The Moscow metro comprises a route network with a total length of 320 km and is the most fascinating underground transport system in the world. Each year more than 2.4 billion passengers use almost 200 stations which are rich in architectural design. The aim is for a further 80 km - that is a quarter of the current network - to be connected by 2017. The metro of the Russian capital is thus on the threshold of an enlargement which will be the largest in its history. This elaborately designed illustrated book focuses on the architecture and its associated design from the signage, to the logo branding, to the many printed materials. Three text contributions consider the underground world of traffic engineering in terms of construction history, from the point of view of the Chief Architect of Moscow, architectural history and the design bureau which lent the metro its unmistakable character. This book continues the academic studies pursued by DOM publishers with regard to Soviet and Russian history of art and technology, encompassing the widespread fascination with cosmonautics, prefabricated mass housing and underground mass transportation.
Sergey Kuznetsov, born in 1977. Graduated from Moscow Architectural Institute in 2001. Since 2012 has been assigned to the post of the Chief Architect of Moscow.
Alexander Zmeul, born in 1978. Graduated from Russian State Humanitarian University. Editor-in-chief of the online publication archspeech.
Erken Kagarov, born in 1966. Graduated from Tashkent State Institute of the Arts in 1992. Since 2012 has been art director at Art. Lebedev Studio.
"The authors of this book (including Moscow's chief architect, Sergey Kuznetsov) take stock of the metro's 80-year history in a beautifully illustrated account of its design, construction, and art." --Metropolis Magazine