The name comes from the village of Karamyshevo, which was located here earlier.
The Turkic word “karamysh” is translated as having seen the light.
The internal appearance of the station harmoniously combines two opposites: light and darkness, white and black. The shape of the columns follows the curves of the Moscow River in the area of Karamyshevskaya embankment. The branching structure of the river is dissected by a bridge, like an axis, into the green left part of the bank and the urbanized right. The bridge served as an image of a light strip running through the center of the station and dividing it into two halves.
In the pedestrian crossing, the slats have a triangular cross-section, one side of the slats is white, the other is black. Thus, on the one hand, the wall consisting of lamellas is white, on the other hand, it is black.
White panels lead to the existing Narodnoye Opolchenie metro station, and black panels lead to the new Narodnoye Opolchenie metro station. Intuitive navigation is created.
The appearance of all street pavilions reflects and develops the basic concept of the metro station. The color scheme of the pavilions, as well as the interior of the station, is black and white.