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Metro-2

Metro-2 (Russian: Метро-2) is the informal name for a purported secret underground metro system which parallels the public Moscow Metro (known as Metro-1 when in comparison with Metro-2). The system was supposedly built, or at least started, during the time of Joseph Stalin and was codenamed D-6 (Д-6) by the KGB. It is supposedly still operated by the Main Directorate of Special Programmes and Ministry of Defence.[2][3][4][5][6][7]

Map of the Metro-2 system as supposed by the United States military intelligence.[1]
Line D6
Arbatskaya-3
Chertole
Frunzenskaya-2
Nauchnaya
Universitet-2
to Ramenki
"Underground City"
Stromnaya
Dlinnaya
Ramenki
Vostryakovo
Vnukovo-2

Metro-2 is said to have four lines which lie 50–200 metres (160–660 ft) deep. It is said to connect the Kremlin with the Federal Security Service (FSB) headquarters, the government airport at Vnukovo-2, and an underground town at Ramenki, in addition to other locations of national importance.

In 1994, the leader of an urban exploration group, the Diggers of the Underground Planet, claimed to have found an entrance to this underground system.[8]

Historic evidence however paints a much more conservative picture, with one "line" existing by the late 1960s, from the Kremlin, specifically site 103, to the site 54 south from Moscow State University, with a spur going north-west from there, to the area of the Matveevskaya railway platform and the DV-1 there.[9][10] Additional lines, i.e. to Vnukovo, are likely a later invention by the enthusiast community, though with the change in generations of the hardened protective structure design in the 1970/80s a redundant back up of this system may have been at least considered.

Etymology edit

 
Supposedly a tunnel switch that leads to Metro-1 from Metro-2, actually a switch at Troparovo to a buffer stop, on Metro-1.

In the summer of 1992, the literary and journalistic magazine Yunost (Russian: Юность) published a novel by the author and screenwriter Vladimir Gonik entitled Preispodniaia (Russian: Преисподняя) (English: Abyss), set in an underground bunker in Moscow. Earlier, in the spring of that year, excerpts from the novel had been published in the weekly newspaper Sovershenno sekretno (ru). In an interview with both the newspaper's editor and Gonik in 1993, the author stated that the term "Metro-2" had been introduced to them, and that the novel had been written based on information collected over the previous 20 years by the two of them on things such as secret bunkers and the underground railways connecting them.[11] Gonik admitted that he had worked on the book between 1973 and 1986, and that some of the more sensitive information had been purposefully misrepresented.[12]

In later years, Gonik has argued that the bunkers, and therefore the so-called "Metro-2", had been for use by the leadership of the Politburo and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), along with their families, in case of war. According to him, in the early 1970s the General Secretary of the CPSU, Leonid Brezhnev, personally visited the main bunker, and, in 1974, awarded the Chairman of the KGB at the time, Yuri Andropov, the Gold Star Medal of the Hero of Socialist Labour. Apparently, each member of the Central Committee had a 180 m2 (1,900 sq ft) apartment, with a study, lounge, kitchen and bathroom. Gonik claims to have gathered this information working as a doctor in the polyclinic of the Ministry of Defence.[13]

After the publication of the novel in 1992, the subject of a second, secret, underground railway has been raised many times, especially in the Russian media. In particular, the magazine Ogoniok (Russian: Огонёк) has referred to a "Metro-2" several times.

Confirmed information edit

Russian journalists have reported that the existence of Metro-2 is neither confirmed nor denied by the FSB or the Moscow Metro administration. However, listed below is evidence for the Metro-2's existence.

Studies of declassified Soviet archival materials edit

In 2021, a book by Dmitry Yurkov was published which covered new research on the history of special fortification in Moscow.[9][10] Below is a summary of findings.

From declassified archival documents, an overall layout of the track system and its main components can be established for the late 1960s (this is limited by the source material officially released so far). While the system was eventually assembled in the late 1960s by the KGB, originally it was a collection of structures built for a variety of purposes and operators.

Deep single track tunnel edit

This is the oldest component of Metro-2. Construction began in the mid-1950s, and its design was finalised in 1956. It intended to provide a solution to the challenge of extending the red line southwest, beyond the Sportivnaya metro station and the river. Because of the conflicting requirements—a reasonable cost, a secure river crossing, and a civil defence shelter capacity—the final design included a shallow metro line with a vulnerable bridge backed up by a deep single track tunnel—which spurs from the main line after the Sportivnaya station (the initial part of this spur is seen on normal track maps)—and a high-speed elevator shaft.

Originally, there were also other intended peacetime uses, such as nighttime train parking.


Order 10-A edit

 
A shaft R6 of OAO "TransInzhStroy" in Ramenki

Order 10-A is composed out of sites 54 and 54a and was intended to provide protected work spaces for the personnel of the planned Palace of the Soviets behind the Moscow State University campus. The plans for those administrative buildings were tied to the shafts and other features of this underground infrastructure project, but sadly the Palace of the Soviets—much like its pre-World War II variant—was not meant to be located next to Kropotkinstaya metro station.

Order 10-A was made by the 9th directorate of the Ministry for Defence, and for it a new construction organisation (US 10-A, presently Transinzhstroi) was set up in 1955. Construction was started in 1956 and completed by 1963.

Site 54 is composed of at least 5 shafts (1, 2, 3, 5, 6 explicitly mentioned) and includes extensive supporting systems such as air filtering stations and power generation, with the latter designed to support the planned above-ground administrative complex in case of emergencies. The site is connected to the deep single track tunnel at the depth of 189m. Shaft R6, which was used during order 10-A construction, still exists in Moscow and is a marker for its overall location.

Sites 100, 101, 103 and "Branch" edit

External image
  Photos of Metro-2 line ("Branch", deep single-track tunnel)

Site 103 is a large U-shaped structure built in central Moscow, designed to enhance the legacy World War II infrastructure by providing: site 1A in Kremlin (at the depth of 55m), a protected work spaces for the leadership; site 15N, a communications node; site 100 shelter (passing under site 101), a protected work spaces for the KGB. There were links to the existing legacy structures such as sites 25 and 25/2 in Kremlin, and site 201 at Lubyanka. It is also connected to the post-war site 101 at Zaryadie, which was intended to provide protected work spaces for officials working in the 8th Stalin's skyscraper; however, the skyscraper was never built, so site 101 was repurposed to support local Moscow region officials.

However, this project was plagued with a number of problems, such as slow construction (which went well into the mid-1960s), and uncertainty of how it could be evacuated after a nuclear attack. The latter was solved by the construction of "Branch" (Russian: Ветка), which linked site 103 in the city center to the deep single track tunnel and enabled moving people to the city outskirts.

The remote air intake (DV) network edit

 
A surface building of Matveevsky air intake (DV-1) with ventilation shafts

After some initial work on a network of air filtering and then air regeneration stations, such as site 703 (aka ChZ-703), the decision was made to shift towards using several large air filtering stations on the outskirts of the city and pumping this clean air into the rest of the deep metro from there. Those were quite large structures (600,000–800,000 m3/h productivity) and required extensive supporting infrastructure of their own.

While five remote air intakes were planned in Moscow, this was later cut to three, with only two actually being built: "Matveevsky" (DV-1) and "Rizhsky" (DV-2). While the latter was neatly connected to the post-war deep metro line, the former used a proprietary air supply tunnel connecting its location at the Matveevskaya railroad platform to the deep single track tunnel. This air supply tunnel was later retrofitted with track, and joined the network. For construction of this air supply tunnel and other related structures, shaft R6 was transferred from US 10-A.

A related additional structure was the special connector line between the red and circle lines, as it would allow transport of air from the deep and nuclear hardened post-war section of the red line to the similarly protected circle line, bypassing the vulnerable area of the red line, which was built in the 1930s. DV-1 could also have been be used as an evacuation exit for the Moscow Metro, due to its location in the city outskirts at the time.

Leningrad also received a remote air intake, located at Lenin's square.

Move to KGB custody edit

 
A hermetic gate in a deep single track tunnel that separates Metro-1 from Metro-2, which was built after transferring this tunnel to KGB

In the late 1960s, the DV-1 and its related support infrastructure (i.e. the deep single track tunnel) were transferred to the KGB from the Moscow Metro, with a number of modifications being made, such as reworking the deep single track tunnel connection to the red line and adding a hardened hangar for 10 APCs at the DV-1.

Possible causes of the naming confusion and myth generation edit

DV (Russian: ДВ) is quite similar to D6 (Д6), and may be one of the ways this designation came to be used in modern online discussions. The so-called "underground city in Ramenki" is likely the result of urban explorers observing extensive support infrastructure for the DV-1. Alternatively, this term has also been linked to the order 10-A (i.e. with the CIA map drawing a large rectangular box with the known shaft R6 in the center).

Report from the U.S. Department of Defense edit

 
An underground service platform that is supposedly part of Metro-2

In 1991, the United States Department of Defense published a report entitled Military forces in transition, which devoted several pages to a secret government underground in Moscow. It also included a diagram of the system superimposed on a map of the city.[14]

"The Soviets have constructed deep-underground both in urban Moscow and outside the city. These facilities are interconnected by a network of deep interconnected subway lines that provide a quick and secure means of evacuation for the leadership. The leadership can move from their peacetime offices through concealed entryways in protective quarters beneath the city. There are important deep-underground command posts in the Moscow area, one located at the Kremlin. Soviet press has noted the presence of an enormous underground leadership bunker adjacent to Moscow State University. These facilities are intended for the national command authority in wartime. They are estimated to be between 200 m (660 ft) and 300 m (980 ft) deep, and can accommodate an estimated 10,000 people. A special subway line runs from some points in Moscow and possibly to the VIP terminal at Vnukovo Airfield(...)"

—Military forces in transition, 1991, p. 40

Information from officials edit

 
A structure that appears to be a secret ventilation complex near the Moscow State University, University metro station and site 54

Igor Malashenko edit

In 1992, in an interview with Time, Deputy Director Broadcaster Igor Malashenko (ru) spoke about the existence of Sofrino-2, about 30 km (19 mi) to the north-east of Moscow's television broadcasting centers, built at great depths in case of nuclear war. According to Malashenko, the equipment was unusable due to age. He went on to say that the same fate befell many of the underground bomb shelters, and in particular a system of underground bunkers beneath the building of Moscow State University, which he said were flooded and had deteriorated.[15]

Vladimir Shevchenko edit

In 2004, former advisor of Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev, former Russian president Boris Yeltsin and then president Vladimir Putin, Vladimir Shevchenko (ru) confirmed the existence of a secret in the Moscow Metro.[16]

"Reports on the number of underground communications are greatly exaggerated. In the days of Stalin, who was very afraid of assassination attempts, there was in fact a single-track underground railway line running from the Kremlin to his so-called "Nearby Dacha" in Volynskoye. Today, neither the Dacha nor the subway line are in use. In addition, there were underground transport links between the General Staff and several other government facilities. In 1991 a pneumatic mail tube was constructed between the CPSU Central Committee building in Moscow's Old Square and the Kremlin."

In 2008, Shevchenko once again touched upon the Metro-2.[17]

"Currently, the Kremlin subway cannot be called a transportation artery, and, as far as I know, for its continued operation it required major repairs: for among other things there are a lot of underground utilities which will eventually decay."

Mikhail Poltoranin edit

In 2008, Mikhail Poltoranin (ru), a minister under Boris Yeltsin in the early 1990s, explained:[17]

"This is an extensive network of tunnels and an emergency command center in case of war, where you can command the nuclear forces of the country. It can hide a lot of people - its maintenance was necessary. I know that the "Metro-2" has branches that go to the suburbs so that the command could move away from the epicenter of a nuclear attack."

Dmitry Gayev edit

When ex-chief of the Moscow Metro Dmitry Gayev was questioned on the existence of the Metro-2, he responded:

"I would be surprised if it did not exist."

In the same year, in an interview with Izvestia, he said:[13]

"There is a lot of talk about the existence of secret transport tunnels. I will not deny anything. I would be surprised if they did not exist. You ask: Can we use them to transport passengers? It is not for me to decide, but for those organizations who own the railways. I do not exclude such a possibility."

Svetlana Razina edit

In 2008, in an interview in Argumenty i Fakty, the head of the Moscow Metro independent trade union, Svetlana Razina, admitted:[18]

"Several years ago, among the drivers of the Izmailovo depot there was a recruiting for a service on secret routes, and although there were many willing, they were to select only one. Entering the midst of these tunnels is only for people with special clearance. Most often, these branches used very short trains, consisting of battery-electric locomotive and one passenger car."

ITAR-TASS edit

As stated in a report of ITAR-TASS in 2007:[19]

"Line of the Metro-2 has long been in the KGB office, and subsequently came under the wing of the FSB."

Information from defectors edit

Oleg Gordievsky edit

Oleg Gordievsky, a former colonel of the KGB who worked for the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) for 11 years and defected in 1985, in an interview with Argumenty i Fakty called The supreme secret of the KGB, which has not been disclosed until now stated[20]

"You still do not know the main KGB secret yet: a huge underground city, a whole communications network of such facilities. But they will not show you; they will never, of course."

Declassified facilities edit

 
Model of the underground facility RFQ "Tagan".

Museum of the Cold War edit

In 2006, the Museum of the Cold War (ru) was opened to the public, located in the old Tagansky Protected Command Point. Also known as "Bunker-42" this museum is located at the GO-42 site, that took over sites 02 and 20. Site 02 was a deeply buried hardened protective structure housing a secure telephone exchange, while site 20 was some sort of military communications node (little hard archival evidence exists beyond that).

Sites 02 and 20 were connected to the regular Metro, with site 02 forming a ring of hardened telephone exchanges together with sites 01 (close to Belorusskaya metro station) and 03 (close to Kievskaya metro station). None of those sites were physically connected to the "Metro-2".

Special fortification museum edit

In 2018, a museum opened at the location of the former ministry for foreign affairs secure archive facility ("Bunker-703, also known as MFA site 2 or ChZ-703) .[21] Around 42 meters deep, it was originally intended as a metro air filtering, then air regeneration station, before the metro began work on a remote air intake network.

"Underground City" in Ramenki edit

 
A highly secured complex of buildings near Ramenki metro station between sites 54 and DV-1 air intake that appears to be an entrance to underground city in Ramenki and station of "Branch"

In southwest Moscow, near the Ramenki District, there is a vacant lot to the southwest of the main building of Moscow State University.[22] A complex of buildings of the research base of Association "Science" (NEBO "Nauka"), built to a depth of between 180 m (590 ft) and 200 m, is the largest underground bunker in Moscow. According to the same source, it is connected with other secret underground facilities, and appears to be able to house up to 15,000 people.[23] A complex of surface buildings was built by architect Eugene Rozanov in 1975 by order of Glavspetsstroy.

One of the first times the facility was mentioned was in Time in 1992. Its article refers to a source named a "KGB officer", who claims he took part in the construction of a large underground facility in Ramenki. It was claimed construction began in the mid-1960s and was complete by mid-1970. The facility was named by the journalist as the "Underground City", which was supposedly intended to give refuge to 15,000 people for 30 years in the event of a nuclear attack on Moscow.[citation needed]

Most likely this is the sites 54, 54a of the order 10-A due to the location, time of construction (1956-1962), depth (189m at the connection to the deep single track tunnel) matching.[9][10] The inflated numbers for the shelter capacity may be influenced by the original deep single track tunnel's civil defence mission, which was to provide additional capacity to the metro. However, despite the high capacity, this was only a temporary, short term shelter, much like the other civil defence infrastructure.

In the media, the "Underground City" is often referred to as "Ramenki-43", the address of one of the supposed entrances to the facility. Ostensibly, the address is home to Militarized Rescue Squad 21 and the 1st Paramilitary Rescue Squad.[citation needed]

The novel Metro 2033 and its video game adaptation feature the underground city and secret metro.

Rolling stock edit

 
A diesel multiple unit DPS (left) and railcar AS1A (right) in the tunnel of Moscow Metro-2 («Branch»)

In the Branch system, due to the absence of a third rail, a special diesel and battery-electric rolling stock was used. All this rolling stock is on the balance sheet of military base 95006[24] (Special Objects Service of Main Directorate of Special Programs of the President of the Russian Federation), which is located in the Ramenki District near DV-1 air intake.[25] By order of this military unit, the Moscow Metro carries out maintenance and repair of the rolling stock of the Branch, for which it is temporarily transferred to the civil metro depots through the deep single track tunnel.[26][27] Also, by order of this military unit, the training and production center of the Moscow metro provides training for metro train drivers.[28][29]

The known rolling stock of the Branch system includes:

  • AS1A — a small gasoline-powered railcars, which are basically used on conventional railways to transport railroad workers. It is known that at the Branch were used at least two such railcars with numbers 1198 and 1401, which were produced by Velikoluksky Plant in 1971 and 1972, but now they are taken away from service and moved to a conventional metro depot where they are preserved.[24][30][31]
  • Ezh6 (model 81-712) — a subversion of the standard passenger electric subway cars Ezh3 (model 81-710), produced by Metrowagonmash, adapted for operation in conjunction with battery-electric locomotives of type L. Each train of the Branch was formed of two Ezh6 cars and one or two L electric locomotives in the middle of the train. Totally 10 subway cars were built - 6 in 1973 and 4 in 1986. As of the end of the 2010s, there were two modified cars EZh6M left in the Branch system, operating with a diesel-electric locomotive LM, the others were scrapped or moved to operate with Ezh3 cars in conventional subway trains.[32][33][27]
  • L (model 81-711) — a battery electric locomotives with two control cabins, designed for joint operation with Ezh6 cars. Totally 6 electric locomotives were built - 3 in 1974 and 3 in 1986. As of the end of the 2010s, one electric locomotive was converted into a diesel-electric locomotive and remained in operation under the LM type designation,[27] the others were scrapped in 2009 or before.[26][34]
  • DPS — a special four-car diesel-hydraulic multiple unit for transporting metro workers. The only one train of this type was built in 1995 at the Lyudinovsky plant and later modernized at the Metrovagonmash plant before being sent to the Moscow Metro. The train arrived to serve the Branch, however its current fate is unknown.[35][36]
  • RA1 730.15 — a modification of the RA1 model 730 diesel-hydraulic passenger railcar for conventional railways, which, in turn, was created on the basis of the passenger metro car 81-720. This railcar is designed for transportation of subway employees or other special persons. Produced by the Metrovagonmash plant from 2003,[36] the exact number of cars is unknown, but at least 7 cars were produced. It is also known that in the late 2000s, by order of military base 95006, its cars were repaired.[37][38][39]
  • 81-730.05 — a cargo-passenger diesel-hydraulic railcar. Two railcars were produced in 2008.[40] It has both a passenger compartment with two control cabins and side automatic doors, and also an open flat platform for cargo with a loading crane. It is also known that in the late 2000s, by order of military base 95006, these cars were repaired.[41]
  • Oka diesel railcar (its exact model designation is unknown) — a two-cabin diesel-hydraulic railcar, which is a conversion of the passenger electric subway car 81-760 Oka. Like railcars 730.15, it is designed for transportation of subway employees and other special persons and has only one pair of the automatic doors in the center instead of four pair of dooors which standard cars Oka has. It is known that at least one car was produced in 2016.[42]

References edit

  • Military forces in transition (Report). 1991. ISSN 1062-6557.
  1. ^ Kelly, Debra (January 27, 2017). "Metro-2: Is Moscow Home to a Secret Underground Railway?". Urban Ghosts Media. Retrieved June 23, 2017.
  2. ^ . Moscow Pass. Archived from the original on 2007-01-12. Retrieved 2022-02-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ . Agentura. 2000-03-23. Archived from the original on 2011-09-11. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  4. ^ Главное управление специальных программ Президента Российской Федерации. Gusp.gov.ru. 2000-03-23. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  5. ^
  6. ^
  7. ^ Alexandr Perelygyn 2
  8. ^ Kalder, Daniel (2008). Strange Telescopes. Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-23123-2.
  9. ^ a b c Yurkov, Dmitry (June 3, 2021). Советские "секретные бункеры" городская специальная фортификация 1930-1960-х годов [Soviet "Secret Bunkers" Urban Special Fortification of 1930s-1960s] (1st ed.). Moscow: Maska. p. 352. ISBN 978-5604604212.
  10. ^ a b c Yurkov, Dmitry. "Правительственные бункеры Москвы — лекция Дмитрия Юркова". Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 5 September 2021 – via YouTube.
  11. ^ Ъ-Газета - !Вышла книга о московских подземельях. Kommersant. 6 March 1993. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  12. ^ . Adventure.df.ru. Archived from the original on 2011-09-03. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  13. ^ a b . Izvestia. Archived from the original on 2011-03-24. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  14. ^ United States Department of Defense (1991). Military forces in transition. Washington, D.C.: United States Department of Defense. p. 40. ISBN 0-16-035973-2. ISSN 1062-6557. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
  15. ^ Carney, James (1992-08-10). . TIME. Archived from the original on April 8, 2008. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  16. ^ Подземные города [Underground cities]. Аргументы и факты. No. 21 (1230). 2004-05-26. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  17. ^ a b Правительство Москвы может открыть доступ в секретное сталинское метро. Newsru. 23 March 2007. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  18. ^ Представьтесь, пожалуйста (2008-10-16). Секретное метро.Спецлинии и сегодня продолжают строить. Аргументы и Факты. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  19. ^ Власти готовят карты подземной Москвы: узнаем ли мы всю правду о "провалах" и "секретном метро". Archived from the original on 2007-08-08.
  20. ^ Argumenty i Fakty Issue number 30 (1083) on July 25, 2001
  21. ^ "МУЗЕЙ — Бункер 703" (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-09-05.
  22. ^ Сидя на красивом холме. Русская жизнь. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  23. ^ Подземный город Раменки. Irn.ru. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  24. ^ a b "Moscow, Military Base # 95006". TransPhoto. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  25. ^ "Military Base # 95006". Military units of Russia (in Russian).
  26. ^ a b "Battery electric locomotives of type L" (in Russian). Metrocars. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  27. ^ a b c "Contract 3982107000082 — Current repair of cars Ezh-6M, LM". rosspending.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2012-09-11.
  28. ^ "Contract 3982107000004 - Training of 7 people in the specialty «subway train driver»". rosspending.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2012-09-10.
  29. ^ "Contract 3982108000092 — Training of 6 people in the specialty «subway train driver»". rosspending.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2012-09-11.
  30. ^ "AS1A-1198". RailGallery.ru. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  31. ^ "AS1A-1401". TransPhoto.ru. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  32. ^ "Electric subway cars of type Ezh6" (in Russian). Metrocars. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  33. ^ "Moscow, L". TransPhoto.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  34. ^ "Moscow, L". TransPhoto.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  35. ^ "DPS-01". RailGallery.ru. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  36. ^ a b "Secret metro". nashemetro.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  37. ^ . rosspending.ru. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  38. ^ "Contract 3982108000347 — Repair of equipment of rolling stock". rosspending.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-09-10.
  39. ^ "Contract 3982109000340 — Repair of equipment of rolling stock". rosspending.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-09-09.
  40. ^ [ANNUAL REPORT – Open Joint Stock Company "METROVAGONMASH" for 2008] (PDF) (in Russian). Metrowagonmash. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-05-17 – via www.metrowagonmash.ru.
  41. ^ "Contract 3982110000171 — Repair of equipment of rolling stock 730.15 and 730.05". rosspending.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-09-12.
  42. ^ "Moscow, diesel railcar based on 81-760". TransPhoto.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-01-01.

External links edit

  • A thorough site on the subject (in Russian)
  • Detailed analysis of the system (in Russian)
  • GlobalSecurity.org article (in English)
  • BBC News article (in English)
  • Detailed map of the famous part of the system (D6 system, OAO "TransInzhStroy" system, and not very famous "SovMin system") by NIO "Azimut" 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • A supposed map of the system (in Russian)
  • Moscow's "Metro-2": The Ultimate "Secret Subway", The World's Ultimate Secret Subway Network! Moscow Metro-2!! Detailed Line Descriptions!!!, Moscow's Metro-2: Fact or Fantasy? commentary about various aspects of Metro-2 lore, sometimes smug, sometimes satirical but readable. (in English)

55°41′17″N 37°30′48″E / 55.68806°N 37.51333°E / 55.68806; 37.51333

metro, this, article, about, rumored, transit, system, credit, reporting, data, specification, metro, format, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, mate. This article is about a rumored transit system For the credit reporting data specification see Metro 2 format This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Metro 2 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Metro 2 Russian Metro 2 is the informal name for a purported secret underground metro system which parallels the public Moscow Metro known as Metro 1 when in comparison with Metro 2 The system was supposedly built or at least started during the time of Joseph Stalin and was codenamed D 6 D 6 by the KGB It is supposedly still operated by the Main Directorate of Special Programmes and Ministry of Defence 2 3 4 5 6 7 Map of the Metro 2 system as supposed by the United States military intelligence 1 vteLine D6LegendArbatskaya 3ChertoleFrunzenskaya 2connection to Metro 1 Sokolnicheskaya line Nauchnaya Universitet 2to Ramenki Underground City Stromnaya DlinnayaRamenkiVostryakovoVnukovo 2Metro 2 is said to have four lines which lie 50 200 metres 160 660 ft deep It is said to connect the Kremlin with the Federal Security Service FSB headquarters the government airport at Vnukovo 2 and an underground town at Ramenki in addition to other locations of national importance In 1994 the leader of an urban exploration group the Diggers of the Underground Planet claimed to have found an entrance to this underground system 8 Historic evidence however paints a much more conservative picture with one line existing by the late 1960s from the Kremlin specifically site 103 to the site 54 south from Moscow State University with a spur going north west from there to the area of the Matveevskaya railway platform and the DV 1 there 9 10 Additional lines i e to Vnukovo are likely a later invention by the enthusiast community though with the change in generations of the hardened protective structure design in the 1970 80s a redundant back up of this system may have been at least considered Contents 1 Etymology 2 Confirmed information 2 1 Studies of declassified Soviet archival materials 2 1 1 Deep single track tunnel 2 1 2 Order 10 A 2 1 3 Sites 100 101 103 and Branch 2 1 4 The remote air intake DV network 2 1 5 Move to KGB custody 2 1 6 Possible causes of the naming confusion and myth generation 2 2 Report from the U S Department of Defense 2 3 Information from officials 2 3 1 Igor Malashenko 2 3 2 Vladimir Shevchenko 2 3 3 Mikhail Poltoranin 2 3 4 Dmitry Gayev 2 3 5 Svetlana Razina 2 3 6 ITAR TASS 2 4 Information from defectors 2 4 1 Oleg Gordievsky 2 5 Declassified facilities 2 5 1 Museum of the Cold War 2 5 2 Special fortification museum 3 Underground City in Ramenki 4 Rolling stock 5 References 6 External linksEtymology edit nbsp Supposedly a tunnel switch that leads to Metro 1 from Metro 2 actually a switch at Troparovo to a buffer stop on Metro 1 In the summer of 1992 the literary and journalistic magazine Yunost Russian Yunost published a novel by the author and screenwriter Vladimir Gonik entitled Preispodniaia Russian Preispodnyaya English Abyss set in an underground bunker in Moscow Earlier in the spring of that year excerpts from the novel had been published in the weekly newspaper Sovershenno sekretno ru In an interview with both the newspaper s editor and Gonik in 1993 the author stated that the term Metro 2 had been introduced to them and that the novel had been written based on information collected over the previous 20 years by the two of them on things such as secret bunkers and the underground railways connecting them 11 Gonik admitted that he had worked on the book between 1973 and 1986 and that some of the more sensitive information had been purposefully misrepresented 12 In later years Gonik has argued that the bunkers and therefore the so called Metro 2 had been for use by the leadership of the Politburo and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union CPSU along with their families in case of war According to him in the early 1970s the General Secretary of the CPSU Leonid Brezhnev personally visited the main bunker and in 1974 awarded the Chairman of the KGB at the time Yuri Andropov the Gold Star Medal of the Hero of Socialist Labour Apparently each member of the Central Committee had a 180 m2 1 900 sq ft apartment with a study lounge kitchen and bathroom Gonik claims to have gathered this information working as a doctor in the polyclinic of the Ministry of Defence 13 After the publication of the novel in 1992 the subject of a second secret underground railway has been raised many times especially in the Russian media In particular the magazine Ogoniok Russian Ogonyok has referred to a Metro 2 several times Confirmed information editRussian journalists have reported that the existence of Metro 2 is neither confirmed nor denied by the FSB or the Moscow Metro administration However listed below is evidence for the Metro 2 s existence Studies of declassified Soviet archival materials edit In 2021 a book by Dmitry Yurkov was published which covered new research on the history of special fortification in Moscow 9 10 Below is a summary of findings From declassified archival documents an overall layout of the track system and its main components can be established for the late 1960s this is limited by the source material officially released so far While the system was eventually assembled in the late 1960s by the KGB originally it was a collection of structures built for a variety of purposes and operators Deep single track tunnel edit This is the oldest component of Metro 2 Construction began in the mid 1950s and its design was finalised in 1956 It intended to provide a solution to the challenge of extending the red line southwest beyond the Sportivnaya metro station and the river Because of the conflicting requirements a reasonable cost a secure river crossing and a civil defence shelter capacity the final design included a shallow metro line with a vulnerable bridge backed up by a deep single track tunnel which spurs from the main line after the Sportivnaya station the initial part of this spur is seen on normal track maps and a high speed elevator shaft Originally there were also other intended peacetime uses such as nighttime train parking Order 10 A edit nbsp A shaft R6 of OAO TransInzhStroy in RamenkiOrder 10 A is composed out of sites 54 and 54a and was intended to provide protected work spaces for the personnel of the planned Palace of the Soviets behind the Moscow State University campus The plans for those administrative buildings were tied to the shafts and other features of this underground infrastructure project but sadly the Palace of the Soviets much like its pre World War II variant was not meant to be located next to Kropotkinstaya metro station Order 10 A was made by the 9th directorate of the Ministry for Defence and for it a new construction organisation US 10 A presently Transinzhstroi was set up in 1955 Construction was started in 1956 and completed by 1963 Site 54 is composed of at least 5 shafts 1 2 3 5 6 explicitly mentioned and includes extensive supporting systems such as air filtering stations and power generation with the latter designed to support the planned above ground administrative complex in case of emergencies The site is connected to the deep single track tunnel at the depth of 189m Shaft R6 which was used during order 10 A construction still exists in Moscow and is a marker for its overall location Sites 100 101 103 and Branch edit External image nbsp Photos of Metro 2 line Branch deep single track tunnel Site 103 is a large U shaped structure built in central Moscow designed to enhance the legacy World War II infrastructure by providing site 1A in Kremlin at the depth of 55m a protected work spaces for the leadership site 15N a communications node site 100 shelter passing under site 101 a protected work spaces for the KGB There were links to the existing legacy structures such as sites 25 and 25 2 in Kremlin and site 201 at Lubyanka It is also connected to the post war site 101 at Zaryadie which was intended to provide protected work spaces for officials working in the 8th Stalin s skyscraper however the skyscraper was never built so site 101 was repurposed to support local Moscow region officials However this project was plagued with a number of problems such as slow construction which went well into the mid 1960s and uncertainty of how it could be evacuated after a nuclear attack The latter was solved by the construction of Branch Russian Vetka which linked site 103 in the city center to the deep single track tunnel and enabled moving people to the city outskirts The remote air intake DV network edit nbsp A surface building of Matveevsky air intake DV 1 with ventilation shaftsAfter some initial work on a network of air filtering and then air regeneration stations such as site 703 aka ChZ 703 the decision was made to shift towards using several large air filtering stations on the outskirts of the city and pumping this clean air into the rest of the deep metro from there Those were quite large structures 600 000 800 000 m3 h productivity and required extensive supporting infrastructure of their own While five remote air intakes were planned in Moscow this was later cut to three with only two actually being built Matveevsky DV 1 and Rizhsky DV 2 While the latter was neatly connected to the post war deep metro line the former used a proprietary air supply tunnel connecting its location at the Matveevskaya railroad platform to the deep single track tunnel This air supply tunnel was later retrofitted with track and joined the network For construction of this air supply tunnel and other related structures shaft R6 was transferred from US 10 A A related additional structure was the special connector line between the red and circle lines as it would allow transport of air from the deep and nuclear hardened post war section of the red line to the similarly protected circle line bypassing the vulnerable area of the red line which was built in the 1930s DV 1 could also have been be used as an evacuation exit for the Moscow Metro due to its location in the city outskirts at the time Leningrad also received a remote air intake located at Lenin s square Move to KGB custody edit nbsp A hermetic gate in a deep single track tunnel that separates Metro 1 from Metro 2 which was built after transferring this tunnel to KGBIn the late 1960s the DV 1 and its related support infrastructure i e the deep single track tunnel were transferred to the KGB from the Moscow Metro with a number of modifications being made such as reworking the deep single track tunnel connection to the red line and adding a hardened hangar for 10 APCs at the DV 1 Possible causes of the naming confusion and myth generation edit DV Russian DV is quite similar to D6 D6 and may be one of the ways this designation came to be used in modern online discussions The so called underground city in Ramenki is likely the result of urban explorers observing extensive support infrastructure for the DV 1 Alternatively this term has also been linked to the order 10 A i e with the CIA map drawing a large rectangular box with the known shaft R6 in the center Report from the U S Department of Defense edit nbsp An underground service platform that is supposedly part of Metro 2In 1991 the United States Department of Defense published a report entitled Military forces in transition which devoted several pages to a secret government underground in Moscow It also included a diagram of the system superimposed on a map of the city 14 The Soviets have constructed deep underground both in urban Moscow and outside the city These facilities are interconnected by a network of deep interconnected subway lines that provide a quick and secure means of evacuation for the leadership The leadership can move from their peacetime offices through concealed entryways in protective quarters beneath the city There are important deep underground command posts in the Moscow area one located at the Kremlin Soviet press has noted the presence of an enormous underground leadership bunker adjacent to Moscow State University These facilities are intended for the national command authority in wartime They are estimated to be between 200 m 660 ft and 300 m 980 ft deep and can accommodate an estimated 10 000 people A special subway line runs from some points in Moscow and possibly to the VIP terminal at Vnukovo Airfield Military forces in transition 1991 p 40 Information from officials edit nbsp A structure that appears to be a secret ventilation complex near the Moscow State University University metro station and site 54Igor Malashenko edit In 1992 in an interview with Time Deputy Director Broadcaster Igor Malashenko ru spoke about the existence of Sofrino 2 about 30 km 19 mi to the north east of Moscow s television broadcasting centers built at great depths in case of nuclear war According to Malashenko the equipment was unusable due to age He went on to say that the same fate befell many of the underground bomb shelters and in particular a system of underground bunkers beneath the building of Moscow State University which he said were flooded and had deteriorated 15 Vladimir Shevchenko edit In 2004 former advisor of Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev former Russian president Boris Yeltsin and then president Vladimir Putin Vladimir Shevchenko ru confirmed the existence of a secret in the Moscow Metro 16 Reports on the number of underground communications are greatly exaggerated In the days of Stalin who was very afraid of assassination attempts there was in fact a single track underground railway line running from the Kremlin to his so called Nearby Dacha in Volynskoye Today neither the Dacha nor the subway line are in use In addition there were underground transport links between the General Staff and several other government facilities In 1991 a pneumatic mail tube was constructed between the CPSU Central Committee building in Moscow s Old Square and the Kremlin In 2008 Shevchenko once again touched upon the Metro 2 17 Currently the Kremlin subway cannot be called a transportation artery and as far as I know for its continued operation it required major repairs for among other things there are a lot of underground utilities which will eventually decay Mikhail Poltoranin edit In 2008 Mikhail Poltoranin ru a minister under Boris Yeltsin in the early 1990s explained 17 This is an extensive network of tunnels and an emergency command center in case of war where you can command the nuclear forces of the country It can hide a lot of people its maintenance was necessary I know that the Metro 2 has branches that go to the suburbs so that the command could move away from the epicenter of a nuclear attack Dmitry Gayev edit When ex chief of the Moscow Metro Dmitry Gayev was questioned on the existence of the Metro 2 he responded I would be surprised if it did not exist In the same year in an interview with Izvestia he said 13 There is a lot of talk about the existence of secret transport tunnels I will not deny anything I would be surprised if they did not exist You ask Can we use them to transport passengers It is not for me to decide but for those organizations who own the railways I do not exclude such a possibility Svetlana Razina edit In 2008 in an interview in Argumenty i Fakty the head of the Moscow Metro independent trade union Svetlana Razina admitted 18 Several years ago among the drivers of the Izmailovo depot there was a recruiting for a service on secret routes and although there were many willing they were to select only one Entering the midst of these tunnels is only for people with special clearance Most often these branches used very short trains consisting of battery electric locomotive and one passenger car ITAR TASS edit As stated in a report of ITAR TASS in 2007 19 Line of the Metro 2 has long been in the KGB office and subsequently came under the wing of the FSB Information from defectors edit Oleg Gordievsky edit Oleg Gordievsky a former colonel of the KGB who worked for the British Secret Intelligence Service MI6 for 11 years and defected in 1985 in an interview with Argumenty i Fakty called The supreme secret of the KGB which has not been disclosed until now stated 20 You still do not know the main KGB secret yet a huge underground city a whole communications network of such facilities But they will not show you they will never of course Declassified facilities edit nbsp Model of the underground facility RFQ Tagan Museum of the Cold War edit In 2006 the Museum of the Cold War ru was opened to the public located in the old Tagansky Protected Command Point Also known as Bunker 42 this museum is located at the GO 42 site that took over sites 02 and 20 Site 02 was a deeply buried hardened protective structure housing a secure telephone exchange while site 20 was some sort of military communications node little hard archival evidence exists beyond that Sites 02 and 20 were connected to the regular Metro with site 02 forming a ring of hardened telephone exchanges together with sites 01 close to Belorusskaya metro station and 03 close to Kievskaya metro station None of those sites were physically connected to the Metro 2 Special fortification museum edit In 2018 a museum opened at the location of the former ministry for foreign affairs secure archive facility Bunker 703 also known as MFA site 2 or ChZ 703 21 Around 42 meters deep it was originally intended as a metro air filtering then air regeneration station before the metro began work on a remote air intake network Underground City in Ramenki edit nbsp A highly secured complex of buildings near Ramenki metro station between sites 54 and DV 1 air intake that appears to be an entrance to underground city in Ramenki and station of Branch In southwest Moscow near the Ramenki District there is a vacant lot to the southwest of the main building of Moscow State University 22 A complex of buildings of the research base of Association Science NEBO Nauka built to a depth of between 180 m 590 ft and 200 m is the largest underground bunker in Moscow According to the same source it is connected with other secret underground facilities and appears to be able to house up to 15 000 people 23 A complex of surface buildings was built by architect Eugene Rozanov in 1975 by order of Glavspetsstroy One of the first times the facility was mentioned was in Time in 1992 Its article refers to a source named a KGB officer who claims he took part in the construction of a large underground facility in Ramenki It was claimed construction began in the mid 1960s and was complete by mid 1970 The facility was named by the journalist as the Underground City which was supposedly intended to give refuge to 15 000 people for 30 years in the event of a nuclear attack on Moscow citation needed Most likely this is the sites 54 54a of the order 10 A due to the location time of construction 1956 1962 depth 189m at the connection to the deep single track tunnel matching 9 10 The inflated numbers for the shelter capacity may be influenced by the original deep single track tunnel s civil defence mission which was to provide additional capacity to the metro However despite the high capacity this was only a temporary short term shelter much like the other civil defence infrastructure In the media the Underground City is often referred to as Ramenki 43 the address of one of the supposed entrances to the facility Ostensibly the address is home to Militarized Rescue Squad 21 and the 1st Paramilitary Rescue Squad citation needed The novel Metro 2033 and its video game adaptation feature the underground city and secret metro Rolling stock edit nbsp A diesel multiple unit DPS left and railcar AS1A right in the tunnel of Moscow Metro 2 Branch In the Branch system due to the absence of a third rail a special diesel and battery electric rolling stock was used All this rolling stock is on the balance sheet of military base 95006 24 Special Objects Service of Main Directorate of Special Programs of the President of the Russian Federation which is located in the Ramenki District near DV 1 air intake 25 By order of this military unit the Moscow Metro carries out maintenance and repair of the rolling stock of the Branch for which it is temporarily transferred to the civil metro depots through the deep single track tunnel 26 27 Also by order of this military unit the training and production center of the Moscow metro provides training for metro train drivers 28 29 The known rolling stock of the Branch system includes AS1A a small gasoline powered railcars which are basically used on conventional railways to transport railroad workers It is known that at the Branch were used at least two such railcars with numbers 1198 and 1401 which were produced by Velikoluksky Plant in 1971 and 1972 but now they are taken away from service and moved to a conventional metro depot where they are preserved 24 30 31 Ezh6 model 81 712 a subversion of the standard passenger electric subway cars Ezh3 model 81 710 produced by Metrowagonmash adapted for operation in conjunction with battery electric locomotives of type L Each train of the Branch was formed of two Ezh6 cars and one or two L electric locomotives in the middle of the train Totally 10 subway cars were built 6 in 1973 and 4 in 1986 As of the end of the 2010s there were two modified cars EZh6M left in the Branch system operating with a diesel electric locomotive LM the others were scrapped or moved to operate with Ezh3 cars in conventional subway trains 32 33 27 L model 81 711 a battery electric locomotives with two control cabins designed for joint operation with Ezh6 cars Totally 6 electric locomotives were built 3 in 1974 and 3 in 1986 As of the end of the 2010s one electric locomotive was converted into a diesel electric locomotive and remained in operation under the LM type designation 27 the others were scrapped in 2009 or before 26 34 DPS a special four car diesel hydraulic multiple unit for transporting metro workers The only one train of this type was built in 1995 at the Lyudinovsky plant and later modernized at the Metrovagonmash plant before being sent to the Moscow Metro The train arrived to serve the Branch however its current fate is unknown 35 36 RA1 730 15 a modification of the RA1 model 730 diesel hydraulic passenger railcar for conventional railways which in turn was created on the basis of the passenger metro car 81 720 This railcar is designed for transportation of subway employees or other special persons Produced by the Metrovagonmash plant from 2003 36 the exact number of cars is unknown but at least 7 cars were produced It is also known that in the late 2000s by order of military base 95006 its cars were repaired 37 38 39 81 730 05 a cargo passenger diesel hydraulic railcar Two railcars were produced in 2008 40 It has both a passenger compartment with two control cabins and side automatic doors and also an open flat platform for cargo with a loading crane It is also known that in the late 2000s by order of military base 95006 these cars were repaired 41 Oka diesel railcar its exact model designation is unknown a two cabin diesel hydraulic railcar which is a conversion of the passenger electric subway car 81 760 Oka Like railcars 730 15 it is designed for transportation of subway employees and other special persons and has only one pair of the automatic doors in the center instead of four pair of dooors which standard cars Oka has It is known that at least one car was produced in 2016 42 nbsp L battery electric locomotive nbsp DPS 01 DMU nbsp 81 730 05 freight and passenger railcar nbsp A diesel railcar based on 81 760References editMilitary forces in transition Report 1991 ISSN 1062 6557 Kelly Debra January 27 2017 Metro 2 Is Moscow Home to a Secret Underground Railway Urban Ghosts Media Retrieved June 23 2017 Metro Moscow Pass Archived from the original on 2007 01 12 Retrieved 2022 02 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Glavnoe upravlenie specprogramm Prezidenta Agentura 2000 03 23 Archived from the original on 2011 09 11 Retrieved 2011 09 14 Glavnoe upravlenie specialnyh programm Prezidenta Rossijskoj Federacii Gusp gov ru 2000 03 23 Retrieved 2011 09 14 D 6 i Aleksandr Perelygin Alexandr Perelygyn Alexandr Perelygyn 2 Kalder Daniel 2008 Strange Telescopes Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 23123 2 a b c Yurkov Dmitry June 3 2021 Sovetskie sekretnye bunkery gorodskaya specialnaya fortifikaciya 1930 1960 h godov Soviet Secret Bunkers Urban Special Fortification of 1930s 1960s 1st ed Moscow Maska p 352 ISBN 978 5604604212 a b c Yurkov Dmitry Pravitelstvennye bunkery Moskvy lekciya Dmitriya Yurkova Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 5 September 2021 via YouTube Gazeta Vyshla kniga o moskovskih podzemelyah Kommersant 6 March 1993 Retrieved 2011 09 14 Vvedenie chast 1 Adventure df ru Archived from the original on 2011 09 03 Retrieved 2011 09 14 a b Sekretnoe metro Stalina otkroyut dlya vseh Izvestiya Izvestia Archived from the original on 2011 03 24 Retrieved 2011 09 14 United States Department of Defense 1991 Military forces in transition Washington D C United States Department of Defense p 40 ISBN 0 16 035973 2 ISSN 1062 6557 Retrieved 2011 06 13 Carney James 1992 08 10 Moscow s Secret Plans TIME Archived from the original on April 8 2008 Retrieved 2011 09 14 Podzemnye goroda Underground cities Argumenty i fakty No 21 1230 2004 05 26 Retrieved 2011 09 14 a b Pravitelstvo Moskvy mozhet otkryt dostup v sekretnoe stalinskoe metro Newsru 23 March 2007 Retrieved 2011 09 14 Predstavtes pozhalujsta 2008 10 16 Sekretnoe metro Speclinii i segodnya prodolzhayut stroit Argumenty i Fakty Retrieved 2011 09 14 Vlasti gotovyat karty podzemnoj Moskvy uznaem li my vsyu pravdu o provalah i sekretnom metro Archived from the original on 2007 08 08 Argumenty i Fakty Issue number 30 1083 on July 25 2001 MUZEJ Bunker 703 in Russian Retrieved 2021 09 05 Sidya na krasivom holme Russkaya zhizn Retrieved 2011 09 14 Podzemnyj gorod Ramenki Irn ru Retrieved 2011 09 14 a b Moscow Military Base 95006 TransPhoto Retrieved 2023 01 01 Military Base 95006 Military units of Russia in Russian a b Battery electric locomotives of type L in Russian Metrocars Retrieved 2023 01 01 a b c Contract 3982107000082 Current repair of cars Ezh 6M LM rosspending ru in Russian Archived from the original on 2012 09 11 Contract 3982107000004 Training of 7 people in the specialty subway train driver rosspending ru in Russian Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Contract 3982108000092 Training of 6 people in the specialty subway train driver rosspending ru in Russian Archived from the original on 2012 09 11 AS1A 1198 RailGallery ru Retrieved 2023 01 01 AS1A 1401 TransPhoto ru Retrieved 2023 01 01 Electric subway cars of type Ezh6 in Russian Metrocars Retrieved 2023 01 01 Moscow L TransPhoto ru in Russian Retrieved 2023 01 01 Moscow L TransPhoto ru in Russian Retrieved 2023 01 01 DPS 01 RailGallery ru Retrieved 2023 01 01 a b Secret metro nashemetro ru in Russian Retrieved 2023 01 01 Contract 3982107000021 Repair of equipment of rolling stock 730 15 rosspending ru Archived from the original on 2015 12 22 Retrieved 2015 12 20 Contract 3982108000347 Repair of equipment of rolling stock rosspending ru Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Contract 3982109000340 Repair of equipment of rolling stock rosspending ru Archived from the original on 2012 09 09 GODOVOJ OTChET Otkrytogo akcionernogo obshestva METROVAGONMASh za 2008 god ANNUAL REPORT Open Joint Stock Company METROVAGONMASH for 2008 PDF in Russian Metrowagonmash Archived from the original PDF on 2017 05 17 via www metrowagonmash ru Contract 3982110000171 Repair of equipment of rolling stock 730 15 and 730 05 rosspending ru Archived from the original on 2012 09 12 Moscow diesel railcar based on 81 760 TransPhoto ru in Russian Retrieved 2023 01 01 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moscow Metro 2 A thorough site on the subject in Russian Detailed analysis of the system in Russian GlobalSecurity org article in English BBC News article in English Detailed map of the famous part of the system D6 system OAO TransInzhStroy system and not very famous SovMin system by NIO Azimut Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine A supposed map of the system in Russian Moscow s Metro 2 The Ultimate Secret Subway The World s Ultimate Secret Subway Network Moscow Metro 2 Detailed Line Descriptions Moscow s Metro 2 Fact or Fantasy commentary about various aspects of Metro 2 lore sometimes smug sometimes satirical but readable in English 55 41 17 N 37 30 48 E 55 68806 N 37 51333 E 55 68806 37 51333 Retrieved from https en 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