a nuclear war. Most stuff on this is on a "my brother's friend's aunt's friend worked there" basis and anything on this should be taken [[EpilepticTrees with a pinch of salt]]. However, many tunnels have spin-offs and some of them are not associated with any object on surface.

Metrorats (Метрокрысы) are another famous urban legend about the metro.metro, fueled by a series of entirely fictitious stories published by newspapers to boost ratings in the early 1990s. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. The legend is so popular, that it became ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums.
forums. One of explanations for its origin is seeing a stray brown pit bull terrier in the times when the breed was near-unknown in the USSR.



There ''are'' some "ghost stations," that were built, but never used for passengers. Passengers still can see them from car windows, yet mostly without lights except from the train itself.

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There ''are'' some "ghost stations," that were built, but never used for passengers. Passengers still can see them from car windows, yet mostly without lights except from the train itself. \n The last full-sized ghost station is scheduled to open in 2014. After that only short evacuation chambers will remain. Unused platforms on some active stations will remain too.
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*** That's mainly because the initial segment was based [[WriteWhatYouKnow on location of Lukianenko's own apartment]] at the time of writing in the late Nineties. Obviousle, that was changed for the movie.

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*** That's mainly because the initial segment was based [[WriteWhatYouKnow on location of Lukianenko's own apartment]] at the time of writing in the late Nineties. Obviousle, Obviously, that was changed for the movie.
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*** That's mainly because the initial segment was based [[WriteWhatYouKnow on location of Lukianenko's own apartment]] at the time of writing in the late Nineties. Obviousle, that was changed for the movie.

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The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture, ''and'' an experience that can hardly be recommended on a regular basis. The plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in 1880's]], but due to the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, it wasn't until Stalin that work actually began (actually thanks to Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce were finally available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.

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The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture, ''and'' an experience that can hardly be recommended on a regular basis.architecture. The plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in 1880's]], but due to the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, it wasn't until Stalin that work actually began (actually thanks to Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce were finally available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.

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Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs.

to:

Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs.
signs. This is slowly changing with time, with addition of English signage on the maps and floor and wall transfer direction indicators on the few stations that have them.



* ''Literature/NightWatch'' - filmed, according to IMDB, in [[TheCityFormerlyKnownAs St. Petersburg.]] Which has its own, much smaller and less traveled, but much more technically complex and ''confusing'' metro system. The local joke does that St. Pete's metro was designed to utterly dumbfound any possible occupant.

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* ''Literature/NightWatch'' - filmed, according to IMDB, in [[TheCityFormerlyKnownAs St. Petersburg.]] Which has its own, much smaller and less traveled, but much more technically complex and ''confusing'' metro system. The local joke does that St. Pete's metro was designed to utterly dumbfound any possible occupant. The aboveground sections involving the subway stations ''were'' filmed in Moscow, however.
** There's also an interesting gaffe as the movie changed the address of one of the characters, moving their home two stations down the orange line. As a result, a scene involving a crowd rushing into the train at Anton when he tries to get off happens on Botanicheskiy Sad, a station that mostly sees passengers getting ''off'' the northbound trains, what few of them ride this far, as the main rush happens on VDNKh, the original station used in the book. Of course, only Muscovites residing that far up the orange line will even notice that.
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tidying up a rather meandering sentence


The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture, ''and'' an experience that can hardly be recommended on a regular basis. Though the plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in 1880's]], the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being equally ridiculously tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, led to the fact that it finally started being built by Stalin (actually by Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister, but that's the fact that slips from most Westerners' attention) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce finally were available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.

to:

The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture, ''and'' an experience that can hardly be recommended on a regular basis. Though the The plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in 1880's]], but due to the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being equally ridiculously tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, led to the fact that it finally started being built by wasn't until Stalin that work actually began (actually by thanks to Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister, but that's the fact that slips from most Westerners' attention) minister) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce were finally were available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.
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* In ''PoliceAcademy: Mission To Moscow'', Commander Lassard expresses his awe at the Moscow Metro to his Russian "hosts."

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* In ''PoliceAcademy: ''[[Film/PoliceAcademy Police Academy: Mission To Moscow'', Moscow]]'', Commander Lassard expresses his awe at the Moscow Metro to his Russian "hosts."

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* Mentioned in several TomClancy books.

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* Mentioned in several TomClancy books.Creator/TomClancy books.
** In ''[[Literature/JackRyan The Cardinal of the Kremlin]]'', the Metro crowds are used as cover for one of the exchanges in the communications chain for the titular Cardinal's information to make it into CIA hands.
** A sealed off branch of the Metro is set up for a command post for the Soviet senior leadership, in ''RedStormRising''.
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The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. However, in USSR times it used common coins and then special slugs. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

to:

The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-once-per-7-minutes unlimited-but-no-more-than-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. However, in USSR times it used common coins and then special slugs. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.
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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"''

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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"''
закрываются!"'' (''Ostrozho, dveri zakr'vayutsya!''/"Caution, doors are closing!")
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* ''NightWatch'' - filmed, according to IMDB, in [[TheCityFormerlyKnownAs St. Petersburg.]] Which has its own, much smaller and less traveled, but much more technically complex and ''confusing'' metro system. The local joke does that St. Pete's metro was designed to utterly dumbfound any possible occupant.

to:

* ''NightWatch'' ''Literature/NightWatch'' - filmed, according to IMDB, in [[TheCityFormerlyKnownAs St. Petersburg.]] Which has its own, much smaller and less traveled, but much more technically complex and ''confusing'' metro system. The local joke does that St. Pete's metro was designed to utterly dumbfound any possible occupant.
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* In ''IStepThroughMoscow'', a 1963 Soviet movie which remains quite popular in Russia, a scene is set in the MoscowMetro.

to:

* In ''IStepThroughMoscow'', a 1963 Soviet movie which remains quite popular in Russia, a scene is set in the MoscowMetro.Moscow Metro.
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Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[hottip:*:As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs.

to:

Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[hottip:*:As counter-clockwise[[note]]As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...]]).[[/note]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs.
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->''"Осторожно, двери закрываются!"''

[[quoteright:300:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/moscow_metro_1028.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:My liege, two blue trains seem to be loose in your réfectoire. It's just like in [[Music/RingoStarr Ringo's]] [[WesternAnimation/YellowSubmarine house!]]]]

The world's busiest subway system and second only to [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]] in the general rapid transit systems category, Moscow's Metro system is both an impressive feat of engineering and architecture, ''and'' an experience that can hardly be recommended on a regular basis. Though the plans for it sprang up [[OlderThanTheyThink back in 1880's]], the city government hating all public works as a matter of principle, and ridiculously rich Moscow merchants being equally ridiculously tightfisted about anything that wasn't fueling their ego, led to the fact that it finally started being built by Stalin (actually by Lazar Kaganovich, then railways minister, but that's the fact that slips from most Westerners' attention) in 1935, when both the funds and workforce finally were available. The deep underground tunnels and stations were explicitly envisioned as bomb shelters for the people of Moscow, and the wisdom of this move was proved during WorldWarII, when most stations served as such, and some were converted to house various important military installations -- like Chistye Prudy station that was an Air Defense HQ.

The system, far more underground than UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground, is best known for the station design (especially in the earlier stations, when lavishness of decoration was the point, and some recent stations), with its ornate arches, sculptures, murals, etc. It's SocialistRealism meeting urban transport and looking like a museum. Sadly, during the Khruschev's times, the architectural opulence was greatly scaled down, which led to the proliferation of the bland and boring, extremely utilitarian station designs [[FanNickname popularly dubbed]] "Sorokonozhka" ("Centipede", but literally "forty-legged"), due to the unfortunate coincidence of the typical station having forty square columns on the sides. Fortunately, the architectural chic was gradually restored, and now new stations may be less Socialist Realist, but still as artsy as they get.

The Metro is a lifeline for notoriously traffic-jammed Moscow, as it's often the only means to reliably reach the desired destination when major highways are jammed for hours, and any accident in the Metro leads to the city grinding a standstill. Fortunately, the accidents are pretty rare, and even The One Under is rarely a fatality -- taking into account [[UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground London's example]], there's a deep trench between the rails on every station. It also has another feature based on the English experience -- there's exactly ''one'' station with a curved platform, so the distinctive caution to mind the gap is simply unneeded there. It is replaced, however by the another, no less iconic phrase: "Ostorozhno, dveri zakryvayutsya," or "Be careful, the doors are closing." Sometimes you can hear another phrase: "Be careful when leaving through last door of last car," because some stations are not long enough to fully guarantee that train will actually fit. Another interesting feature is that there are ''no'' fare zones -- in contrast to much of the other world's subway systems, the fare is flat and each and every trip costs the same amount (~$1 as for now) regardless of its length or number of transfers. The Metro uses smartcards as tickets, with 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 or 60 uses and limited lifetime (45 days for a 60-use ticket), unlimited-but-no-more-once-per-7-minutes replenishable plastic smartcards with 30, 90 and 365 days of use. There are social monthly tickets and replenishable cards as well. However, in USSR times it used common coins and then special slugs. The system has been under constant overuse for last 20 years, so many wish to stay in traffic jams rather use the Metro. Ironically enough, there are human-jams on hub stations at rush hours.

Speaking of the rails, The Metro runs on the same wide gauge track (1520 mm) as other Russian railways, but uses a special rolling stock that is lighter, better suited to quick loading and unloading, and pretty bad for the overground running (there's only one line with a significant overground stretch in the whole system, so why bother?). In contrast with the London system, there's only one size of the rolling stock, as both surface-dug and drilled tunnels are built to the same spec. Most trains, which were designed and (mostly) ''built'' back in Soviet times, lack air-conditioning, relying instead on special scoops on the roofs, which make cars rather drafty when they are running, and positively stifling when they're not. New trains ''do'' have [=ACs=] though, but their reliability leaves much to be desired. They are also pretty rare, as they are bought only to replace the aging ones and used only on some lines. Given the enormous passenger load the system experiences most of the time, it's the major reason why riding a Metro can be a rather unpleasant experience.

There are 12 lines, which are designated by names, numbers and colors, and the lines tend to be referred to by their colors in the colloquial speech, except when the similarly colored lines may cause confusion and in the case of the Ring line -- it's never referred to by its color (brown), but always as "Koltsevaya" ("The Ring Line"). The lines are arranged in a wheel pattern, with seven radial lines running the city end to end being spokes, the intersecting grid they form in the city center constituting a hub, and Koltsevaya line, roughly corresponding to the Garden Ring along the edge of the city center, being the rim. There are also two shorter half-length radial lines, and since the plans of having the second ring to relieve the overloaded central grid were dropped due to the lack of funds, they are replaced by the ''ad hoc''-built "chordal" lines, connecting the spokes outside of the ring, of which there are now two. [[AwesomeButImpractical Moscow Monorail]] is also often lumped here as a third chordal line (it is also run by the Metro company), but is actually a completely different affair, though there are efforts to better integrate it into the system.

Trains are very frequent, less than a minute apart during rush hour, and a supposedly horrendously long 7 minutes apart after midnight (stations open at 05:30 and close at 01:00 for maintenance), so no schedule is available to passengers -- you'd never wait long enough to warrant it. Direction can be determined by the gender of the announcer (male for into the city or clockwise, female out or counter-clockwise[[hottip:*:As the saying goes, "Your boss calls you to work, your wife calls you home". Yep, we know...]]). It's also almost impossible to get lost there, as there's only one branch in the whole system, maps are plastered on every imaginable surface, columns equipped with a voice link to information bureaus and emergency services stand on every station, and signs showing where you can get from here abound -- in fact, it is only second to the Tokyo subway in usability and usefulness of its signage -- if you [[SarcasmMode just so happen to know Russian]], of course, as there's very little in the way of international signs.

There is also a widely believed-in (but officially denied) UrbanLegend about a "Metro 2" system, deeper down, designed to evacuate key people from Moscow in the event of a nuclear war. Most stuff on this is on a "my brother's friend's aunt's friend worked there" basis and anything on this should be taken [[EpilepticTrees with a pinch of salt]]. However, many tunnels have spin-offs and some of them are not associated with any object on surface. Metrorats (Метрокрысы) are another famous urban legend about the metro. They are, reportedly, extremely big and smart [[RodentsOfUnusualSize rats at least 1 meter in size]] who live in metro tunnels and can eat strangers. The legend is so popular, that it became ironical explanation for some stupid metro-questions -- or a reason for an instaban on some forums.

There are also many stray dogs ("Metrodogs") that live in the system, and even use the trains to go from place to place.

There ''are'' some "ghost stations," that were built, but never used for passengers. Passengers still can see them from car windows, yet mostly without lights except from the train itself.

There is as well a subculture of those who try to get to ''service areas'': Metrostroy (parts of the system under construction), tunnels, and other places not meant for the general public. This requires some skills, special gear, and careful work, so even though it's annoying for personnel, such activities usually bring no harm.

''In fiction''
* ''{{Firefox}}'' - this is filmed in Vienna, with a local station sign visible in one shot. Plus a funny mistake - he enters the U1 on Karlsplatz, but exits the U4 in Schönbrunn.
* ''NightWatch'' - filmed, according to IMDB, in [[TheCityFormerlyKnownAs St. Petersburg.]] Which has its own, much smaller and less traveled, but much more technically complex and ''confusing'' metro system. The local joke does that St. Pete's metro was designed to utterly dumbfound any possible occupant.
* The main setting of Dmitriy Gluhovskiy's novel ''{{Metro 2033}}'' and [[VideoGame/{{Metro2033}} the game]] based on it, where it serves as a shelter for the few survivors after TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt, and monstrous abominations lurk in the tunnels.
* In ''IStepThroughMoscow'', a 1963 Soviet movie which remains quite popular in Russia, a scene is set in the MoscowMetro.
* In ''PoliceAcademy: Mission To Moscow'', Commander Lassard expresses his awe at the Moscow Metro to his Russian "hosts."
* Mentioned in several TomClancy books.
* Novel ''Dog Boy'' by Eva Hornung features stray dogs and the WildChild [[RaisedByWolves main character]] riding the Moscow Metro.
* The Metrorat urban legend is true in ''AgeOfAquarius''.
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