Aviamotornaya (Moscow Metro)

Aviamotornaya
Авиамоторная
Moscow Metro station
Location Aviamotornaya Street
Lefortovo District
South-Eastern Administrative Okrug
Coordinates 55°45′09″N 37°43′09″E / 55.7524°N 37.7191°E / 55.7524; 37.7191Coordinates: 55°45′09″N 37°43′09″E / 55.7524°N 37.7191°E / 55.7524; 37.7191
Owned by Moskovsky Metropoliten
Line(s)  8  Kalininsko-Solntsevskaya Line
Connections Bus: 59, 59k, 125, 730, 759, 805
Trolleybus: 24, 45, 53
Tram: 8, 12, 24, 32, 37, 46, 50
Construction
Depth 53 metres (174 ft)
Parking No
History
Opened 30 December 1979 (1979-12-30)
Services
Preceding station   Moscow Metro   Following station
Kalininsko-Solntsevskaya Line
Kalininsky radius
toward  Novokosino
Location
Aviamotornaya
Location within Moscow Ring Road

Aviamotornaya (Russian: Авиамото́рная) is a Moscow Metro station in the Lefortovo District, South-Eastern Administrative Okrug, Moscow, Russia. It is on the Kalininsko-Solntsevskaya Line. The station was opened on 30 December 1979.[1]

The station is built in a three-vault configuration 53 metres (173 feet) underground. The central hallway contains a sculpture made out of anodised gold pyramids and tetrahedra. The architects of the station are A.F. Strelkov, V.I. Klokov, N.I. Demchinsky, J.A. Kolesnikov, and E.S. Barsky. The theme of Aviamotornaya is aviation and flying. The columns holding up the ceiling are glazed in a light marble tone. The floor is made up of granite plates coloured in different shades of grey. The wall at the end of the central hallway is faced in a metal sculpture. There are decorations mentioning and detailing the main constellations.[1]

Station platform

Escalator accident in 1982

The escalators of the station caused a significant disaster on the Moscow Metro on February 17, 1982, that killed at least 8 people.

As evening rush-hour approached, escalator #4 was turned on at 16:30 Moscow time. As the first commuters began to use it to descend, a poorly-attached step came loose, completing the cycle of coming all the way down and then back up on the opposite end of the chain. At 17:00, as it passed the upper mechanism, it got stuck and deformed the upper working gears and rods. This broke the clutch between the driving gears of the engine, and the thread, now free to move in any direction, began to accelerate from the weight of the passengers. Automatically the engine was immediately turned off and the brakes were applied. However, the standard working brakes lacked the strength to stop the momentum of the thread (heavily laden with passengers at this rush-hour), or even to reduce its acceleration.

For such a case, all escalators are equipped with additional emergency brakes, and Aviamotornaya's escalators had received completely new models three months prior. Moreover, two days before the accident, there had been a routine safety check, which found that the emergency brakes were incorrectly configured throughout; after necessary amendments, a simulation deemed all of the four escalators' emergency brakes to be satisfactory. However, that was not the case; the chief mechanic in charge had lacked the correct instructions on how to install the new brakes (which were being introduced on all escalators in the Metro at the time) on the particular escalator model that Aviamotornaya had. The resulting wrong configuration in both mechanism and circuitry did not allow for them to automatically turn on. Even when the escalator supervisor saw that the thread had accelerated to 2.4 times faster than its maximum rate and attempted to manually operate the brakes, nothing happened. 110 seconds after it began, the accident was over.

The state-controlled Soviet press with the exception of one newspaper made no reference to the event. This resulted in thousands of rumours and panic immediately spreading throughout the city. No person was actually sucked into the machine bay. All of the eight people who died were crushed at the base of the escalator by other passengers who did not have time to move away, forming an obstruction. Some did attempt to jump out of the way by climbing onto the balustrade, but the thin plastic coating could not withstand the weight and collapsed (thus the rumours), yet those who did fall through would have hit a solid concrete foundation with no moving parts of any sort a few metres under the balustrade, with most suffering minor injuries.

As the wounded were carried off, at 17:10 the station was put on exit only and at 17:35 closed altogether. Immediately an investigation was launched, where it was determined that the speedometer was wrongly wired to the emergency brake and that all of the three other escalators at the station were prone to similar disaster.[2][3][4] After the accident, the Soviet medics have counted 8 dead and 30 injured.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 "Aviamotornaya station description at Moscow Metro website". Moskovsky Metropoliten. Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  2. Zaytsev, Mikhail (April 18, 2005). Ходынка под землей. Vechernyaya Moskva (in Russian). Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  3. "15 Are Killed in Moscow In Escalator Accident". The New York Times. February 20, 1982. Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  4. "Ten injured in Moscow metro escalator catastrophe". The Moscow News. April 16, 2012. Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  5. "Moscow Metro Kills Over 1,500 Every Year". Pravda. October 3, 2010. Archived from the original on October 23, 2010. Retrieved July 23, 2014.

External links

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