Anděl (Prague Metro)

Entrance building

Anděl (Czech pronunciation: [ˈanɟɛl], meaning "Angel") is a Prague Metro station on Line B. The station was built between 1977 and 1985, designed in the Soviet style, by Soviet architects and dedicated to the Czechoslovak–Soviet friendship. The station was renamed in 1990 to Anděl, after the nearby Anděl neighborhood. At present it is one of the busiest stations on line B.

Its original name was Moskevská, after the city of Moscow. In the same year the Czechoslovak Metrostav designed the station Prazhskaya, named after Prague, it was opened on the Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line of the Moscow Metro, which resembles the ceramic-tiled stations on the C line’s Jižní Město segment. The Anděl station still contains one of the last pieces of propaganda art promoting Czechoslovak-Soviet friendship.[1]

Anděl station has two exits, leading to the two underground vestibules. One vestibule is directly in the Anděl neighborhood, next to the shopping mall and the other is at "Na Knížecí", a big bus station serving as a terminus for local and intercity buses.

References

  1. "History of the Prague Metro". Metroart.cz.
← direction Zličín Prague Metro line B direction Černý Most
Smíchovské nádraží Anděl Karlovo náměstí
Zličín Stodůlky Luka Lužiny Hůrka Nové Butovice JinoniceRadlickáSmíchovské nádraží AndělKarlovo náměstíNárodní třída Můstek ANáměstí RepublikyFlorenc CKřižíkovaInvalidovnaPalmovkaČeskomoravskáVysočanská Kolbenova Hloubětín Rajská zahrada Černý Most 

Coordinates: 50°04′26″N 14°24′18″E / 50.074°N 14.405°E / 50.074; 14.405

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