Lvivska Brama (Kyiv Metro)
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Lvivska Brama ( uk, Львiвська Брама) is a station on the Syretsko-Pecherska Line of the
Kyiv Metro The Kyiv Metro ( uk, Ки́ївський метрополіте́н, Kyivskyi metropoliten, ) is a rapid transit system in Kyiv that is owned by the Kyiv City Council and operated by the city-owned company Kyivsky Metropoliten''.'' It was initi ...
between the Lukianivska and Zoloti Vorota stations that was partially built but never opened.


History

Originally, upon the construction of the Syretsky radius, which began in 1990, the first stage was to consist of five stations that would open in two phases: Zoloti Vorota – Lukianivska with Lvivska Brama as interim, and then Lukianivska – Syrets with two stations as an interim, and the whole project would be opened in the late 1990s. However, the financial setbacks that the
breakup of the Soviet Union The dissolution of the Soviet Union, also negatively connoted as rus, Разва́л Сове́тского Сою́за, r=Razvál Sovétskogo Soyúza, ''Ruining of the Soviet Union''. was the process of internal disintegration within the Sov ...
brought onto the Ukrainian economy slowed the construction of the Metro, and frequent breaks due to the lack of finances affected the quality. Another important factor was the need for the station. The station would be in the centre of the city where the density of Metro stations was already large, and inter-station distances are short. Moreover, the square for which the station is named (''Square of the Lviv Gateway'') was (and still is) not important enough for transport links or commercially to justify the station (as opposed to Lukianivska). Finally, it was the square itself that proved to have the deciding reason, because the original location for the escalator tunnel needed altering, and a disagreement arose on where it would be located. All this led to the station not opening with the first part of the Syretsky radius in 1996. After the financial situation slowly improved in the late 1990s, various optimistic forecasts started promising the completion of the station with a precise opening day: 14 October 1999, 30 December 1999. However, after the opening of the third station on the radius, Dorohozhychi, most attention switched to other extensions and Lvivska Brama was no longer a priority. Ironically, between Dorohozhychi and Lukianivska another station was originally planned, Vulytsia Hertsena, but, unlike Lvivska, only a provision was left. In early 2007 a contractor was found to resume work on the station. A
Lviv Lviv ( uk, Львів) is the largest city in western Ukraine, and the seventh-largest in Ukraine, with a population of . It serves as the administrative centre of Lviv Oblast and Lviv Raion, and is one of the main cultural centres of Ukrain ...
-based ''Zubr'' company which was to rebuild the square would also be required to complete the station with an opening date of 2010. Construction of the station resumed in July 2008. In May 2012, the station had not been completed due to further construction delays. In February 2022 the site was still an unfinished metro station.A tender has been announced for the design of a metro station in Kyiv
Ekonomichna Pravda (5 February 2022)
On 5 February 2022
Kyiv Metro The Kyiv Metro ( uk, Ки́ївський метрополіте́н, Kyivskyi metropoliten, ) is a rapid transit system in Kyiv that is owned by the Kyiv City Council and operated by the city-owned company Kyivsky Metropoliten''.'' It was initi ...
announced a tender for the design of the station entrance. Today the station exists as an empty space that can be seen from inside the trains,Metro to Troieschyna, "The Wall of Yatsenyuk" and the Odesa-Reni highway. For what long-term construction all Ukraine is waiting for
Ukrayinska Pravda ''Ukrainska Pravda'' ( uk, Українська правда, lit=Ukrainian Truth) is a Ukrainian online newspaper founded by Georgiy Gongadze on 16 April 2000 (the day of the Ukrainian constitutional referendum). Published mainly in Ukrai ...
(3 May 2018)
which slow as they pass, Both widened tunnels for the platform halls are done, but most of the passages to the central hall are still not opened, and the central hall itself is only partially bored through. The original architectural image of the station was to be on par with Lukianivska, both symbolising a break with the Soviet past and a Ukrainian future. The theme for Lvivska Brama would be orientated on Western Ukraine (which would fit in with the name) consisting of sharp, contrasting colour tones. The pylon portals would feature additional white vaults joining at the base of the pylons. Contrasting with this would be the black internal pylon passages. The floor would be arranged in a symmetrical cross pattern of red, white and black granite.


See also

* Telychka, another unfinished station of the Syretsko-Pecherska Line


References

{{Kyiv Metro Proposed Kyiv Metro stations