Moscow Belorussky railway station

Belorussky railway terminal (Russian: Белору́сский вокза́л, IPA: [bʲɪɫɐˈruskʲɪj vɐɡˈzaɫ]) is a passenger terminal[1] at the Moscow–Passenger–Smolenskaya railway station[2] (Russian: Москва́-Пассажирская-Смоле́нская, also known as Moskva-Smolenskaya) of the Moscow Railway. Informally the whole station can be called as Moscow Belorusskaya (Russian: Москва Белорусская, Moskva Belorusskaya).[3]

Moscow-Belorusskaya
Moscow Railway terminal
View of the station from Tverskaya Zastava Square
Location7 Tverskaya Zastava Square, Moscow
Russia
Platforms7
Tracks11
Connections
  • Moscow Metro stations:
  • Belorusskaya
  • Belorusskaya

Tram: 7, 9;

Bus: M1, H1, T18, T78, 12, 27, 82, 84, 101, 116, 456, 904, 905 ;

Trolleybus: 12, 20, 54, 70, 82;
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
Other information
Station code198230
Fare zone0
History
Opened1870
Rebuilt1907–1912
Services
Preceding station   Central Suburban Passenger Company   Following station
Begovaya
toward Krasnoye
Moscow—SmolenskTerminus
Begovaya
toward Borodino
Borodino—Serpukhov
Moscow Stankolit
toward Serpukhov
Begovaya
toward Borodino
Borodino—Savyolovo
toward Savyolovo
toward Odintsovo
Belorussko-Savyolovsky diameter
toward Lobnya
Begovaya
toward Odintsovo
Aeroexpress
toward Sheremetyevo
Location
Moscow-Belorusskaya
Location within Moscow Ring Road

It is one of nine railway terminals of Moscow. It was opened in 1870 and rebuilt in its current form in 1907–1912.

Operations

Belorussky railway terminal serves long distance trains to regions west and south-west of Moscow, and one train each to the north-east (on the Savyolovsky branch to Rybinsk with continuing service to Uglich, Vesegonsk, and Pestovo) and to the south (to Anapa through Tula, Kursk, Voronezh, and Rostov-on-Don). The station also serves local commuter trains (Belorussky suburban railway line and Line D1 of Moscow Central Diameters) to Usovo, Odintsovo, Golitsyno, Kubinka I, Mozhaisk (including express service), Borodino, and Zvenigorod as well as the Aeroexpress service to Sheremetyevo Airport.

The station is not entirely a terminus station. A transit line continues on the Alekseevskaya Line. In addition, the station provides through service to Savyolovsky (Savyolovsky suburban railway line and Line D1 of Moscow Central Diameters) and Kursky stations. Until 18 May 2015 a suburban train service also continued to Gagarin,[4][5] and until the end of 2012 to Vyazma. Now the farthest station of commuter train service on this line is Mozhaisk. Approximately 1500 passengers per hour use Belorussky station.[6]

Belorussky railway station is included in the Moscow Regional Directorate of the Directorate of railway stations.[7] This station is part of the Moscow-Smolensk unit of DTSS-3, Moscow Directorate of Rail Traffic Control.

History

Construction of the railway from Moscow to Smolensk, and then to Minsk and Warsaw, started in the second half of the 1860s. Construction of the station, known as Smolensky, began in late April 1869.[6] A grand opening of the Moscow-Smolensk railway took place on 19 September 1870, the station became the sixth in Moscow. In November 1871 after the extension of the railway to Belarus, the station was renamed Belorussky Station. On 15 May 1910 the right wing of the new station opened, and on 26 February 1912 the left wing opened. The station was designed by architect Ivan Strukov. On 4 May 1912 the railway was renamed the Alexander Railway, the station was renamed Alexander Station.[6] In August 1922 the Alexander and the Moscow-Baltic railways were merged into the Moscow-Belarus-Baltic, so the station was renamed Belorussian-Baltic station. In May 1936 and, after yet another reorganization of the railways, the station received its present name – Belorussky Station.

Aeroexpress

Suburban platforms of Belorussky Rail Terminal also showing Aeroexpress platform.

In September 2007 OAO "Aeroexpress" began the reconstruction of the rail link to Sheremetyevo Airport. The cost of reconstruction at the Belorussky station was estimated at US$7.7 million and involved the construction of a new terminal, which has become one of the main links in rail traffic between Moscow and the airport. The new Belorussky terminal is located in the fourth hall of the railway station and occupies an area of 600 square metres (6,500 sq ft) Passengers departing from Sheremetyevo can check in for flights using the self-service kiosks. The terminal was opened on 27 August 2009.

In June 2008 construction of a new railway terminal complex at Sheremetyevo was completed. New purpose-built rolling stock, the electric ED4MKM-Aero developed by ZAO "Transmashholding" serves the line.

Baggage check-in at the city terminal was abolished on 1 December 2010 in connection with the sharp increase in the number of passengers. The one-way cost of the trip is 500 rubles (1000 rubles for business class).[8]

Trains and destinations

Long distance

Train numberTrain nameDestinationOperated by
001/002Belarus (bel, rus: Беларусь) Minsk (Main) Belarusian Railways
003/004Minsk (bel: Мінск, rus: Минск) Minsk (Main) Belarusian Railways
009/010Polonez (pol: Polonez, rus: Полонез) Warsaw (Zachodnia) Polish State Railways
Russian Railways
013/014 Strizh (rus: Стриж) Berlin Russian Railways
017/018 Riviera Express Nice (Ville)[9] Russian Railways
021/022Vltava (cz: Vltava, rus: Влтава) Prague (cars: Wien (Westbahnhof)) Russian Railways
023/024 Paris (Gare de l'Est) Russian Railways
025/026Svislach (bel: Свіслач, rus: Свислочь) Minsk (Main) Belarusian Railways
027/028Bug (bel: Буг, rus: Буг) Brest Belarusian Railways
029/030Yantar (rus: Янтарь) Kaliningrad (cars: Vilnius) Russian Railways

Lithuanian Railways

033/034Smolensk (rus: Смоленск) Smolensk (Main) Russian Railways
039/040Dzvina (bel: Дзвіна, rus: Двина) Polotsk Belarusian Railways
055/056Sozh (bel, rus: Сож) Gomel (cars: Salihorsk, Mahilyow) Belarusian Railways
077/078Nyoman (bel: Нёман, rus: Неман) Grodno Belarusian Railways
601/602Rybinsk (rus: Рыбинск) Rybinsk (cars: Vesyegonsk, Pestovo, Uglich) Russian Railways
731/732

733/734

735/736

Lastochka (rus: Ласточка) Smolensk (Main) Russian Railways

Other destinations

CountryDestinations
AustriaInnsbruck, Wien (Westbahnhof)
BelarusMahilyow
Czech RepublicCheb, Prague
FranceNice (Ville),[9] Paris (Gare de l'Est)
GermanyBerlin, Frankfurt
RussiaAnapa, Arkhangelsk, Cherepovets, Usinsk, Vorkuta, Novosibirsk

Suburban destinations

Suburban commuter trains (elektrichka) connect Belorussky station with the towns of Barvikha, Usovo, Odintsovo, Golitsyno, Zvenigorod, Kubinka, Mozhaysk.

Some suburban commuter trains (elektrichka) also proceed to Savyolovsky Rail Terminal to the Savyolovo direction destinations (Dolgoprudny, Lobnya, Nekrasovsky, Iksha, Dmitrov, Taldom, Dubna) and to Kursky Rail Terminal to Kursk direction destinations (Shcherbinka, Podolsk, Serpukhov).

Airport connections

Belorussky station is connected to Savyolovsky Rail Terminal (before 30 May 2010) and Sheremetyevo International Airport by Aeroexpress trains.[10]

Cultural references

  • A film "Belorussky station" was created in 1970 by Andrey Smirnov.

References

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