Heroiv Dnipra (Kyiv Metro)

Heroiv Dnipra
Kyiv Metro
Kyiv Metro station
The Station Hall
General information
LocationObolonskyi District
Kyiv
Ukraine
Coordinates50°31′22″N 30°29′55″E / 50.52278°N 30.49861°E / 50.52278; 30.49861
Owned byKyiv Metro
Line(s) Obolonsko–Teremkivska line
Platforms1
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeunderground
Platform levels1
Other information
Station code210
History
Opened6 November 1982
ElectrifiedYes
Services
Preceding station Kyiv Metro Following station
Terminus Obolonsko–Teremkivska line Minska
towards Teremky

Heroiv Dnipra (Ukrainian: Героїв Дніпра, lit.'Heroes of the Dnieper' ) is a station on Kyiv Metro's Obolonsko–Teremkivska line. The station was opened on 6 November 1982 in the Obolonskyi Raion of Kyiv and was designed by G.D. Andreev. The Metro station is named after the street directly above it.

The station is closer to the surface than a lot of other Metro stations. The platform has a central hall with brown square columns. The walls are adorned with white and yellow marble, and the floor is red granite. There were socialist red stars (who became illegal due to 2015 decommunization laws[1]) at the top of the columns, which is also where the station's lighting comes from. The station is accessible by two passenger tunnels; one leading to Obolonskyi Prospect and the other to Heroiv Dnipra Street (from which it takes its name).

Voters chose to rename the station Heroiv Ukrainy (Ukrainian: Героїв України; Heroes of Ukraine) in a poll taken during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[2] Another choice was Heroiv Mariupolia.[3] In May 2023 the Kyiv City Council renamed three Kyiv Metro stations, Heroiv Dnipra was not renamed.[4] The last Communist and Soviet Army symbols in the station were removed on 7 January 2024.[5]

Entrance to Heroiv Dnipra Metro Station

References

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  1. ^ (in Ukrainian) From the dismantled in the Kiev subway communist symbols will be created a museum, Zerkalo Nedeli (8 May 2016)
  2. ^ "Kyiv selects new names for Soviet-linked metro stations". BBC. 2022-05-10. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  3. ^ Valentina Romanenko (2022-05-02). ""Борщ", "Реактивные гуси", "Имени Магистра Йоды": как киевляне предлагали переименовать станции метро" (in Russian). Ukrayinska Pravda. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  4. ^ (in Ukrainian) Metro derusification: Kyivrad renamed three stations, Suspilne (May 18, 2023)
  5. ^ (in Ukrainian) Georgiev tape and Russian military emblems were removed from the Dnieper Heroes metro station in Kyiv, Lb.ua [uk] (7 January 2024)
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