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Metro de Santiago
Metrolinea4.jpg
Info
Locale Santiago
Transit type Rapid transit
Number of lines 5
Number of stations 100 (16 under construction)
Daily ridership 2.5 million
Operation
Began operation September 15, 1975
Operator(s) Empresa de Transporte de Pasajeros Metro S.A.
Technical
System length 84.4 km (20.1 km under construction)
The Santiago Metro symbol located at Escuela Militar station L1lo.gif

Metro de Santiago is South America's most extensive and modern metro system. The metro system serves the city of Santiago, Chile. It is a network of five lines connecting a total of 107 stations, some of which are still under construction. The system carries around 2,500,000 passengers per day.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Origin and first project

Popular, modern, secure and efficient, it serves a city of 7 million inhabitants. Since its opening in 1975, el Metro has changed the city; it is one of Chile's most important construction projects. Some of the lines use rubber tyred rail stock.

The rapid growth of the population in the city (in 1920, 507,296 habitants; in 1940, 1,073,699 habitants) was the principal factor in the birth of the idea. The first plan was in 1944, but only in 1968 did work begin. The original plan was for 5 lines:

  • Line 1, between San Pablo and Escuela Militar by the Alameda, Providencia and Apoquindo Avenues.
  • Line 2, between Conchalí and San Miguel by Vivaceta, Panamerican Highway and Gran Avenida.
  • Line 3, (projected) between Mapocho and Ñuñoa, by Ahumada and the avenues Matta and Irarrázaval.
  • Line 4, between Tobalaba (Providencia) and Puente Alto, to the South
  • Line 5, between Quinta Normal and La Florida.

[edit] Extension

On September 15, 1975, Augusto Pinochet inaugurated the first leg of Metro de Santiago between the stations San Pablo and La Moneda on Line 1. Line 2 was opened in 1978 between Los Héroes and Lo Ovalle, and Line 1 was extended to Escuela Militar in 1980. Line 2 was extended to the north and found the remains of the Cal y Canto Bridge (built in 1782 and destroyed in 1880). The extension between Los Héroes and Puente Cal y Canto (former Mapocho Station) was inaugurated in 1987.

The city had changed since 1968 and the plan had to be changed too. La Florida had become the most populous zone of the city, and the Metro needed to go there. Line 5 was built south from Baquedano along Vicuña Mackenna Avenue and was opened in 1997. Line 5 was extended in 2000 to the west and entered the historical centre of the city (Plaza de Armas station), and in 2004 the extensions of Line 2 to the north and south and Line 5 to the west were opened.

In 2002 the construction of Line 4 and Line 4A began, in order to connect Puente Alto and the southeast of the City to the metro system.

Near the end of 2005, President Ricardo Lagos said that the government will start to plan the construction of another extension of line 5. It would reach Maipú, one of the municipalities that is farther away from the center of Santiago.

Presently the metro consists of five lines which total 84 kilometres and a total of 82 stations and seven transfer stations: Los Héroes, Baquedano, Santa Ana, Tobalaba, Vicente Valdés, Vicuña Mackenna and La Cisterna. 16 new stations are planned to be opened in the next few years.

Line Length Stations Opening date Type
L1lo.gif San Pablo - La Moneda 8.2 km 12 15 Sep 1975 Ground level/Underground
L1lo.gif La Moneda - Salvador 3.2 km 5 31 Mar 1977 Underground
L2lo.gif Los Héroes - Franklin 4.9 km 4 31 Mar 1978 Ground level
L2lo.gif Franklin - Lo Ovalle 4.8 km 6 21 Dec 1978 Underground
L1lo.gif Salvador - Escuela Militar 4.5 km 6 22 Aug 1980 Underground
L2lo.gif Los Héroes - Puente Cal y Canto 1.7 km 2 15 Sep 1987 Ground level
L5lo.gif Baquedano - Bellavista de La Florida 10.3 km 11 5 Apr 1997 Underground/Viaduct
L5lo.gif Baquedano - Santa Ana 2.7 km 2 4 Mar 2000 Underground
L5lo.gif Santa Ana - Quinta Normal 1.9 km 2 31 Mar 2004 Underground
L2lo.gif Puente Cal y Canto - Cerro Blanco 1.6 km 2 8 Sep 2004 Underground
L2lo.gif Lo Ovalle - La Cisterna 2.1 km 2 22 Dec 2004 Underground
L2lo.gif Cerro Blanco - Einstein 1.9 km 2 25 Nov 2005 Underground
L5lo.gif Bellavista de La Florida - Vicente Valdés 0.6 km 1 30 Nov 2005 Underground
L4lo.gif Vicente Valdés - Plaza de Puente Alto 10.9 km 9 30 Nov 2005 Underground/Viaduct
L4lo.gif Tobalaba - Grecia 7.7 km 7 30 Nov 2005 Underground
L4lo.gif Grecia - Vicente Valdés 6.1 km 5 2 Mar 2006 Ground level
L4Alo.gif Vicuña Mackenna - La Cisterna 7.7 km 6 16 Aug 2006 Ground level
L2lo.gif Einstein - Vespucio Norte 2.4 km 3 21 Dec 2006 Underground
L4lo.gif San José de la Estrella 0 km 1 5 Nov 2009 Viaduct
L1lo.gif Escuela Militar - Los Domínicos 4 km 3 2009 Underground
L5lo.gif Quinta Normal - Pudahuel 7 km 5 2009 Underground
L5lo.gif Pudahuel - Plaza de Maipú 7 km 7 2010 Underground/Viaduct
L5lo.gif El Sol 0 km 1 2011 Underground

[edit] Controversies

As of 2007 (with the whole metropolitan transportation changing to Transantiago), the system was embroiled in a number of scandals, including a class-action lawsuit from commuters who can no longer get to work. Transportation planners substituted new train lines for a number of bus lines, but this has resulted in excessive crowding on the trains. A new fare card was also deployed, but a moratorium had to be declared on bus fares until problems were addressed. The private operators of the system are warning of imminent bankruptcy.[1]

[edit] Stations

In bold are junction stations. In italics are stations currently under construction.

L1lo.gif
Line 1
West to east
L2lo.gif
Line 2
North to south
L4lo.gif
Line 4
North to south
L4Alo.gif
Line 4A
West to east
L5lo.gif
Line 5
West to southeast

[edit] Art in the Metro

Art is quite a present element in the stations. The station Universidad de Chile has a giant mural created by Mario Toral and represents the history of the country. Other pieces of art are in Baquedano (featuring modern art and a concert space), Bellas Artes (multimedia art), Santa Lucía (Portuguese azulejos, a gift made by the Lisbon Metro), La Moneda (with realistic painting representing typical landscape), and various other stations.

[edit] Pricing and working hours

The Metro de Santiago sells tickets from 6:00 to 23:00 Monday through Friday, 6:30 to 22:30 on Saturdays, and 8:00 to 22:30 on Sundays and holidays. The fare depends on the time of the use of the Metro. The cost of a ticket in the Horario Punta (rush hour, 7:00-8:59:59 and 18:00-19:59:59) is $460 (aprox. US$0.75); in the Horario Valle (off-peak hours, 6:30-6:59:59, 9:00-17:59:59, 20:00-20:44:59, and all day weekends and holidays) is $400 (aprox. US$0.65); and in the Horario Bajo (low-use hours, 6:00-6:29:59 and 20:45-23:00) is $380 (aprox. US$0.60). Senior citizens (65 and older) and students pay $130 (US $0.20), except for the Horario Punta senior citizens pay the normal amount of $460.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ In Chile, Commuters Sue City over Transit System

[edit] External links

[edit] WikiLinks




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