Magmatic rocks in Moscow Metro
decoration.
Pogrebs N.A.
Russia state geological
prospecting university (RSGPU), Moskow, Russia.
Stations
of Moscow metro are unique in their architecture. The greatest architects made
their project plans and took part in construction during 1930th-1950th.
Standard designs of the first stations were still used at the end of XX and
beginning of XXI centuries. Facing stones from different regions of Soviet
Union and foreign countries were used in the decoration of metro stations.
Magmatic rocks are
the firmest and most proof against abrasion, so they are employed for floor and
stair slabs. Their utilization for lower parts of walls, pylons and pillars,
pedestals and decoration of external metro pavilions is quite seldom.
Floors
of metro stations are made from 4-6 different kinds of rocks forming a
geometric design. The chess-board, rag-like and striped patterns and tile
combinations are the most popular. Fine floral, meander- and wave-like
ornaments could be seen on some stations, now and then in combination with
marble. Unmethodical pattern of rock slabs was used extremely rare.
Ukraine was the
main supplier untill 1970th. Granitoids of various color, structure
and texture were quarried on Ukrainian shield. They are: bright-red
coarse-grained granitoids from Kapustinskoe, medium-grained – from
Emelianovskoe, red and brown medium-grained – from Tokovskoe, red gneiss-like –
from Novodanilovskoe, fine-grained red and light-rose – from Leznikovskoe. Grey
medium-grained came from Yantsevskoe field, dark-gray ones – from
Zhezhelevskoe, and dark-gray with big rose phenocrists of feldspar – from
Korninskoe.
Some addition of
black labradorite from Golovinskoe, Turchinskoe and Siniy Kamen and
gabbro-diorites from Slipchitskoe was used also.
Since 1970th
a mine workings of Baltic shield’s (Karelian isthmus) facing stones: rose and
gray trachytoid rapakivi from Vozrozhdenie and gray coarse-grained granits from
Kuznechnoe) began. Red medium grained gneiss-like granits came from
Siuskiunsaari and black gabbro-diabases came from Roprucheiskoe.
New sorts of
granites: light-gray fine-grained ones from Bashkortostan (Mansurovskoe), rose
and lilac medium-grained ones from Kazakhstan (Zheltau and Kurtinskoe) appeared
in metro decoration in 1980th – 1990th. Various granites
from different foreign countries appeared also.