Chelyabinsk Metro


Chelyabinsk Metro is an underground rapid transit system under construction in Chelyabinsk, Russia. Envisioned in the 1960s, construction on the inaugural line began in 1992.
After the project suffered various financial reverses in the 1990s and early 2000s, the first three stations were originally scheduled to open in 2007. But the opening was then postponed to 2010. In 2007, a decision was made to open the first line in 2014, with the project now consisting of four stations initially instead of three. As funding for the project continued to be intermittent, the opening date was pushed back again., an exact opening date would not occur before 2025.
As of Feb. 2010, some of tunnel has been made, out of a total. In 2017, the head of the city's construction authority reported that one station, Torgovy Tsentr was about 70% complete and that three other stations were still envisioned.

Lines and stations

The current plans include opening the following four stations, along with a depot:
The total length of tunnels will be, with an additional track to the depot.
In November, 2011, the first station structure was finished.

Future plans

Further plans include expanding the first line east to the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant, and west.
Two more lines running from north to southeast and from northeast to southwest are planned longer-term; the time frame for their construction is undefined.

Financing the project

In March 1998, before the 1998 Russian financial crisis, Pyotr Sumin, governor of the Chelyabinsk province, called the Chelyabinsk Metro one of the most important construction projects in the region. Construction companies in arrears on their taxes to the local and federal governments offered their services to build the Metro in lieu of payment. The project was therefore being financed by the tax debt of the construction companies to various government bodies. Now it is funded jointly by the governments of Russia, Chelyabinsk Oblast and the city of Chelyabinsk, allocating in total around $40 mln a year.
In 2018, the government estimated that it will take about 80 billion rubles to complete the project, on top of the 11 billion rubles that the authorities have already invested. The government considered forming a joint request with Krasnoyarsk and Omsk, which also have unfinished metros, to secure the needed funds for all three projects.

Criticism

The project was initially due to be completed by 2000, but has been postponed several times due to lack of financing.
The construction plan was developed many years ago and as the city has expanded and transport needs have changed greatly, critics argue that the initial stations will be of little help in reducing traffic congestion or improving the transportation system.
Alternative projects such as a metrotram or surface trains have been rejected.