`Subway stations are usually designed in a clean and modernistic style
in order to make people forget they are traveling deep underground. It
is different in the Stockholm subway though, in which several of the
deep underground stations are cut into solid rock which were left with
cave-like ceilings. Oldnature meets nextnature. The fine ‘cave
paintings' make the finishing touch.
Munich U-Bahn (Germany)
Munich Public Transport System (MVV) is a splendidly constructed system
consisting of dozens of S-Bahn (suburbian trains), U-Bahn (subway),
Tram-Bahn / Straßenbahn (streetcar) and bus lines, connecting all parts
of the city perfectly. This metro system has been opened in 1972 and has
spacious and clean stations. The earlier ones are rather minimalistic
in design while the later ones got more interesting architectural
features and some works of art.
Shanghai Bund Sightseeing Tunnel (China)
This has to be one of the most surreal, psychedlic and fun forms of
public transport. The Tunnel connects East Nanjin Rd on the Bund, and
Pudong near the Oriental Pearl TV Tower, running under the Huangpu
river. It's a psychedelic trip in a glass capsule along the 647 metre
flashing, strobing tunnel.
Moscow's Komsomolskaya Station (Russia)
The Komsomolskaya station of the Moscow Metro is the most famous of all
those on the Koltsevaya Line and of the whole system, and an icon of
Moscow itself, partly due to it being located on Moscow's busiest
transport hub, Komsomolskaya Square, which serves three railway
terminals: Leningradsky, Yaroslavsky and Kazansky. The station's
connotation is of a gateway to Moscow and to the rest of Russia, and its
theme is of the patriotic history and inspiring future of the nation.
It was opened on January 30, 1952, as part of the second stage of the
Ring line.
Frankfurt's Bockenheimer Warte station
A weird subway entrance, looking like a train bursting through the
sidewalk from below, is located in Frankfurt. Architect Zbiginiew Peter
Pininski reported he felt inspired by surrealist artist René Magritte
when creating it.
Metro Bilbao (Basque Country - Spain)
Bilbao, a small city in the Basque region, is proud of their subway
system, not only because of its speed and efficiency, but also because
of its design. Norman Foster, the architect who did the Reichtag in
Berlin, the Gherkin in London, and the world's largest airport in Hong
Kong, designed Bilbao's metro stations. The stations are well-lit and
spacious. Foster uses a simple, yet aesthetically pleasing design,
especially with the support beams, staircases, and lights. The entrances
are especially unique. Nicknamed “el Fosterito,” the entrances are
glass round tubes that emerge to the street level.
New York's City Hall station (US)
While the stations of the subway are now often dirty, ugly, and are
marginally welcoming places, this is not always the case. New York City
once had the imagination to build stations which were beautiful as well
as practical. The City Hall station remains the most impressive subway
station in New York, and yet it hasn't been used since 1945.
Chicago's O'Hare Station (US)
The O'Hare terminal station was built in 1984, looking toward the
airport terminal from the platforms. The curved sidewalls of glass
block, backlit in different colors, illuminate the platforms and absorb
sound in the station. The stairs and escalators at the end of the
platforms ascend through a gray metal wall that mimics an airplane
fuselage to deliver passengers to the fare controls and out into the
airport terminal.
Dubai Metro Stations (UAE)
The elevated and at-grade Dubai Metro stations combine both heritage and
modern designs. They have been modelled on the shape of seashell,
inspired from the diving and pearl-fishing heritage of the UAE, while
the interior design depicts the four elements of nature – water, air,
earth and fire. Conceptual design of some stations includes traditional
architectural ingredients used in antique Arab buildings such as wind
towers, oriels, alleyways or internal arches.
Pyongyang Metro (North Korea)
Built to link secret underground military facilities, the Pyongyang
Metro is nevertheless an important part of the transport infrastructure
in the capital of North Korea (officially, the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea or DPRK). There is evidence that it includes secret
government-only lines, although the extent of these, if they exist, is
unknown. Its station architecture is among the most attractive in the
world. However, relatively little is known about the Metro outside the
country, as few visitors are able to investigate the system.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire