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Railway terminals of St. Petersburg
St. Petersburg is a city of fi ve active railway terminals that ( SYMBOL ) link past and present.
Baltic Terminal was constructed in the middle of the 19th century on the southern bank of the Obvodnoy Canal. It used to direct the trains to Tallinn but since 1933 the terminal has been used to handle ( SUBURB ) communications only.
Moscow Terminal is a crossroads of ways running through Central and South Russia, Crimea, Siberia and Eastern Ukraine. The first ( ERECT ) appeared in 1844–51 and was named Nicholaevsky after the reigning monarch Nicholas I. It has a twin train station in Moscow known as Leningradsky Rail Terminal.
Vitebsk Terminal was the fi rst railway station to be built in the city and the whole of the Russian Empire in 1837. It was the greatest ( IMPROVE ) of engineering that crucially changed the life in the city and in the country.
Finland Terminal handles transport to northern destinations including Helsinki and Vyborg. Finland Station was designed by ( SWEDEN ) architects, built by Finnish State Railways and opened in 1870.
Ladozhsky Terminal is one of the newest, the largest and most modern passenger railway station in Russia. It opened in 2003 for the 300th anniversary of the city’s ( FOUND ). It serves routes to the north and east previously served by Moscow Terminal and by Finland Station. Of the stations in Saint Petersburg, this station is the only ‘not terminus’ station, that trains can pass.
Railway terminals of St. Petersburg
St. Petersburg is a city of fi ve active railway terminals that symbolically link past and present.
Baltic Terminal was constructed in the middle of the 19th century on the southern bank of the Obvodnoy Canal. It used to direct the trains to Tallinn but since 1933 the terminal has been used to handle suburban communications only.
Moscow Terminal is a crossroads of ways running through Central and South Russia, Crimea, Siberia and Eastern Ukraine. The first erection appeared in 1844–51 and was named Nicholaevsky after the reigning monarch Nicholas I. It has a twin train station in Moscow known as Leningradsky Rail Terminal.
Vitebsk Terminal was the fi rst railway station to be built in the city and the whole of the Russian Empire in 1837. It was the greatest improvement of engineering that crucially changed the life in the city and in the country.
Finland Terminal handles transport to northern destinations including Helsinki and Vyborg. Finland Station was designed by swedish architects, built by Finnish State Railways and opened in 1870.
Ladozhsky Terminal is one of the newest, the largest and most modern passenger railway station in Russia. It opened in 2003 for the 300th anniversary of the city’s founding (или foundation). It serves routes to the north and east previously served by Moscow Terminal and by Finland Station. Of the stations in Saint Petersburg, this station is the only ‘not terminus’ station, that trains can pass.