The Dubulti Railway Station, opened in 1977, is an outstanding example of late Soviet modernist architecture in Jūrmala. It was designed by architect Igors Javeins (1903–1980), a former Leningrad-based railway infrastructure planner who oversaw the construction of more than one hundred station buildings across the Soviet Union. His work is associated with Russian Constructivism and architectural avant-garde traditions.
The building’s flowing concrete shell resembles a sea wave, framing a panoramic view of the Lielupe meadows and the Dubulti Church tower—a landscape the architecture seamlessly incorporates into its spatial composition.
Today, the station houses a contemporary art exhibition hall, where expansive glazing provides abundant natural light and creates a clear, neutral environment characteristic of modernist design—perfect for exhibitions.