It's well known that the Moscow Metro is one of the most spectacular in the world--today, let's take a look a smaller metro in a less-famous Russian city: the Novosibirsk Metro
#TrainTwitterpic.twitter.com/wXUZp0vrRe
You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more
Next is Sibirskaya, the transfer station--lots of stone art on the walls here, not quite sure if they're mosaics or something elsepic.twitter.com/DFBAcBffja
Marshala Pokryshkina looks fantastic--very clean lines and edges, very well-lit, spacious overhead, excellent overall aestheticpic.twitter.com/mQqoQW0IjM
Beryozovaya Roshcha makes good use of reflective surfaces to keep its cavernous space illuminatedpic.twitter.com/jMlGz33hgP
Finally, we reach the terminal at Zolotaya Niva. A touch of gold...what a beautiful station!pic.twitter.com/AJzg6JcAOM
Thank you for exploring the Novosibirsk Metro with #TrainTwitter today! Even smaller networks and smaller cities can aspire to elegance and beauty in their railways--be ambitious, seek excellence! We hope you will ride with us again soon
pic.twitter.com/CExWvDvFmB
This is the metro station serving Novosibirsk main railway station, in typical Soviet/Russian fashion, the metro station's name makes no reference to the train station. (like in Ekaterinenburg, where the metro station next to train station is called Uralskaya).
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.