SANTIAGO METRO


'Metro de Santiago' is the metro system serving the city of Santiago, Chile. It is a network of five lines connecting a total of 105 stations, some of which are still under construction. The system carries around 2,500,000 passengers per day.

Contents
History
Origin and first project
Extension
Stations
Art in the Metro
Pricing and working hours
See also
External links

History


Origin and first project

Popular, modern, secure and efficient, it serves a city of 6 million inhabitants. Since its opening in 1975, ''el Metro'' has changed the city; it is one of Chile's most important construction projects.
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 Las Rejas and Los Leones by the Alameda and Providencia Avenue.

★ Line 2, between Conchalí and San Miguel by Vivaceta, Panamerican Highway and Gran Avenida.

★ Line 3, between Mapocho and Ñuñoa, by Ahumada and the avenues Matta and Irarrázaval.

★ Line 4, between Estacion Central (Alameda) and San Bernardo, following the Railway to the South

★ Line 5, between Los Cerrillos and Ñuñoa, using the Beltway Railway.
Extension

Map

On September 15 1975, the ''Metro de Santiago'' was opened 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 Heroes'' and ''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. The '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 to connect Puente Alto and the southeast of the City to the ''Red de Metro''.
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 to 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.
LineLengthStationsOpening dateType
San Pablo - La Moneda8.2 km1215 Sep 1975Underground
La Moneda- Salvador3.2 km531 Mar 1977Underground
Los Héroes - Franklin4.9 km431 Mar 1978Ground level
Franklin - Lo Ovalle4.8 km621 Dec 1978Underground
Salvador - Escuela Militar4.5 km622 Aug 1980Underground
Los Héroes - Puente Cal y Canto1.7 km215 Sep 1987Ground level
Baquedano - Bellavista de La Florida10.3 km115 Apr 1997Underground/Viaduct
Baquedano - Santa Ana2.7 km24 Mar 2000Underground
Santa Ana - Quinta Normal1.9 km231 Mar 2004Underground
Puente Cal y Canto - Cerro Blanco1.6 km28 Sep 2004Underground
Lo Ovalle - La Cisterna2.1 km222 Dec 2004Underground
Cerro Blanco - Einstein1.9 km225 Nov 2005Underground
Bellavista de La Florida- Vicente Valdés0.6 km130 Nov 2005Underground
Vicente Valdés - Plaza de Puente Alto10.9 km930 Nov 2005Underground/Viaduct
Tobalaba - Grecia7.7 km730 Nov 2005Underground
Grecia - Vicente Valdés6.1 km52 Mar 2006Ground level
Vicuña Mackenna - La Cisterna7.7 km616 Aug 2006Ground level
Einstein- Vespucio Norte2.4 km3December 2006Underground
''Escuela Militar- Los Domínicos''4 km32009Underground
''Quinta Normal- Plaza de Maipú''13.5 km142009Underground

Stations


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

'Line 1'
''West to east''

'Line 2'
''North to south''

'Line 4'
''North to south''

'Line 4A'
''West to east''

'Line 5'
''West to southeast''

San Pablo
Neptuno
Pajaritos
Las Rejas
Ecuador
San Alberto Hurtado
Universidad de Santiago
Estación Central
Unión Latinoamericana
República
★ 'Los Héroes'

La Moneda
Universidad de Chile
Santa Lucía
Universidad Católica
★ 'Baquedano'

Salvador
Manuel Montt
Pedro de Valdivia
Los Leones
★ 'Tobalaba'

El Golf
Alcántara
Escuela Militar
★ ''Manquehue''
★ ''Tomás Moro''
★ ''Plaza Los Domínicos''

Vespucio Norte
Zapadores
★ ''Dorsal''
Einstein
Cementerios
Cerro Blanco
Patronato
Puente Cal y Canto
★ 'Santa Ana'

★ 'Los Héroes'

Toesca
Parque O'Higgins
Rondizzoni
Franklin
El Llano
San Miguel
Lo Vial
Departamental
Ciudad del Niño
Lo Ovalle
El Parrón
★ 'La Cisterna'

★ 'Tobalaba'

Cristóbal Colón
Francisco Bilbao
Príncipe de Gales
Simón Bolívar
Plaza Egaña
Los Orientales
Grecia
Los Presidentes
Quilín
Las Torres
Macul
★ 'Vicuña Mackenna'

★ 'Vicente Valdés'

Rojas Magallanes
Trinidad
Los Quillayes
Elisa Correa
Hospital Sótero del Río
Protectora de la Infancia
Las Mercedes
Plaza de Puente Alto

★ 'La Cisterna'

San Ramón
Santa Rosa
La Granja
Santa Julia
★ 'Vicuña Mackenna'

★ ''Plaza de Maipú''
★ ''Rafael Riesco''
★ ''Mall Maipú''
★ ''Teniente Cruz''
★ ''Laguna Sur''
★ ''General Bonilla''
★ ''Municipalidad de Pudahuel''
★ ''Avenida Las Torres''
★ ''Municipalidad de Lo Prado''
★ ''Las Rejas Norte''
★ ''General Velásquez''
Quinta Normal
Cumming
★ 'Santa Ana'

Plaza de Armas
Bellas Artes
★ 'Baquedano'

Parque Bustamante
Santa Isabel
Irarrázaval
Ñuble
Rodrigo de Araya
Carlos Valdovinos
Camino Agrícola
San Joaquín
Pedrero
Mirador
Bellavista de La Florida
★ 'Vicente Valdés'


Art in the Metro


The Metro does not only function as a transport system: it also has a cultural, artistic and social function.
Art is an important 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.

Pricing and working hours


The 'Metro de Santiago' sells tickets from 6:00 to 23:30 Monday through Saturday and 8:00 to 22:30 on Sundays. The fare depends on the time of the use of the Metro. The cost of a ticket in the ''unitario'' (rush hour, 7:00-8:59:59 and 18:00-19:59:59) is $420 and in the ''unitario rebajado'' (6:30-7:14:59, 9:00-17:59:59, 19:30-22:30 and Sat–Sun) is $380 (US $0.69). Senior citizens (65 and older) and school and university students pay $130 (US $0.24).

See also



List of metro systems

Transantiago

Rubber-tyred metro

External links



Metro S.A.

UrbanRail.net/Santiago

Tarjeta Bip!

Plan and Authority of Transit of Santiago de Chile, Transantiago

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