Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/17/2012

Metro Gets Air Conditioned Cars

The Moscow Times

Metro drivers giving the new Rusich train cars a test run on the circle line Thursday. Service starts Friday.
Vladimir Filonov / MT

Metro drivers giving the new Rusich train cars a test run on the circle line Thursday. Service starts Friday.

Train cars with air conditioning and extra doors will start operating on the circle line of the Moscow metro on Friday in an upgrade made at passengers’ request, metro chief Dmitry Gayev said.

The new Rusich train cars will be the first to offer air conditioning in the city’s metro, Gayev said Thursday at a ceremony where he showed off the cars.

“The modernized Rusich has a cabin climate control system that was made at the wishes of the passengers,” Gayev said, Interfax reported.

A version of the Rusich without air conditioning already operates on the dark-blue Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line.

He said each train would have 56 sliding doors instead of the current 40 to allow passengers to board and disembark more quickly. The doors themselves are touch-sensitive so that they will not slam shut onto passengers’ arms and legs and possibly injure them.

The new cars also are equipped with a video surveillance system, bigger windows and an “improved cabin layout,” Gayev said.

The cars will enter serial production in August, allowing the metro to gradually replace all its trains on the Koltsevaya line, he said.

While the changes have been tailored to passengers’ wishes, people hoping for female-only train cars or restrooms and trash canisters in the metro will have to wait.

Beijing’s metro recently proposed introducing female-only cars to prevent the sexual harassment of women, but the Moscow metro has no plans to follow suit, even though the problem is apparently widespread.

“We have never considered such a question,” metro spokesman Pavel Sukharnikov told RIA-Novosti earlier this month.

He said no female passengers had filed complaints about harassment.

Up to 40 percent of female passengers in the Moscow metro have been subjected to sexual harassment, RIA-Novosti reported, citing psychologists who said public transportation provides a perfect environment for harassment: throngs of people, availability and an opportunity to avoid punishment.

Gayev discouraged the idea of an exclusive metro car at an earlier news conference where he dismissed a proposal to introduce VIP cars.

“The metro is an open system of transportation where all people are equal, just like they are in a banya,” Gayev said, RIA-Novosti reported.

Gayev also said at the news conference there were no plans to offer bathrooms or garbage cans in the metro.


Also in News

Doubts Nag Prokhorov's Candidacy

"Let's look at the history of human development," he begins. "Somebody always has to be first. That person says, 'We need to develop in this way,' and nobody believes him; they're suspicious of him. Nobody believed Steve Jobs or Bill Gates at first."

Duma Reform Could Reduce Poll Trickery

A bill submitted to the State Duma by President Dmitry Medvedev would ban political parties from putting nationally known figures on regional parliamentary election lists while increasing the number of electoral districts from 80 to 225.

Opposition Rally Barred From Central Square

Organizers of a Feb. 26 opposition rally called "Farewell to Putin's Political Winter" said their application to hold the event on Ploshchad Revolyutsii next to the Kremlin was rejected by City Hall.

Elections Chief Says He Expects Increase in Complaints

Central Elections Commission head Vladimir Churov said Thursday that he expects there to be more public complaints about falsifications after the March 4 presidential vote than after the State Duma elections, due to a "command" by opposition newspaper Novaya Gazeta to file them.

Social Network Vkontakte Shut Down Groups Devoted to Suicide

Amid a wave of media reports concerning teen suicide in Russia, social network Vkontakte has begun closing groups dedicated to suicide-related topics.

Report: Elections Official Warns of Use of Mobile Voting in Falsifications

Deputy Mayor of Moscow Peter Biryukov assembled leaders of municipal social-rights centers to make arrangements for ensuring votes for presidential candidate Vladimir Putin, voter's rights defender Ilya Shablinsky said, Vedomosti reported.




Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook

print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read