Metro Siberia
In the 80's, this Russian city (1.2 million inh.) situated in western Siberia on both sides of the river Irtysh planned a typical Russian 3-line subway network plus a fourth branch line.
Construction of Line 1 began in 1992: 6.2 km, 6 stations, from the city centre at Marshala Zhukova to the south as far as Rabochaya.
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Update 25 May 2007 - Construction of tunnels between Kristall and Zarechnaya have been started. There are 1520 meters to go between these stations. Potential speed of construction is 5-6 meters per day. General contractor - 'Mostovik' - is going to launch another TBM by the end of the year.
Update - Sept. 2005 by Yuri Popov:
The authorities announce that the first four stations will open in 2008: 'Biblioteka imeni Pushkina' (Pushkin Library, ex 'Krasnyi Put'), 'Zarechnaya', 'Kristall' (ex-Bul'var Arhitektorov), and 'Sobornaya' (Cathedral, ex-Avtovokzal). Metro bridge construction is almost complete, so they have three years to build four stations. All stations will be cut-and-cover, no deep tunnels.
Government of Omsk region approved the plan of constructing metro in Omsk city until 2008 on 13 April 2005. On 16 February tunneling was started on the first section. 'Mostovik' has started work at two main sites: underground tunnels and stations and metro bridge over the Irtysh river. The first section will have 6.1 km in lenth; 4 stations: 'Avtovokzal', 'Bul'var Arkhitektorov', 'Zarechnaya' and 'Krasnyiy Put'; 190,000 passengers per day; average speed 36 km/h; 10 minutes for the trip from one side to the other; it's planned to be completed in the 4th quarter of 2008. Projects include stretching the first section to the station 'Rabochaya' before 2015 which will increase the whole length of the first line up to 13.6 km and 10 stations. Construction of the second line will start after 2015.
News 01/2004 (Andrey Surikov):
In 2003, there were two sites being constructed in Omsk. First is the tube tunnel had being constructed with Russian made TBM 'KT-5,6 B21' between 'Tupolevskaya' and 'Rabochaya' stations. The TBM finished the tunnel (740 m, 10 m depth) on 23 OCT 2003. The second tunnel will not be constructed in the nearest years because the project has been changed and the first phase should be: 3 stations on the left bank and 1 on the right. In 2004 the metrobridge will be finished but only highway part (upper part). The TBM shall start boring tunnel from metrobridge. But the situation with foundation as usual is very poor and no real opening date was announsed. Some time it was announsed that only 2 stations with one tunnel and metrobridge would be opened first (2005) - 'Krasny Put' and 'Zarechnaya' with shuttle service.
Links
Mostovik general contractor of Omsk metro
Rosmetrostroy by Andrey Surikov Jre 1 6 download for macmadeprogram.
STANKEVICHI, Russia (Reuters) – Russian student Alexei Dudoladov has been forced to go to great lengths – or rather great heights – to attend classes online, having to climb a birch tree in his remote Siberian village every time he needs an internet connection.
The 21-year-old, a popular blogger and a student at the Omsk Institute of Water Transport, located 2,225 kilometres (1,383 miles) east of Moscow, has got the authorities’ attention by pleading for better internet coverage from the top of a snow-covered birch tree.
In his plea – viewed 1.9 million times on TikTok and more than 56,000 times on Instagram since last week – Dudoladov tells regional governor Alexander Burkov that his home internet is not strong enough to connect to his online classes and that he has been forced to come up with a creative solution.
“I need to go into the forest 300 metres from the village and climb a birch tree that is eight-metres high… and I get on Zoom to speak to professors and prove that I am not skipping class for no reason,” he said.
Authorities in several Russian regions, including Moscow, have moved university students to online classes to counter a surge in coronavirus cases.
Around 80% of Russians regularly use the internet, but coverage is some remote regions can be patchy or non-existent.
The Omsk region’s education ministry told RBC business daily it was preparing an individualised study plan for Dudoladov so he could study in Stankevichi, a village 170 kilometres northwest of the regional capital.
Dudoladov said he wasn’t pleased with the authorities’ reaction and that he had been told by officials to try and catch an internet connection by the highway.
Metro Siberia Pretty Buildings
“I was put on an individual study plan, but do they (authorities) not care about other students from other universities,” he wrote in an Instagram post on Monday.
Metro Siberia
“Why can people from the city use the internet in their apartments while villagers can only do so from highways, rooftops and trees!”
(Additional reporting by Nadezhda Tsydenova; Writing by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Gareth Jones)