Saint-Petersburg has well-developed transportation links to other Russian cities and large cities all over the world.
If you arrive by train:
There are several large railway stations ("vokzals")
in St. Petersburg.
Trains from Moscow, other Russian cities to the south
and south-east of St. Petersburg
and some trains from Ukraine arrive at
the Moskovskii vokzal,
linked to the metro station Ploshchad' Vosstaniya.
Most trains from the west and south-west (including European countries) arrive at the Vitebskii vokzal
(metro station Pushkinskaya).
Trains from the east, nord-east, and nord-west (Helsinki)
arrive at the Ladozhskii vokzal
(metro station Ladozhskaya).
Finlyandskii vokzal
(metro station Ploshchad' Lenina) and Baltiiskii vokzal
(metro station Baltiiskaya)
serve only regional trains.
The railway timetables (in Russian) can be found here.
There is an online scheme of the St.-Petersburg metro lines (in Russian; external link). Ploshchad' Vosstaniya, Baltiiskaya, Ploshchad' Lenina, and Pushkinskaya stations are on the First (red) metro line; Ladozhskaya is on the Fourth (orange) line.
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Click on the scheme to go back to its smaller version. |
If you arrive by plane:
Almost all passenger flights to St. Petersburg arrive at the
Pulkovo international airport, located ca. 15 km south of St. Petersburg.
Domestic and some international flights arrive at the Pulkovo-1
terminal, from where one can reach the Moskovskaya metro station
by bus No. 39 or "route taxi" (express minibus) No. 39.
Most of international flights arrive at the Pulkovo-2
terminal, from where one can reach the Moskovskaya metro station
by bus No. 13 or "route taxi" No. 13.
You have to pay something around 20 roubles inside the car.
From the Moskovskaya metro station please follow by the Second (blue) metro line to the correspondence station Tekhnologuicheskii institut (Technological Institute), then change to the First (red) line (see the metro scheme) and follow to Politekhnicheskaya.
Page design and maintenance:
Alexander Potekhin
Page last updated on September 4, 2007. |