Akropoli metro station

Akropoli (Ακρόπολη) is a station on Athens Metro Line 2. The station serves Plaka, Koukaki and Makrygianni.

Location
The station is located under Makrygianni street in the Makrygianni neighbourhood of Athens. It is located on the east side of the Acropolis Museum and south of Dionysiou Areopagitou Street.

History
The station appeared in the original Athens Metro plan which was funded in 1991 and when construction began it was to be named Olympieion after the Temple of Olympian Zeus. During construction the name was changed to its current name. The station opened on 15 November 2000 along with the Syntagma-Dafni extension, 10 months after the first section of the system opened.

Station Description
The station can be accessed by three ground-level entrances. Two are located on the eastern wall of the Acropolis Museum, one of which is elevator-only, while the third entrance is located on the other side of Makrygianni Str., at the finishing point of Athanasiou Diakou Str. Both entrances lead to the concourse level, which is decorated with antiquities. A big diagonal escalator leads from the concourse level to an intermediate level from which other escalators lead to the platforms. Both the concourse and intermediate levels' walls are covered with polished marble tiles. The platforms' walls are decorated with a curved-plastic-panel pattern, the same that can be found at Line 2's Omonoia and Panepistimio and Line 3's Syntagma and Ambelokipi stations. Parts of the platforms are covered by posters of Melina Merkouri and reproductions of the Elgin Marbles of Parthenon. The station is among the deepest of the system and is one of the very few that have three underground levels.

Bus Connections
Only stops that are within 200m. from any of the station's exits are listed. Special bus routes are not included.

Vandalism
On the night of March 4, 2020 a group of about 30 persons entered the station, spray-painted on the station's walls and sculptures and broke ticket-vending machines as a form of protest. The messages written on the walls included "EAT COPS NOT MEAT", "FIRE TO ALL PRISONS" and "HIT SEXISTES [sic]". The group tried to flee the scene by entering a passing train, the driver of which refused to leave before the police arrived. A total of 43 arrests were made for obstruction, criminal mischief and domestic disturbance.

Nearby Points of Interest

 * Acropolis of Athens
 * Acropolis Museum
 * Dionysiou Areopagitou Street
 * Temple of Olympian Zeus