Wikipedia
Perovo is a Moscow Metro station on Kalininsko-Solntsevskaya Line. It was opened on the 30 December 1979 along with the Kalininsky radius at a depth of nine metres. Named after the Moscow district Perovo, the architects Nina Aleshina and Volovich adopted a single-vault design with hinged aluminium lighting elements. The decorative design of the station is devoted to the Russian folk arts. The walls are decorated with blocks with screw-threaded rocks, and original patterns above the entrance portals (by L. Novikova and B. Filatov). The walls are revetted with white marble above and black gabbro below. The floor, which has several high marble stalls surrounded by benches, is faced with grey, black and brown granite.
The station has two exits, both interlinked with the underground subways under the Zelyony Avenue and 2nd Vladimirskaya street. Presently the station has a relatively low passenger traffic of 49300 passengers.
Perovo may refer to:
- Perovo District, a district in Eastern Administrative Okrug of the federal city of Moscow, Russia
- Perovo Solar Park, a photovoltaic power station in Crimea
- Perovo (Moscow Metro), a station of the Moscow Metro, Moscow, Russia
- Perovo, Russia, several rural localities in Russia
- Perovo, Grosuplje, a hamlet of Grosuplje in the Municipality of Grosuplje, Slovenia
- Perovo, Ribnica, a small settlement in the Municipality of Ribnica, Slovenia
- Perovo, alternative name of Dolno Perovo, a village in the Republic of Macedonia
- Perove (Perovo), a rural locality in Crimea
Perovo is a formerly independent settlement in the northern part of the town of Grosuplje in central Slovenia. It belongs to the Municipality of Grosuplje. It was part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola and is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. It includes the hamlet of Potok.