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Warsaw Metro

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rapid transit system in Warsaw
Warsaw Metro
M2 platform at Świętokrzyska station
M2 platform atŚwiętokrzyska station
Overview
Native nameMetro Warszawskie
OwnerCity of Warsaw
LocaleWarsaw,Poland
Transit typeRapid transit
Number of lines2 (3 more planned)
Number of stations39
Annual ridership200.0 million (2023)[1]
WebsiteMetro Warszawskie
Warsaw Public Transport
Operation
Began operation7 April 1995
Operator(s)Metro Warszawskie
Technical
System length41.3 km (25.7 mi)[2]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
System map

Diagram
MłocinyM1
M2Bemowo
Wawrzyszew
Ulrychów
Stare Bielany
Księcia Janusza
Słodowiec
Młynów
Marymont
Płocka
Plac Wilsona
Rondo Daszyńskiego
Dworzec Gdański
Rondo ONZ
Ratusz Arsenał
Świętokrzyska
Centrum
Nowy Świat-Uniwersytet
Politechnika
Centrum Nauki Kopernik
Pole Mokotowskie
Stadion Narodowy
Racławicka
Szwedzka
Wierzbno
Targówek Mieszkaniowy
Wilanowska
Trocka
Służew
Zacisze
Ursynów
Kondratowicza
Stokłosy
BródnoM2
Imielin
Natolin
M1Kabaty
Note

All stations have step-free access.

This diagram:

TheWarsaw Metro (Polish:Metro Warszawskie) is arapid transit underground system serving thePolish capitalWarsaw. It currently consists of two lines, the north–southM1 line which links centralWarsaw with its densely populated northern and southerndistricts, and the east–westM2 line. Three more lines (M3,M4, andM5) are planned.[3] The system is operated by Metro Warszawskie, a company owned by the city, and managed byPublic Transport Authority in Warsaw. As of 2025, it is the only metro system in Poland.

The first section of M1 was opened in 1995 and the line was gradually extended until it reached its full length in October 2008. The contract for the construction of the initial central section of M2 was signed on 28 October 2009 and construction began on 16 August 2010.[4][5] The initial segment of M2, measuring 6.3 kilometres (3.9 miles) with seven stations,[2] one of which,Świętokrzyska, includes a transfer between the two lines, was opened on 8 March 2015.[6][7] The line's further extensions have been opening since 2019, and it is expected to be completed in 2026, when it will have 21 stations.[8][9]

In February 2023, the mayor of WarsawRafał Trzaskowski released a plan for the Warsaw Metro, calling for five metro lines by the year 2050. The plan includes constructing two additional M1 stations,Plac Konstytucji andMuranów, extending M2 line toMarymont andUrsus-Niedźwiadek, as well as construction of three new lines: M3, M4, and M5. With those extensions the metro would directly serve 17 out of Warsaw’s 18 districts.[10]

History

[edit]
First phase of the planned metro network started in 1938, never completed with the onset ofWorld War II and consequent planneddestruction of Warsaw

Early attempts (1918-1939)

[edit]

Plans to build an underground rail system inWarsaw date as far back as 1918, when the idea was first proposed after Warsaw regained its status asPoland's capital city. An underground railway system was expected to solve the transport difficulties of the densely built city center. Proper preliminary planning andboring work were initiated by theWarsaw Tramway Authority in 1925, with construction expected to start in the late 1920s. TheGreat Depression buried those plans asPoland and the world were gripped by economic hardship.[11]

In 1934, with the election of a new mayor of Warsaw,Stefan Starzyński, work was to resume on the metro. The mayor dusted off the plans from the mid-1920s, and with some minor adjustments, construction of the metro was planned to start by the late 1930s, with a projected finishing date of the first of two projected lines scheduled for the mid-1940s. By then, the subway network was to consist of two lines. Line M1 (north–south line, 7.4 km or 4.6 mi long) was to follow a route similar to the present-day line and was to link the southernmost borough ofMokotów with the city center and the northern borough ofŻoliborz. This line was to be connected with the newly constructedWarszawa Główna railway station and the railway tunnel crossing the city from west to east. Line M2 (east–west, 6.36 km or 3.95 mi long) was to start beneath the westernmost borough ofWola, proceed along the Chłodna street to the pivotal station beneath theSaxon Square and then further eastwards to theVistula river escarpment. There, the line was to go overground, cross the river through a newly built bridge and proceed to the easternmost railway station ofWarszawa Wschodnia. Altogether, in 35 years, 7 lines were to be built. The works finally started in 1938, butWorld War II brought an end to the ambitious undertaking. The short trace tunnels made in 1938 serve as a wine cellar today.

Post-war plans (1945-1950)

[edit]

The city suffered heavily during World War II. Although the majority of pre-war projects were destroyed during the war, most of the engineers behind their creations survived and returned to their city to take part in its rebirth. However, the new Communist authorities of Poland envisioned a city completely different from what it had been before the war. As the "ideal" communist city, Warsaw was to be decentralized and the need to commute to the city center was reduced. Thus, the Office for the Reconstruction of Warsaw (BOS) commissioned several engineers to prepare a project for a fast urban railway (SKM) crossing the city in a deep cutting. Although to a large extent it was to follow line 1 of the pre-war plans, only the central stations were to be located underground. However, by the end of the decade, the project was cancelled. Instead, in 1948 communist planners developed a different concept with the new SKM morphing into a rapid transit line at a depth of up to 15 metres (49 feet). The suggested north–south direction, with three parallel branches of the same line in the city center, corresponded to the planned development of the city along the Vistula. The works, however, never started and this project was also abandoned.

Cold War era tunnels (1950-1957)

[edit]
Revised deep-tunnel metro plan from 1953

In the 1950s, as theCold War raged on, Soviet strategic plans required that a secure transport link across the river Vistula be built. One of the ways to achieve this was to create a deep metro system in Warsaw (pl:Metro głębokie w Warszawie; up to 46 m (150 ft) beneath the ground), which would be interlinked with the rail network and could serve as an underground conduit for transporting troops. Plans assumed that the first line (about 11 km or 7 mi long) would lie along a north–south axis, with a branch of the same line crossing the Vistula river in the city centre. The construction works started almost simultaneously at 17 different points on both sides of the river. By 1953 only 771 m (843 yd) of tunnels had been built; after the death ofJoseph Stalin and the start of a period ofdétente, all work was halted under the pretext of technical difficulties. In the following years, only one junction tunnel and one shield-driven tunnel were continued. These works were undertaken experimentally, to discover the best driving methods suitable for the ground conditions beneath Warsaw (plioceneclay formations layer spread beneathquaternary soils). All work was halted in 1957, and the tunnel eventually flooded in 1960.

Current Metro (1983-Present)

[edit]

Planning & construction

[edit]

In 1955, planners returned to the old idea of a shallow metro network. However, the planning phase proceeded at a very slow pace and the economic situation prevented all successive governments from actually starting serious work. Finally, in 1983, the program was approved by the government and the first tunnels were built. Lack of funds, technical difficulties, shortage of materials and outdated tunnelling methods meant that the work progressed very slowly, sometimes at a speed no greater than 2 m (6 ft 7 in) per day.

Opening

[edit]

The Metro was opened on 7 April 1995 with a total of 11 stations.[12] The initial line,M1, has 21 stations over a route distance of 22.7 km (14.1 mi).

Many of the station name announcements are narrated byKsawery Jasieński, with some newer stations using recordings byMaciej Gudowski.[13]

Newer extensions

[edit]
Thisis missing information about construction and opening of the initial segment of the M2 line. Please expand the to include this information. Further details may exist on thetalk page.(May 2024)

On 11 March 2016, a 1 billionPLN (€225 million) contract was awarded to the Italian companyAstaldi to build the first phase of the north-eastM2 extension with 3.2 kilometres (2.0 mi) of track and 3 stations:Szwedzka,Targówek Mieszkaniowy, andTrocka. On 30 April, construction on Szwedzka station started, and on 2 May, the other two stations started construction. Construction of this phase took 3 years, until it opened on 15 September 2019. Initially, this extension was to be built at the same time as the west extension which was due to be completed in 2020. However, due to delays, it was decided that each extension will be built at its own pace. The extension fromRondo Daszyńskiego toKsięcia Janusza was opened on 4 April 2020, and the extension fromKsięcia Janusza toBemowo was opened on 30 June 2022. On 28 September 2022, the extension ofM2 consisting of three new stations:Zacisze,Kondratowicza, andBródno was opened to the public.

Turkish construction firm Gülermak was commissioned in November 2018 to complete the three western-most stations on the line – Lazurowa, Chrzanów and Karolin.[14]

Timeline

[edit]
SegmentLineLength (km)[citation needed]Date opened
KabatyPolitechnikaM111.17 April 1995
PolitechnikaCentrum1.426 May 1998
CentrumRatusz Arsenał1.711 May 2001
Ratusz ArsenałDworzec Gdański1.520 December 2003
Dworzec GdańskiPlac Wilsona1.58 April 2005
Plac WilsonaMarymont0.929 December 2006
MarymontSłodowiec1.023 April 2008
SłodowiecMłociny2.625 October 2008[15]
Rondo DaszyńskiegoDworzec WileńskiM26.3[2]8 March 2015[6]
Dworzec WileńskiTrocka3.115 September 2019[16]
Rondo DaszyńskiegoKsięcia Janusza3.44 April 2020[17]
Księcia JanuszaBemowo2.130 June 2022[18]
TrockaBródno428 September 2022[19]
Total: 39 stations41.3 km[2]

Lines

[edit]
Main article:List of Warsaw Metro stations

The Metro currently consists of two lines, the north–southM1 line, and the east–westM2 line. Three more lines (M3,M4, andM5) are planned.[3]

Map of metro as of 28 January 2020
Warsaw Metro tickets

Operational

[edit]
NameOpenedLengthStations
M11995–200822.7 km (14.1 mi)[2]21, 23 planned in total[2]
M22015–present18.6 km (11.6 mi)[20]18, 28 planned in total[2]

Planned

[edit]
NameOpeningLengthStations
M3by 2032 (first section)

by 2050 (second section)

8 km (5.0 mi)[21]1, 15 planned in total[10]
M4by 205026 km (16 mi)[22]23 planned in total[10]
M5by 2050ca. 20 km (12 mi)[23]20 planned in total[10]

Rolling stock

[edit]
Annual ridership and number of stations of the Warsaw Metro
LineCurrent stockImageIntroducedSetsLength (m/ft)SeatsCapacity
M1Alstom
(Alstom Metropolis 98B)
2000–200518116.74/383.012641454
M1Siemens Mobility
(Siemens Inspiro)
2013,201535117.7/3862321500
M2
M1Škoda Transportation
(Škoda Varsovia)
202237119.01/390.452301500
M2
M1 M2CAF (CAF AS-2014)Not Image2025????

Initially, all of the trains were Russian-built 81-series metro cars. They first arrived in Warsaw in 1990 as a "gift" from theUSSR, five years before the Metro's opening, from theMetrovagonmash plant inMytishchi near Moscow (model 81-717.3/714.3 - 10 carriages). Subsequent trains arrived fromSaint Petersburg's Vagonmash (I. E. Yegorov) Plant in 1994 (81-572/573 - 32 carriages) and an additional 18 81-572.1/573.1 carriages in 1997.[24]

In 1995 the metro began operation with 14 three-car trainsets, with 5 minute intervals between trains during rush hours. With the opening of the Centrum metro stations the trains were extended to four cars and their number was increased to 15.[25]

In 1998, 108 new carriages of the modernMetropolis family were ordered from the French companyAlstom, forming 18 six-car trainsets. These were all delivered by 2005[26] (24 were produced inBarcelona and the remainder in theAlstom Konstal plant inChorzów).[27]

In 2006, additional 30 carriages were ordered from Russia to extend the existing 81-series to the target length of six cars, with deliveries taking place up to 2007.

In 2007 five new Russian 81-series trains with redesigned front-ends were purchased, with the contract extended to seven in 2009.

In February 2011, an order was signed with German manufacturerSiemens for 35 complete trains from their newInspiro line. A large number of these were manufactured inPoland byNewag. The first five trains were put into service in 2013. However, in November 2013 a fire broke out in one of the carriages and for safety reasons all five trains were withdrawn from operation until the cause of the fire was determined. Once the investigation was completed the five new Inspiro trains were placed back into service in March 2014. In 2012, a non-revenue dieselshunting locomotive, classified asZPS LM-400.00 [pl], was manufactured byZakład Pojazdów Szynowych [pl] inStargard, designed especially for shunting Inspiro trains at theKabaty depot.

By 2020, the Siemens Inspiro formed the majority of the operating rolling stock.

Originally the 81-series and Alstom Metropolis trains were painted in two horizontal stripes of equal width, the upper one white and the lower one red, with a blue bar identifying the M1 line between them. For the Simens Inspiro a livery with a yellow and red stripe under the windows was chosen in order to resemble the color scheme of the surface public transport taken from theflag of Warsaw. Subsequently the older trains have had the blue bar replaced with a yellow one during scheduled refurbishment.[28]

In January 2020,Škoda Transportation was awarded a new contract for 37 new, single-space trains, named theVarsovia. The first EMU arrived in Warsaw on April 25, 2022, in October the first unit entered regular passenger service on the M1 line.[29]

With the delivery of the Škoda Varsovia the obsolete 81-series is being gradually retired, units in good technical condition have been donated for spare parts to Kyiv[30] and Kharkiv,[31] where trains of the type are still common. A single trainset of this is to be kept in working order as a museum exhibit and seasonal operation while 3 others remain in Warsaw for spare parts.

Depots

[edit]

A single depot is located south of theKabaty station. There is a single-track connection (PKP rail line 937 [pl]) between the depot andWarszawa Okęcie railway station on thePKP rail network. This link is not electrified and is used only for an occasional rolling-stock transfer. A second depot (Karolin) is currently under construction and is expected to open in 2026. A third depot (Kozia Górka) is planned to be built as part of the first section of theM3 line fromStadion Narodowy toGocław.

Retired stock

[edit]
LineCurrent stockImageIntroducedRetiredSetsLength (m/ft)SeatsCapacity
M1Metrovagonmash
(81-717.3/714.3)
1989-1990, 2006202316115.26/378.152601200
Vagonmash
(81-572/573)
1994-19972023
Vagonmash
(81-572.2/573.2)
200920237

Despite being retired in Poland, the 81-series trains are still widespread in several V4 countries and are well-known in Europe. Compared to west European metro systems (such as Berlin U-Bahn or Paris Metro), these trains can maintain higher average speeds, 80 km/h maximum and 35-40 km/h average, there were produced in several thousands, so their spare parts are still on high demand abroad. So, some trains were donated to Ukraine. Unlike, for example, Hungary,[32] Ukraine decided not to buy the Russian spare parts, as Polish ones already met this demand.[33]

Plans

[edit]
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Warsaw Metro" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
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A map of the Warsaw Metro, showing the north-southLine M1, as well as the planned east-west lines
Two new stations are planned from the beginning as completion of the line M1

The M1 line does not pass directly under Warsaw'sOld Town, the city's main tourist attraction, which has few public transport links, passing it about 600 metres (2,000 feet) to the west instead. It also does not directly connect to theWarszawa Central railway station, with the nearest stop being over 400 metres (1,300 feet) to the east. Until the opening of M2 in March 2015, the metro system was confined to the western bank of Vistula, thus doing nothing to ease traffic problems on Warsaw's bridges: a major bottleneck between the city center and the easternPraga district. Plans for a third line toWarsaw Chopin Airport have been abandoned for the foreseeable future, with the airport served bya newly built railway station instead.

Transport planners have suggested that theWKD, alight rail line that runs to the western suburbs, could be integrated with the city's tram system, or be more closely tied to the metro and a future suburban rail network, or both. The first such plans were prepared in the late 1930s and the railway tunnel running below the city center was to be shared by both the railways and the metro. The WKD, PKP and Warsaw Metro systems are integrated and Warsaw city travel cards are also valid in the suburban trains operated bySKM andKM.

Future extensions

[edit]
Warsaw Metro 2050 master plan

Reception

[edit]

In 2009, the Warsaw Metro won two "Metro Award" prizes in the categories of "Special Merit Award for Commitment to the Environment" and "Best Maintenance Programme". These were followed by the Most Improved Metro award in 2011.[35] The system consistently receives very high ratings among its passengers; a survey conducted in September 2014 indicated that 98% of the respondents rated it as good or very good.[36]

Network map

[edit]

Map

See also

[edit]
Portals:

References

[edit]
Inline citations
  1. ^"Raport Roczny 2023" [Annual report 2023](PDF). Zarząd Transportu Miejskiego w Warszawie. 2024. p. 16. Retrieved2024-07-20.
  2. ^abcdefg"Raport roczny 2015" [Annual Report 2015](PDF) (in Polish and English). 2016. p. 9. Retrieved2017-01-04.
  3. ^ab"Warszawa: III linia metra – jest już koncepcja pierwszego odcinka".
  4. ^Polish website of Warsaw Metro - Line 2 information and maps
  5. ^PAP."Wielka chwila: ruszają prace przy drugiej linii metra" (in Polish). Gazeta.pl. Retrieved2010-08-13.
  6. ^ab"Warsaws second metro line opens".Radio Poland. March 8, 2015. Retrieved2015-03-09.
  7. ^"Crowds take first ride on Warsaws new subway line".U-T San Diego. Associated Press. March 8, 2015. Retrieved2015-03-08.
  8. ^"TLC Involved in Project to Expand Warsaw Metro System".TLC. April 25, 2019. Retrieved2019-04-25.
  9. ^"Trzaskowski: Metrem na Karolin pojedziemy w 2026 r."www.transport-publiczny.pl (in Polish). Retrieved2023-10-27.
  10. ^abcd"Stolica pięciu linii metra".Urząd m.st. Warszawy (in Polish).
  11. ^"History of the Warsaw Metro".mirprometro.info. Retrieved23 August 2024.
  12. ^"History of the Warsaw Metro".mirprometro.info. Retrieved23 August 2024.
  13. ^Jabłczyński, Kamil (2023-05-08)."Tak kiedyś wyglądało metro w Warszawie! Za krótkie pociągi, bez bramek wejściowych i masy ekranów. Nostalgiczna podróż do lat 90".Nasze Miasto.Archived from the original on 2023-05-09. Retrieved2023-11-12.
  14. ^https://notesfrompoland.com/2020/06/02/not-so-fast-extension-of-warsaws-metro-system-faces-delays-over-land-disputes/
  15. ^"First train to pull into Mlociny metro station".Radio Poland. Retrieved2008-10-25.
  16. ^"Warszawa: Metro jeździ już na Targówek".TVP. Retrieved2019-09-15.
  17. ^"Warszawa: Uruchamiamy wolskie stacje metra". Retrieved2020-04-03.
  18. ^ <"Metro jedzie na Bemowo. Dwie nowe stacje otwarte".www.transport-publiczny.pl. Retrieved30 June 2022.
  19. ^ <"Metro jedzie na Bródno. Trzy nowe stacje otwarte".www.transport-publiczny.pl. Retrieved28 September 2022.
  20. ^"Rocznica otwarcia centralnego odcinka II linii metra".
  21. ^"Air pleased, will ride the subway!".www.architekturaibiznes.pl. Retrieved2025-02-03.
  22. ^Białas, Kamil (2024-07-15)."Autonomous metro in Warsaw and five lines by 2050. [MAP]".Magazyn WhiteMAD - moda, architektura, design w jednym miejscu. Retrieved2025-02-03.
  23. ^Wróblewski, Piotr (2023-03-03)."Linia metra M5 w Warszawie. Z Ursusa na Gocławek. Gdzie zlokalizowane będą stacje nowej ,,piątki"?".Warszawa Nasze Miasto (in Polish). Retrieved2025-02-03.
  24. ^Metrowahonы (in Russian). Archived fromthe original on 2006-05-13.
  25. ^"Metro: Skład nr 07 wyrusza w ostatnią podróż".
  26. ^"Warsaw Metro". Alstom Cars. Archived fromthe original on 2006-10-07.
  27. ^"Przegubowiec".Tabor Metra Warszawskiego (in Polish).
  28. ^"Metro zmienia barwy. Metropolis jak Inspiro".
  29. ^"Skoda Varsovia wyjechała (Testowo) na I linię metra".
  30. ^"Kyiv Metro Receives Another 6 Trains from Warsaw". September 2023.
  31. ^"Three more subway trains for Kharkiv, thanks to Warsaw". 19 October 2023.
  32. ^"Hungary Wins EU Exemption to Let Russian Firm Service Metro Cars".Bloomberg.com. 2023-06-22. Retrieved2024-07-03.
  33. ^"В киевском метро начал курсировать поезд из варшавских вагонов". November 2023.
  34. ^"Metro Warszawskie". Archived fromthe original on 2009-02-02. Retrieved2009-02-02.
  35. ^"the big idea - The Metros Awards".The Metros Awards. Retrieved13 April 2016.
  36. ^"Pasażerowie zadowoleni z metra. Mamy wyniki najnowszych badań".Onet.pl (in Polish). August 23, 2014. Retrieved2014-09-07.
Bibliography
  • Jan Rossman, ed. (1962).Studia i projekty metra w Warszawie; 1928-1958. Warsaw: Arkady. p. 391.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Warsaw Metro (category)
Videos
  • Television TVPW - The Information Movie about Warsaw Metro system (production: TVPW)(in Polish)
  • Television TVPW - Relation of opening the "Słodowiec" station (production: TVPW)(in Polish)
  • Television TVPW - The movie about building the metro in Warsaw from the beginning to the end (production: TVPW)(in Polish)
  • Television TVPW - The interview with Robert Jaryczewski - the best metro driver of the world in 2008 (production: TVPW)(in Polish)
  • Television TVPW - The movie about signaling in metro in Warsaw (production: TVPW)(in Polish)
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