[3] In 2011, the station has been listed as a "newly discovered object of cultural heritage," and monuments of architecture, town planning, and art.
[4] In May 2016, it was decided that the Soviet decorative piece at the end of the central hall would be removed to be displayed at a museum in accordance with the 2015 decommunization laws.
[5] Originally, a metro station was not planned for this area, since there were no large residential neighborhoods or important transport interchanges nearby.
The station was built as a temporary terminus, owing to the complexity of the hydro-geological situation in the area that would become the Holosiivska extension of the Obolonsko–Teremkivska Line.
Lybidska was designed by a team of architects including Valentyn Ezhov, Anatoliy Krushynskyi, Tamara Tselikovska, Oleksiy Panchenko, in addition to artists Ernest Kotkov, Nikolai Bartossik.