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Rail transport in Argentina

The Argentine railway network consisted of a 47,000 km (29,204 mi) network at the end of the Second World War and was, in its time, one of the most extensive and prosperous in the world. However, with the increase in highway construction, there followed a sharp decline in railway profitability, leading to the break-up in 1993 of Ferrocarriles Argentinos (FA), the state railroad corporation. During the period following privatisation, private and provincial railway companies were created and resurrected some of the major passenger routes that FA once operated.

Argentina
Operation
National railwayFerrocarriles Argentinos
Infrastructure companyADIFSE
Statistics
Ridership423,202,522 Buenos Aires commuter (2018)[1]
2,036,792 regional (2018)[2]
1,009,357 long distance (2018)
System length
Total36,966 km (22,970 mi) (8th)[3]
Track gauge
5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm)26,475 km (16,451 mi)
1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)2,780 km (1,730 mi)
1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)7,711 km (4,791 mi)
Secondary narrow gauges424 km (263 mi)
Map
Argentina's rail network at its greatest extent (c. 1950)

Dissatisfied with the private management of the railways, beginning in 2012 and following the Once Tragedy, the national government started to re-nationalise some of the private operators and ceased to renew their contracts. At the same time, Operadora Ferroviaria Sociedad del Estado (SOFSE) was formed to manage the lines which were gradually taken over by the government in this period and Argentina's railways began receiving far greater investment than in previous decades.[4][5][6] In 2014, the government also began replacing the long distance rolling stock and rails and ultimately put forward a proposal in 2015 which revived Ferrocarriles Argentinos as Nuevos Ferrocarriles Argentinos later that year.[7][8][9][10]

The railroad network today, with its 36,966 km (22,970 mi) size, is now somewhat smaller than it once was, though still the 8th largest in the world,[3] and the 15th largest in passenger numbers.

History

 
Del Parque station built in 1857, later closed in 1883.

The growth and decline of the Argentine railways are tied heavily with the history of the country as a whole, reflecting its economic and political situation at numerous points in history, reaching its high point when Argentina ranked among the 10 richest economies in the world (measured in GDP per capita) during the country's Belle Époque and subsequently deteriorating along with the hopes of the prosperity it came so close to achieving.[11]

In the early years, the railway was emblematic of the vast waves of European Immigration into the country, with many coming to work on and operate the railways, such as the Italian-Argentine Alfonso Covassi, the country's first engine driver,[12] and also in the sense that the population boom experienced as a result of this immigration required means of transportation to meet growing demands. Much like in the American West, the railways also played a key role in the creation and expansion of new population centres and boomtowns in remote parts of the country.[13]

Development

 
Advertisement for the Central Argentine Railway (1913).
 
Interior of Retiro railway station, then the central terminal of the Central Argentine Railway (1915).
 
Steam locomotive in Puerto Deseado, Santa Cruz Province (c.1920).

The importance of foreign capital in the construction of the Argentine railways is perhaps overstated,[14] with initial construction of the network beginning in 1855 at first with Argentine finance, which continued throughout the network's development.[15] The Buenos Aires Western, Great Western and Great Southern railways (today the part of the San Martín, Sarmiento and Roca railways respectively) were all commenced using Argentine capital with the Buenos Aires Western Railway being the first to open its doors in the country, along with its Del Parque railway station.[16]

Following the adoption of liberal economic policies by president Bartolomé Mitre, these railways were sold off to foreign private interests, consisting of mostly British companies, in what would be the first of many acts where the ideological climate of the time would define the fate of the Argentine railways.[17] These sales also included Argentina's first railway, the Buenos Aires Western (by now 1,014 km long), which was sold in 1890 to the British company New Western Railway of Buenos Aires for just over 8.1 million pounds (close to £500 million in 2005 money[18]).[19] This sale, and others that came after it, was heavily criticised at the time for being far lower than the actual value of the railway, and prompted many anti-British protests.[14] In later years, this was also criticised by historians:

During the 27 years in which it belonged to the Government of the Province of Buenos Aires, the Western Railway was the line which was most luxurious, least wasteful [...] and offered the most economical fares and cargo rates. It was a model company which was the pride of Argentina, in relation to which all the English railway companies established in our country were, without exception, second-rate…[But after the sale] the unnecessary growth in spending, largely due to the disproportionate increase in employees, the resulting decrease in returns and the rise in ticket prices made up a definite intent to sabotage: the Western Railway would quickly be discredited in the public opinion.

— Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, Historia de los Ferrocarriles Argentinos [20]

In the years that followed, there were numerous cases of undervalued sales to British investors, including the 1,000 km (620 mi) long Andean Railway, which provoked much anti-British sentiment in the country.[21] By 1910 the network had been monopolised by British companies, owned by large finance firms such as J.S. Morgan & Co. in London.[21] Nevertheless, major development of the Argentine rail network occurred up to this period and the Argentine state also played a large role, financing ferrocarriles de fomento (development railways) in rural areas not attractive to private interests,[12] while the Argentine State Railway had a 9,690 km (6,020 mi) network.[22]

By 1914, the Argentine rail network attained significant growth having added 30,000 km (19,000 mi) to the network between 1895 and 1914,[23] which positioned the country as having the tenth largest rail network in the world in that year, at a point where the country had the tenth highest per-capita GDP in the world.[24] Its expansion accelerated greatly due to the need for the transport of agricultural products and cattle in Buenos Aires Province. The rail network converged on the city of Buenos Aires and was a key component in the development of the Argentine economy as it rose to be a leading export country. However, with the advent of the First World War, then subsequently the Wall Street Crash and Great Depression, the rail network of the country experienced a much lower rate of growth after this period and had mostly ground to a halt by the beginning of the Second World War.[25][26]

Railroad network growth and expansion[27]
Years 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920
System length (kilometres) 9.8 722 2,516 9,397 16,500 29,094 47,000
Passengers transported (millions) 3 18 145
Cargo transported (x 1,000,000 tonnes) 1.0 11.8 45.5

Nationalisation

By the end of the Second World War, the United Kingdom owed Argentina m$n 2 billion after the country had filled the gaps in food shortages during the war effort.[28][29] Following what was then a worldwide trend, the private companies were nationalised by the government of Juan Perón, beginning in 1946 with the French railways and then purchasing the British railways after an agreement was signed cancelling the British debt in 1947.[30][31] Perón later claimed in an interview that the British envoys had offered him a bribe of US$100 million if the state paid an extra m$n 6 billion for the railways on top of the debt cancellation.[28]

Ferrocarriles Argentinos divisions

After the 1948 nationalisation, the 47,000 km (29,000 mi) long Argentine railway network was separated into six divisions managed by State-owned company Ferrocarriles Argentinos. Of the 20 railways incorporated into Ferrocarriles Argentinos, 7 were Argentine, 10 were British and 3 were French prior to nationalisation. There were grouped together by track gauge and location and named after important figures in Argentine History. Maps of those division companies were as follows:

Soon after the reorganisation, Perón turned it into a political matter with the nationalisation becoming a symbol of national autonomy and independence from foreign powers rather than an administrative change and is still to this day regarded by justicialists as a move against neo-imperialsm.[32][33] Although for many years the state-owned railways were able to provide a good standard of passenger and freight service, over the years the changing politics of Argentina began to take its toll. By the 1960s, the post-war economic boom had ushered in a new age of the automobile, with rail transport on its way out around the world, a trend from which Argentina was not left unscathed.[23]

Following the ousting of Perón from power, the Larkin Plan was implemented to modernise transport in the country with backing from the World Bank and intended to make investments in the country's railways.[34] However, by 1961 its aims had changed significantly and the plan had evolved into one which prioritised automobile transportation and began lifting sections of railway - an act which was put to an end following a series of strikes by railway workers in opposition to the plan.[35] The government favoured road transport and opened car and truck factories in the country. Diesel train shops and new car shops were opened with help from Fiat, Alstom, and Mitsubishi. Steam locomotives were slowly phased out. Later governments between 1967 and 1971 then continued investing in the railways and enacted modernisation plans, renewing much of the rolling stock and the railways continued to function well.[36]

Under the military junta, the 1970s and 1980s saw a significant decline in Argentina's railways. In 1965, 25% of cargo and 18% of passengers were transported by rail, while by 1980 this figure had dropped to 8% and 7% respectively and Ferrocarriles Argentinos was losing US$1 million per day maintaining an ageing system with dwindling passenger numbers.[37] Between 1976 and 1980, 560 stations were closed, along with 5,500 km (3,400 mi) of track, while the number of employees in railway workshops alone fell from 155,000 to 97,000.[38]

By the time the country returned to democratic rule, the railways were in bad shape and the country was overwhelmed by the economic burdens and debts left over from the junta.[39] Under this context, and with the state unable to cope with the cost of managing the railways due to a large fiscal deficit, the privatisation of the network came into consideration.

Privatisation

 
During the privatisation period, rail infrastructure deteriorated drastically.
 
The Once rail disaster left 49 dead and prompted calls for re-nationalisation.

Under the presidency of Carlos Menem, Argentina radically changed its economic policies moving from a more Import substitution industrialisation-orientated model towards neoliberal shock therapy and the Washington Consensus under the supervision of the International Monetary Fund.[40][41] Much like under the classical liberalism of the late 19th and early 20th century, under these plans, Argentina would sell off most of its state assets at extremely reduced prices, among them the railways.[36][42]

During these reforms, between 1992 and 1995, the government decided break up and to privatise the state-owned company Ferrocarriles Argentinos (FA), which comprised six relatively independent divisions, Sarmiento, Mitre, Urquiza, San Martín, Belgrano and Roca, and granted concessions to private companies for their operation through competitive bidding, while doing the same with freight services.[43]

At the start of the concessions, the railway network was quickly reduced to one quarter of its capacity, with long distance lines disappearing almost completely.[23][44] At the same time, as more locomotives and rolling stock were needed, the private companies became increasingly reluctant to make the investment required to increase capacity and thus service quality and passenger numbers declined.[23] Railway privatisation resulted in the loss of some 70,000 jobs in the railway sector over the years, whilst by 1998 some 793 railway stations had been closed.[45] In addition, companies operating other transport means (such as bus transport) who had vested interests seeking the demise of the railway, purchased lines for far less than their real value.[46]

Under privatisation, substantial government subsidies continued in order to keep the system from collapsing, the state continued losing money on the railways.[44] During this period, the railways were plagued by negligence, while private operators persistently ignored warnings from inspectors whilst failing in their contractual obligations to maintain railway infrastructure.[44] Similarly, over the years, government subsidies to the private companies increased to levels similar to the losses incurred under the state management of the railways, albeit now with a much more limited service and further deteriorated infrastructure.[46]

The closing of much of the rail system also led to the emptying of many rural towns dependent on the railways, creating ghost towns and therefore to a dismantling of the development that had taken place there since the arrival of trains.[47] Argentine agriculture found itself in the difficult position of shipping its goods less efficiently using road transport, which costs around 72% more than state-owned rail services.[48]

The economic crisis in 2001 was the final blow and neither the private companies nor the government could provide the service required. In 2003, the new administration of President Néstor Kirchner set it as a key policy objective to revive the national rail network. Although the economic upturn saw traffic grow again, the suburban rail operators were still little more than managers of government contracts rather than true entrepreneurs.[49]

Re-nationalisation

 
Florencio Randazzo overseeing construction near Chascomús.

In 2008, the National Government formed Trenes Argentinos Operadora Ferroviaria (SOFSE) to manage some freight and passenger lines in the country.[4] The Once Tragedy of February 2012 prompted further action by the government, resulting in the revocation of the Sarmiento Line and Mitre Line concessions from Trenes de Buenos Aires (TBA) in May of that year, with both lines eventually being put under the management of the state-owned SOFSE.[50][51] In June 2012, the government announced that it was renationalising some freight railways citing "serious breaches of contract" by the operators, this culminated in the nationalisation of the Belgrano Cargas network which operates on over 10,000 km (6,200 mi) of metre gauge track.[52][53]

This trend continued in the following years and the government began re-opening services and improving on the once private services using completely new rolling stock, including long distance services like the one from Buenos Aires to Mar del Plata and Buenos Aires-Rosario-Cordoba.[54][55] This new-found investment in the railways has not been limited to rolling stock since, in many cases, the state has completely replaced, or is in the process of replacing, the existing infrastructure with continuous welded rails on concrete sleepers and undertaking other works such as renovating level crossings and building new railway bridges.[56][57][58] The freight network has also received significant investment from China, with two investments totalling US$4.8 billion made in 2013 and 2015.[59]

While from 2008 to 2014 there were many indications that the state was re-nationalising parts of the railway and making efforts towards improving it, in 2015 it was announced that complete nationalisation of the remaining lines and services were on the table after a project was put forward that would see the resurrection of Ferrocarriles Argentinos as a state-owned holding company which would incorporate SOFSE (passenger services), TACyL (freight) and ADIFSE (infrastructure).[7] This was put into effect in April 2015 when, by overwhelming majority, the Argentine Senate passed the law which re-created Ferrocarriles Argentinos and effectively re-nationalised the country's railways, a move which saw support from all major political parties across the political spectrum.[8][9][10] Expenditure for the railway network was set at AR$ 9 billion for 2015, while in 2016 it is expected to be AR$7.2 billion.[60]

Commuter rail and trams

Buenos Aires, Mendoza, Cordoba, Resistencia, Paraná, La Plata, Santiago del Estero and Salta are the only cities in Argentina to offer suburban passenger services; most other cities rely on bus and trolleybus transportation, though in the past there were more networks and most major cities had a tramway network.

Buenos Aires

 
Map of the Buenos Aires Commuter Rail Network.

Greater Buenos Aires' metropolitan rail system is the second most extensive in the Americas after New York's commuter rail system, with about 259 stations, covering 900 km (559 mi) and 7 rail lines serving more than 1.4 million commuters daily in the Greater Buenos Aires area.[61][62] Commuter rail services from the suburbs is mostly operated by SOFSE, though some private operators remain. The rail lines converge at five rail terminals, all of them in Buenos Aires, with two, Retiro and Constitución rail terminals being the busiest train stations in Argentina, though there is a plan to connect all the lines in one central underground station for easy transfer.[61]

Metropolitan railway transport
Line Operator Length (Km) N° stations Annual ridership (2014)[62]
Mitre Trenes Argentinos 185,5 55 18,330,512
Belgrano Norte Ferrovías 54,3 22 28,876,619
Belgrano Sur Trenes Argentinos 66,3 30 10,974,454
Roca Trenes Argentinos 237,2 70 115,032,946
San Martín Trenes Argentinos 56,3 19 39,239,510
Sarmiento Trenes Argentinos 184,1 40 39,663,847
Urquiza Metrovías 29,9 23 12,585,106
Totals: 813 259 264,702,994
 
Constitución, second busiest rail station in the country.
 
A San Martín Line CSR SDD7 diesel-electric locomotive.

Buenos Aires City's commuter rail provides 1800 trains carrying 1.4 million passengers each business day in the city of Buenos Aires, its suburbs in Greater Buenos Aires and several far-reaching satellite towns.[61] Service is provided by private companies and spreads out from five central stations in Buenos Aires: Retiro, Constitución, Once and Federico Lacroze – all serving both long-distance and local passenger services – and Buenos Aires Station which, despite its name, is a secondary rail terminus serving only local commuter services and will cease to be a terminal once the Belgrano Sur Line is extended to Constitución.[63]

The Retiro and Constitución train stations are linked by Line C of the Buenos Aires Underground, Once is served by Line A of the underground via its "Plaza Miserere" station and by Line H's Once station, while Federico Lacroze is served by Line B.[64] The smaller Buenos Aires Station is accessible by some city bus services and it is the only railway terminus in Buenos Aires that has no access to the Buenos Aires Underground, though it is connected to the Metrobus Sur line.[65]

Most trains leave at regular 8-20 minute intervals, though for trains travelling a longer distance service may be less frequent.[66] Fares are cheap and tickets can be purchased at ticket windows or through the SUBE card machines at stations.[67] Most of the lines are electrified, several are diesel-powered, while some of these are currently being electrified and some of the lines share traffic with freight services.

Buenos Aires area commuter rail lines were privatised in the 1990s, and passengers had complained for years about poor commuter rail services on lines leading from Constitución station in downtown Buenos Aires to the capital's southern suburbs.[68] However, in recent years all but two of the services have been re-nationalised and are operated by Trenes Argentinos (SOFSE).[69]

Light rail and trams

 
A tram running in Buenos Aires (c.1947).
 
Anchorena station on the Tren de la Costa light rail line.

Buenos Aires once had one of the most extensive tramway systems in the world, with a 875 km (544 mi) network in the city proper alone, which gained the city global notoriety as being "The City of Trams" in the late 19th and early 20th century.[70][71] The system remained popular throughout its existence but, despite this, it was dismantled in the mid-1960s in favour of bus transport.[72] Today, some minor tram services remain, as well as light rail services in the city proper and Greater Buenos Aires.

The light rail Tren de la Costa (Train of the Coast), which serves tourists and local commuters, runs from the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires to Tigre along the river for approximately 15 km (9 mi). The line connects directly to the Mitre Line at Maipú–Bartolomé Mitre station in the northern suburb of Olivos for direct access to Retiro terminus in the centre of the city.[73]

An experimental project of a short run tramway line, Tranvía del Este, was inaugurated in 2007 in the Puerto Madero district of Buenos Aires. The 2 km prototype line ran between the Córdoba and Independencia avenues, ridership was not as expected and the line closed in 2012.[74] A Historic Tramway operates on weekends and holidays in the Caballito neighbourhood of the capital with free fares and using vintage rolling stock from the now defunct Buenos Aires tramway network.[75][76]

Another tramway line, the Buenos Aires Premetro, operates as a feeder at the end of Underground Line E, running through some of the city's southern districts.[77] Though there is currently only one Premetro line (E2), originally many other lines were planned to run as feeder services to the Buenos Aires Underground, however due to their planned construction coinciding with the privatisation of the Underground network, these never materialised.[78] The creation of new lines has been proposed as late as 2012, however it is now accepted that, with the creation of the Metrobus network in 2011, the need for further Premetro lines has been made redundant.[79][80]

Ticketing

The Buenos Aires public transit system uses a ticketing system. All tickets are bought at ticket booths and ticket printing consoles at railway stations and on board certain trains. Tickets can be bought either using cash or by using the SUBE card (also used throughout the country for buses, tollbooths and underground).[67] Ticket cost differ depending on the payment method: If the tickets are bought using SUBE, the user can benefit from a government subsidy which translates to a substantially reduced fare.[81] Children under three years of age, children in school uniform, retired people receiving pensions and the disabled do not have to pay to use these services in most cases.[82] Similarly, university students and staff have a 20% discount, with a 50% discount proposed in 2015.[83][needs update]

Electrification

 
An electric commuter rail train crossing a bridge over the Matanza River.
 
The new Roca Line EMUs are like those used on other lines, but using overhead lines instead of third rail.

Although the first electric railway between Retiro and Tigre was inaugurated in 1916, major electrification projects were not adopted. The large size of the country, its long distances and flat topography mean that major electrification does not make much sense economically, although some suburban networks in Buenos Aires Metropolitan Area were electrified. After several decades of the Buenos Aires rail-service being under-funded, there is presently an ongoing modernisation plan so as to provide much needed improvement in services, and the trend is towards electrification of several lines. Similarly, ongoing maintenance and investment has continued on existing electric lines, such as with the $845 million purchase of 705 CSR electric multiple unit cars from China for the Mitre, Sarmiento and Roca lines in 2013.[84]

The first line to receive this improvement was the Roca Line network in the southern part of the city, where work is already in progress, and several new segments electrified in 2012, such as the Glew - Alejandro Korn route and the Temperley - Remedios de Escalada route.[85][86] The electrification of this line from Constitución railway station in Buenos Aires to the city of La Plata was completed in 2017.[87] In 2018, all routes were electrified except Bosques – Villa Elisa route, which only a portion is in service with diesel trains.[88]

It is expected that the San Martín Line will finish the electrification of its diesel segments in 2022.,[89] and there are plans to electrify the Belgrano Sur Line and remaining parts of the Sarmiento Line.[90][91][92] Both the Mitre and Sarmiento lines received completely new CSR electric multiple units in 2014. The Roca line's 300 coaches of the same type are in service, as the electrification of its remaining diesel segments was completed in 2018 (except Bosques – Villa Elisa route).[88]

In 2008, approximately 42.7%, 258 km (160 mi) from a total rail network of 604 km (375 mi) of the Buenos Aires and Greater Buenos Aires area (excluding outer-suburban satellite cities of Capilla del Señor, Lobos, Mercedes, Luján, Zárate and Cañuelas), but including the city of La Plata, was electrified. This is expected to increase by the end of 2015, when major electrification works are completed.[needs update]

La Plata

 
La Plata railway station

La Plata is mostly served by the Roca Line, including the University train of La Plata, which runs from the central station to the National University of La Plata.[93] The segment of the Roca Line which runs from Buenos Aires Constitución to La Plata and its suburbs is electrified with new rolling stock, stations and track, with works having commenced in 2014 and completed in 2017.[94]

This line also provides commuter services to La Plata's city centre from neighborhoods like Tolosa, Ringuelet, City Bell and Villa Elisa, with a frequency of one train every 25 minutes, which is expected to drop to 12 minutes after the electrification is completed.[95] Up until the 1980s, there were also other commuter services on the General Roca Railway to nearby towns and suburbs, however they are no longer in use and there are no indications that they will be reactivated.[96]

Mendoza

 
Passengers boarding a Siemens–Duewag U2 in Mendoza.

The Metrotranvía Mendoza (Spanish for Mendoza Light Rail or fast tramway) is a public light rail transport system for the city of Mendoza, Argentina, served by articulated light rail cars operating on newly relaid tracks in former-Ferrocarril General San Martín mainline right-of-way. The tram system is unusual in the sense that, unlike the rest of railway services in Argentina,[97] the rail cars on this line run on the righthand track instead of the left.

The tram serves the metropolitan area of Mendoza, which includes the departments of Las Heras, Central district, Godoy Cruz, Maipú and Luján de Cuyo. As of 2013, only one line runs a 12.5 km (8 mi) stretch between Mendoza Central Station and General Gutierrez in Maipú, on double-track 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge track.[98] The finished project includes four lines, 46.5 km (29 mi) in length and 50 stations, also connecting downtown with the Airport.[99][100]

Construction of the first line (Línea Verde, or Green Line)[101] began in March 2009.[102] The system opened for regular service on 8 October 2012.[101] In February 2014, the local Government announced the start of constructing works for the second line, linking the city centre with the North, up to Panquehua, in Las Heras Department.[103]

Neuquén

 

The Tren del Valle (Train of the Valley) is a service that runs between the cities of Neuquén and Cipolletti in Neuquén and Río Negro provinces, expected to begin operating in July 2015 with 22 services per day.[104] While in the first phase of the reactivation of this line (closed in the 1990s after the privatisation of the network) takes it between these two cities, after the opening, it will continue to be extended to General Roca, Plottier and Añelo in 2015 and 2016.[105][106] The line uses Argentine-built Materfer CMM 400-2 DMUs and General Roca Railway tracks, which have been replaced along with the restoration of existing railway bridges, while parts of its route will be shared with YPF freight services that serve the vast Vaca Muerta oil fields in the provinces.[104][107][108] This line was once operated by the Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway, before railway nationalisation in 1948.

Paraná

The Paraná urban railway is served by two local lines which run on the standard gauge General Urquiza Railway and link Paraná city -Capital of Entre Ríos province- with Colonia Avellaneda and Villa Fontana. The two lines are 9 and 13.4 km long, but there are further plans to expand the system. Villa Fontana's line was inaugurated in August 2010 up to Oro Verde and expanded to Villa Fontana in 2011. Colonia Avellaneda's line was inaugurated in March 2011.[109][110]

Paraná city is also linked with interurban services to Concepción del Uruguay and Concordia, Entre Rios' main cities.[111]

Resistencia

It serves Great Resistencia, the capital city of the province of Chaco with a 10 km line to Puerto Vilelas with 8 stations, and a 20 km line to Puerto Tirol with 16 stations. From the intermediate station of Cacuí in the Puerto Tirol Line leaves the interstate line to Los Amores in the province of Santa Fe. The whole network uses the former General Belgrano Railway 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) gauge tracks.[112]

The system was originally operated by Chaco Railway Services, owned by the Province's Government, but in May 2010 operation was transferred to SOFSE, the state-owned railway company managed by the National Government.[113]

Santa Fe

The Santa Fe Urban Train is project initiated in 2014 for a 3.7 km line which runs through the city of Santa Fe in Santa Fe Province using metre gauge General Belgrano Railway tracks.[114] In June 2015, the service underwent successful testing on the line and its 8 brand new stops, using Argentine-built TecnoTren railbuses.[115] Once fully opened in 2015, this will be the first commuter rail service in the city since railway privatisation in the 1990s, while it is estimated that using the train will be 40% faster than existing bus transport.[116][117]

Santiago del Estero

The historical city of Santiago del Estero will have a commuter rail service called Tren al Desarrollo, which will run on a series of newly built viaducts over the city, as well as existing General Mitre Railway broad gauge tracks.[118] The 8 km line has undergone testing using Argentine TecnoTren rolling stock and will open to the public in 2016, though its central terminus was inaugurated in 2015.[119][120][121] After its aperture, the line will be further extended to the outskirts of the city, though it has also been considered to extend the line to the nearby city of San Miguel de Tucumán.[122][123]

Historical networks

Up until the mid-twentieth century, most major cities in Argentina had a tramway network, though today only a small number remain.[125][126] La Plata was the first Argentine city to receive an electric tramway network in 1892, rather than Buenos Aires which would see its existing network electrified from 1897 onwards.[72] By the mid-1960s, most cities had their tram networks dismantled and replaced with colectivos and trolleybuses. La Plata was the last city to operate trams in Argentina, with its last service operating in December 1966, until the 1980s when the Buenos Aires PreMetro began operations.[75][126]

Mass transit

Buenos Aires Underground

 
Map of the current underground network
 
Line A 200 Series rolling stock at San Pedrito station.

The Buenos Aires Underground (Subterráneo de Buenos Aires-locally known as Subte) is a metro system that serves the city of Buenos Aires, the network was inaugurated in 1913 by the Anglo-Argentine Tramways Company, being the first of its kind in Latin America and in the entire Southern Hemisphere and Spanish speaking world.[127]

It currently has six lines, with a seventh underway a further two planned, carrying 365 million passengers per year on a 52 km (32 mi) network with 83 stations.[128][129] The network expanded quickly in its early years, but the rate of expansion had slowed by the 1960s, with serious attempts at expansion and modernisation only occurring in recent years.[130]

Other projects

 
Buenos Aires commuter rail network with the Red de Expresos Regionales tunnels completed.

In the city of Córdoba, Argentina, there is a project to build an underground system; the Córdoba Metro, which would make it the second metro system in Argentina.[131] The network will be 33 kilometres long with 26 stations on 3 lines, with a total cost of $1.8 billion.[132] The city of Rosario has also proposed having its own metro system, which is currently being evaluated.[133]

Work has also begun in Buenos Aires to move the Sarmiento Line underground in an effort to decrease journey times whilst improving traffic conditions above ground. The project will be undertaken in three stages and, when completed, would mean that 32.6 kilometres of the line between Caballito and Moreno will be completely underground, with station entrances above ground similar to a metro system.[134] The existing above-ground line has continued to operate while work has occurred below ground for the corresponding sections.[135][136]

There is also a project announced in 2015 to create a 16 km (9.9 mi) series of tunnels to connect Retiro railway station, Once railway station and Constitución railway station.[137] The result of this would be the Red de Expresos Regionales, which would link together all of Buenos Aires' existing 812 km (505 mi) commuter rail network, allowing for passengers to travel from one side of Greater Buenos Aires to the other making only one connection at a central underground station underneath the Obelisco. The project will cost $1.8 billion and will be carried out in three stages, taking 8 years for it to be fully completed, though some parts are due to commence operation sooner.[61]

Intercity passenger services

 
Long distance CNR CKD8 passenger train on the General Roca Railway.
 
Argentina rail passenger services (interactive map)
 
Staff checking tickets in a pullman class carriage on a long distance train.

Argentina scrapped many of its uneconomical long-distance passenger train services during the early 1990s and privatised, by concession contract, several main routes to Trenes de Buenos Aires (TBA), Ferrocentral, Ferrobaires, and Trenes Especiales Argentinos. The new services were not what passengers were used to and, with the exception of the Buenos Aires, Rosario, Córdoba and Tucumán corridors, provided erratic and poor-quality services. In recent years however, government policy has changed to one in which the state intends to re-open and operate all services which were formally closed.[138]

Under privatisation, many services ceased to operate for a variety of reasons. Among these were previously iconic routes such as Buenos Aires - Posadas and Buenos Aires - Bariloche.[139][140] Recently however, the national government has been replacing very large segments of track in important corridors and routes, using continuous welded rails on concrete sleepers to accommodate trains running at speeds of 160 km/h.[141][142] Many of these improvements are nearing completion while others are under way and some are in the planning stages. Long-distance rail travel in Argentina has been described as considerably cheaper than air or bus travel, but also much slower, with maximum speeds of 50 km/h even on the newer stretches opened in 2017.[143]

In 2014 there was a 600% increase in spending on railway infrastructure, being spent on projects around the country to revive long distance services, while this expenditure is expected to be even higher in 2015.[144][145] To accommodate this revival in long distance services, Retiro railway station will receive a new expansion for the services being operated by SOFSE.[146] Similar projects are nearing completion in cities like Rosario, where a completely new railway terminal has been built in addition to the existing ones.[147]

At the same time, the high speed rail project which had been planned for the Buenos Aires - Rosario - Córdoba corridor has been put on hold since for the moment the routes are being refurbished for the 160 km/h services which are considered to be a higher priority, though as of 2015, Chinese proposals for high speed rail are still being considered.[148][149]

Routes

 
Retiro railway station in Buenos Aires.

Inter-city services are currently served by two State-owned railway companies, Trenes Argentinos (that manages all the long-distance passenger rail services) and Ferrobaires (operating services in Buenos Aires Province). Ferrobaires has been criticised for the quality of its service,[150] though there have been signs that the company (owned by the province of Buenos Aires, rather than the national government) may be dissolved when its remaining services are taken over by Trenes Argentinos.[151]

Nowadays, some of the most important cities of Argentina are served by train, departing from Constitucion, Once and Retiro terminus located in the centre of Buenos Aires. Some cities currently are: Mar del Plata, Rosario (both stations, Norte and Sur, Córdoba, General Pico, Santa Rosa, Rufino and San Miguel de Tucumán.[152]

Other regional services are operated by their respectives Provinces, such as Tren a las Nubes (operated by the Government of Salta) and Servicios Ferroviarios Patagónico (also known as "Tren Patagónico") by the Río Negro Province.

Tourist railways

 
The Old Patagonian Express crossing the Río Chico.
 
"Polvorilla" viaduct used by the Tren a las Nubes.

Buenos Aires

Córdoba

Entre Ríos

Mendoza

  • The "Wine Train" (Tren del Vino) was a project that would provide railway transportation to locals, running along wine producing districts of Mendoza.[157] The route had been set from cities of La Colonia (in Alto Verde) to Luján de Cuyo with diesel locomotive trains with 3 coaches each. Despite of its opening had been announced for 2008,[158] Tren del Vino never made its inaugural trip. Nevertheless, in April 2014 state-owned Trenes Argentinos Cargas y Logística took over the transportation of wine, carrying the production of Mendoza Province.[159]

Misiones

Patagonia

  • The narrow-gauge "Old Patagonian Expres" (popularly known as La Trochita), is a 402 km (250 mi) long narrow gauge 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) heritage railway in Patagonia using steam locomotives. It is said to be the only narrow-gauge long-distance steam train in operation in the world.[161][162]
  • The "Tren Histórico a Vapor" was a short run from Bariloche to Perito Moreno, 4-6-0 steam manufactured in Scotland in 1912 by the North British Locomotive Company in Glasgow, the Cedar and Mahogany carriages were originally made in England. The service was opened in 2001[163] although it was closed later, remaining inactive up until the present day.

Rosario

  • The Bicentennial Tramway runs through the city of Rosario with two different routes and a total of 19 stops.[164] Rosario got its first trams in 1906, however after they closed in 1962 much of the track was covered in tarmac, so the vintage units have been converted to run on rubber tires.[165][166] In June 2015, a heritage tram began running on rails using one of the original trams from the restored network; the intention is to provide more heritage services and restore more trams.[167]

Salta

Tierra del Fuego

  • The Southern Fuegian Railway, called "Tren del Fin del Mundo" - "The Train at the End of the World", is the world's southernmost railway in the province of Tierra del Fuego, operating on narrow gauge 500 mm (19+34 in), using steam locomotives.[171]

Freight

There are several private freight operators in Argentina, along with the state-owned Trenes Argentinos Cargas y Logística. In 2012, the network carried 12,111 million tonne-kilometres (tonnes x distance travelled).[172] The amount of freight carried by individual operators in 2014 was as follows:

Freight carried in Argentina (2014)
Operator Freight carried (tonnes) [173] Type
Nuevo Central Argentino 7,408,914 Private
Ferrosur Roca 5,258,301 Private
Ferroexpreso Pampeano 3,500,009 Private
TACyL 3,155,301 State-owned
Total: 19,317,525 -

Trenes Argentinos Cargas y Logistica (TACyL) is a state-owned company created out of the Belgrano Cargas network after the national government terminated the company's contract in 2013, returning it to state control while citing the lack of competitiveness in the private sector as a primary reason for the move.[174][175] Later that year, the government revoked concessions from Brazilian company América Latina Logística citing "serious" contract violations and imposing heavy fines on the company for being in breach of contract.[176] The services managed by this company were also integrated into the new TACyL holding company.[177]

Following the creation of TACyL, the national government began investing heavily in the country's freight network with an AR$12 billion investment to improve its infrastructure, renewing 30% of the rails over the following 2 years.[178] This investment also included purchasing 100 locomotives and 3,500 freight cars from China for TACyL which are expected to arrive in 2015, while a separate investment saw the purchase of a further 1,000 cars from Argentine company Fabricaciones Militares.[178][179] Further renovation of infrastructure for passenger lines, such as the complete replacement of rails on the Buenos Aires - Rosario - Córdoba - Tucumán route of the General Mitre Railway, will aid private operators such as Nuevo Central Argentino who use those segments.[180][181]

Soon after nationalisation, the government began looking to expand the fleet of the company and began making orders both domestically and abroad. One order consisted of 1000 freight wagons from Argentine state-owned company Fabricaciones Militares.[179] The company also ordered 100 locomotives and 3,500 carriages from China as part of a plan that also included the purchase of 30,000 rails to repair parts of the line.[182] In September 2015, it was announced that the original Chinese investment of US$2.4 billion in the Argentine freight network was being doubled to US$4.8 billion and new purchases and infrastructure projects would ensue.[183]

Rolling stock

Prior to the deterioration of the rail network, Argentina had a greater number of rolling stock manufacturers which supplied trains and cars throughout the railways, however today only a few companies like Materfer, Grupo Emepa, TecnoTren and Fabricaciones Militares remain. While Materfer make the CMM 400-2 diesel multiple units and the MTF-3300 diesel cargo locomotives, Emepa manufacture the Alerce EMU/DMU which is to be used on the Belgrano Norte Line.[184][185] At the same time, Fabricaciones Militares only makes freight cars, such as those used in the Belgrano Cargas network, though in the past they made electric trains for suburban and underground lines.[179] There have been signs that the industry is reviving and expanding, while at the same time there are many workshops around the country which refurbish and modernise older rolling stock.[186][187]

Though the industry is being revived, the country no longer has the capacity to manufacture long-distance locomotives and EMUs for suburban lines, so these are mostly imported from China and are made by companies such as CSR Corporation Limited and China CNR Corporation, with CSR planning to open a factory in Argentina and purchasing the Argentine company Emprendimientos Ferroviarios, which is now its subsidiary.[188][189]

International rail links to adjacent countries

Incidents

 
The 1970 accident in Benavídez is the worst in Argentina's history.
 
Flores railway station, location of the 2011 rail accident.

The worst rail accident in Argentina in terms of fatalities occurred on 1 February 1970 when two trains collided near Ingeniero Maschwitz in Greater Buenos Aires.[194][195] This due to a passenger train carrying 700 people coming to a halt with mechanical problems, while a long distance General Mitre Railway train carrying 500 passengers from Tucumán crashed into it from behind.[196] The total death toll was 142 people, with 368 injured.[196][197]

From 2008 to 2012, there were a series of rail accidents which eventually led to the re-nationalisation of the rail network. Before dawn on 9 March 2008, a passenger train slammed into a bus at a rural Argentine level crossing, near Dolores, some 125 miles (201 km) south of Buenos Aires, killing 18 people and leaving at least 47 others injured. The bus driver ignored the warning lights and lowered crossing gates.[198]

On 13 September 2011, a passenger train operated by Trenes de Buenos Aires hit a bus on a level crossing at Flores in Buenos Aires during the morning rush hour, killing 11 people and injuring 265.[199] The train derailed, and crashed into a train standing at the platform in the adjacent station. The bus driver had ignored warning lights and a partly lowered barrier.[200]

The second-worst rail accident in terms of fatalities occurred on 22 February 2012 a passenger train operated by TBA crashed into the solid buffers at the Once station near downtown Buenos Aires, killing 51 people and injuring over 700 others.[201][202] President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner called for two days of national mourning following the accident.[203]

Following these accidents, all of TBA's concessions were revoked and the national government began restoring rail infrastructure and purchasing brand new rolling stock for Buenos Aires' commuter rail lines, as well as huge investment across the country.[6][144][204] These moves eventually led to the complete re-nationalisation of the country's railway network, with safety concerns under private operation being one of the primary reasons.[205][206]

See also

References

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  160. ^ Rainforest Train - Iguazu National Park
  161. ^ Ingeniero Jacobacci Journal; Old Patagonian Express Puff, Puff, Puffs to Its End - New York Times, 20 June 1992.
  162. ^ The Old Patagonian Express - Narrow Gauge Heaven,
  163. ^ "Accidentado viaje inaugural de un tren de vapor en Bariloche", La Nación, 14 Jul 2001
  164. ^ Recorridos - El Tranvia del Bicentinario
  165. ^ Imágenes - El Tranvia del Bicentinario
  166. ^ A un siglo de su puesta en marcha, quieren que vuelva a rodar un tranvía - La Capital, 29 October 2006
  167. ^ El tranvía histórico de Rosario vuelve a circular este domingo - Impulso, 6 June 2015.
  168. ^ El Tren a las Nubes - El Sol, 7 April 2015
  169. ^ Después de ocho meses, volvió el Tren a las Nubes - La Nacion, 5 April 2015
  170. ^ "El tren más famoso del país vuelve a las nubes", Perfil, 1 Apr 2015
  171. ^ 'Transported' for life... Ushuaia Prison - 'The Presidio' - Railways of the Far South, 25 May 2008.
  172. ^ Railways, goods transported (million ton-km) - World Bank
  173. ^ 7,1% menos de carga transportada por ferrocarril en el 2014, Bolsa de Comercio de Rosario, 13 February 2015.
  174. ^ "Belgrano Railway returns to state control". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  175. ^ "Estatizan el ferrocarril Belgrano Cargas", La Nación, 23 May 2013
  176. ^ Argentina Seizes Railway From Brazil’s ALL Over Contract Breach - Bloomberg, 4 June 2013.
  177. ^ Gobierno anunció estatización del ferrocarril de cargas América Latina Logística - Argentina.ar, 4 June 2013.
  178. ^ a b Apuntan a recuperar los trenes de cargas con una inversión de casi 12.000 millones de pesos - Telam, 16 November 2014.
  179. ^ a b c Fabricaciones Militares construirá más de 1000 vagones para el Belgrano Cargas 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine - Fabricaciones Militares
  180. ^ Realizaron primera apertura de sobres de la renovación de vías a Córdoba - EnElSubte, 30 April 2015.
  181. ^ Nuestra Red - Nuevo Central Argentino
  182. ^ Avanza la renovación del Belgrano Cargas con financiamiento chino - Telam, 14 February 2015.
  183. ^ Duplicarán el crédito chino para cargas: invertirán más de 4800 millones de USD - EnElSubte, 14 September 2015.
  184. ^ Nuevo servicio diferencial en el Belgrano Norte, con coches de fabricación nacional - Secretaria de Transporte, 25 March 2015
  185. ^ Ferroviario - Materfer
  186. ^ Técnicos españoles colaborarán con la recuperación de los talleres ferroviarios argentinos - Telam, 23 July 2013
  187. ^ Tecnología e innovación ferroviaria en la Argentina - Pagina/12, 19 April 2014
  188. ^ La fábrica de trenes china CSR Sifang se instalará en la Argentina - Telam, 4 November 2014
  189. ^ CSR adquiere EMFER y desembarca en la Argentina - EnElSubte, 24 February 2014.
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  192. ^ "Empezó a circular el tren que une Posadas y Encarnación", Territorio Digital, January 2015
  193. ^ "El tren que unía Argentina y Uruguay dejó de funcionar de modo definitivo", El Día, 28 May 2012
  194. ^ Un convoy del Ferrocarril General Mitre (hoy NCA), proveniente de Tucumán, embistió a otro, detenido 25 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine - Todo Tren
  195. ^ The Times, Tuesday, 3 February 1970; pg. 7; Issue 57784; col A
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  200. ^ "Al Menos Once Muertos y 228 Heridos en la Mayor Tragedia con Trenes en la Ciudad en Casi 50 Años". Clarín (in Spanish). Buenos Aires. 13 September 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
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  202. ^ "Tragedia ferroviaria en Once: ya son 50 los muertos y hay 703 heridos" [Once rail tragedy: Already 50 dead and 703 wounded]. Infobae (in Spanish). 22 February 2012. from the original on 25 February 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  203. ^ "El gobierno nacional decretó duelo y suspendió el carnaval" [The national government declares mourning and suspends the Carnival]. La Nación (in Spanish). 22 February 2012. from the original on 23 February 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  204. ^ Finalmente, el Gobierno le sacó las concesiones del Sarmiento y del Mitre a TBA - Clarín, 24 May 2012.
  205. ^ Las claves de la estatización - Pagina/12, 16 April 2015.
  206. ^ Oficial: el Gobierno promulgó la ley de estatización de los ferrocarriles - La Nacion, 21 May 2015.

Bibliography

  • Pendle, George. "Railways in Argentina" History Today (Feb 1958) 8#2 pp 119-125.
  • Latin Tracks (Latin-American railway magazine)
  • Mario J. López and Jorge A. Waddell, Nueva Historia del Ferrocarril en la Argentina – 150 años de Politica Ferroviaria (A New History of Railways in Argentina – 150 Years of Railway Policies) - Ediciones Lumiere (2007) - ISBN 978-987-603-032-8

External links

  • Old Patagonian express official site
  • Asociación Amigos del Tranvía official site (Spanish)
  • Tren Histórico a Vapor - Historical Steam Train official site
  • Tren del Fin del Mundo official site
  • Historia del Ferrocarril (Spanish)
  • Ing. Livio Dante Porta's First Locomotive – "Argentina"
  • Railway map of Argentina (Spanish)

rail, transport, argentina, argentine, railway, network, consisted, network, second, world, time, most, extensive, prosperous, world, however, with, increase, highway, construction, there, followed, sharp, decline, railway, profitability, leading, break, 1993,. The Argentine railway network consisted of a 47 000 km 29 204 mi network at the end of the Second World War and was in its time one of the most extensive and prosperous in the world However with the increase in highway construction there followed a sharp decline in railway profitability leading to the break up in 1993 of Ferrocarriles Argentinos FA the state railroad corporation During the period following privatisation private and provincial railway companies were created and resurrected some of the major passenger routes that FA once operated ArgentinaOperationNational railwayFerrocarriles ArgentinosInfrastructure companyADIFSEStatisticsRidership423 202 522 Buenos Aires commuter 2018 1 2 036 792 regional 2018 2 1 009 357 long distance 2018 System lengthTotal36 966 km 22 970 mi 8th 3 Track gauge5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm 26 475 km 16 451 mi 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in 2 780 km 1 730 mi 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in 7 711 km 4 791 mi Secondary narrow gauges424 km 263 mi MapArgentina s rail network at its greatest extent c 1950 Dissatisfied with the private management of the railways beginning in 2012 and following the Once Tragedy the national government started to re nationalise some of the private operators and ceased to renew their contracts At the same time Operadora Ferroviaria Sociedad del Estado SOFSE was formed to manage the lines which were gradually taken over by the government in this period and Argentina s railways began receiving far greater investment than in previous decades 4 5 6 In 2014 the government also began replacing the long distance rolling stock and rails and ultimately put forward a proposal in 2015 which revived Ferrocarriles Argentinos as Nuevos Ferrocarriles Argentinos later that year 7 8 9 10 The railroad network today with its 36 966 km 22 970 mi size is now somewhat smaller than it once was though still the 8th largest in the world 3 and the 15th largest in passenger numbers Contents 1 History 1 1 Development 1 2 Nationalisation 1 2 1 Ferrocarriles Argentinos divisions 1 3 Privatisation 1 4 Re nationalisation 2 Commuter rail and trams 2 1 Buenos Aires 2 1 1 Light rail and trams 2 1 2 Ticketing 2 1 3 Electrification 2 2 La Plata 2 3 Mendoza 2 4 Neuquen 2 5 Parana 2 6 Resistencia 2 7 Santa Fe 2 8 Santiago del Estero 2 9 Historical networks 3 Mass transit 3 1 Buenos Aires Underground 3 2 Other projects 4 Intercity passenger services 4 1 Routes 5 Tourist railways 6 Freight 7 Rolling stock 8 International rail links to adjacent countries 9 Incidents 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksHistory Edit Del Parque station built in 1857 later closed in 1883 The growth and decline of the Argentine railways are tied heavily with the history of the country as a whole reflecting its economic and political situation at numerous points in history reaching its high point when Argentina ranked among the 10 richest economies in the world measured in GDP per capita during the country s Belle Epoque and subsequently deteriorating along with the hopes of the prosperity it came so close to achieving 11 In the early years the railway was emblematic of the vast waves of European Immigration into the country with many coming to work on and operate the railways such as the Italian Argentine Alfonso Covassi the country s first engine driver 12 and also in the sense that the population boom experienced as a result of this immigration required means of transportation to meet growing demands Much like in the American West the railways also played a key role in the creation and expansion of new population centres and boomtowns in remote parts of the country 13 Development Edit See also Economic history of Argentina Advertisement for the Central Argentine Railway 1913 Interior of Retiro railway station then the central terminal of the Central Argentine Railway 1915 Steam locomotive in Puerto Deseado Santa Cruz Province c 1920 The importance of foreign capital in the construction of the Argentine railways is perhaps overstated 14 with initial construction of the network beginning in 1855 at first with Argentine finance which continued throughout the network s development 15 The Buenos Aires Western Great Western and Great Southern railways today the part of the San Martin Sarmiento and Roca railways respectively were all commenced using Argentine capital with the Buenos Aires Western Railway being the first to open its doors in the country along with its Del Parque railway station 16 Following the adoption of liberal economic policies by president Bartolome Mitre these railways were sold off to foreign private interests consisting of mostly British companies in what would be the first of many acts where the ideological climate of the time would define the fate of the Argentine railways 17 These sales also included Argentina s first railway the Buenos Aires Western by now 1 014 km long which was sold in 1890 to the British company New Western Railway of Buenos Aires for just over 8 1 million pounds close to 500 million in 2005 money 18 19 This sale and others that came after it was heavily criticised at the time for being far lower than the actual value of the railway and prompted many anti British protests 14 In later years this was also criticised by historians During the 27 years in which it belonged to the Government of the Province of Buenos Aires the Western Railway was the line which was most luxurious least wasteful and offered the most economical fares and cargo rates It was a model company which was the pride of Argentina in relation to which all the English railway companies established in our country were without exception second rate But after the sale the unnecessary growth in spending largely due to the disproportionate increase in employees the resulting decrease in returns and the rise in ticket prices made up a definite intent to sabotage the Western Railway would quickly be discredited in the public opinion Raul Scalabrini Ortiz Historia de los Ferrocarriles Argentinos 20 In the years that followed there were numerous cases of undervalued sales to British investors including the 1 000 km 620 mi long Andean Railway which provoked much anti British sentiment in the country 21 By 1910 the network had been monopolised by British companies owned by large finance firms such as J S Morgan amp Co in London 21 Nevertheless major development of the Argentine rail network occurred up to this period and the Argentine state also played a large role financing ferrocarriles de fomento development railways in rural areas not attractive to private interests 12 while the Argentine State Railway had a 9 690 km 6 020 mi network 22 By 1914 the Argentine rail network attained significant growth having added 30 000 km 19 000 mi to the network between 1895 and 1914 23 which positioned the country as having the tenth largest rail network in the world in that year at a point where the country had the tenth highest per capita GDP in the world 24 Its expansion accelerated greatly due to the need for the transport of agricultural products and cattle in Buenos Aires Province The rail network converged on the city of Buenos Aires and was a key component in the development of the Argentine economy as it rose to be a leading export country However with the advent of the First World War then subsequently the Wall Street Crash and Great Depression the rail network of the country experienced a much lower rate of growth after this period and had mostly ground to a halt by the beginning of the Second World War 25 26 Railroad network growth and expansion 27 Years 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920System length kilometres 9 8 722 2 516 9 397 16 500 29 094 47 000Passengers transported millions 3 18 145Cargo transported x 1 000 000 tonnes 1 0 11 8 45 5 Exterior of Del Parque station c 1857 84 Railway strike on the Buenos Aires Northern Railway the first British railway in Argentina c 1904 Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway train in Palermo c 1930 Comodoro Rivadavia Railway train in Patagonia c 1940 A Ferrocarriles Patagonicos Ganz DMU in Chubut province 1945 Nationalisation Edit Main articles Railway nationalization in Argentina and Ferrocarriles Argentinos By the end of the Second World War the United Kingdom owed Argentina m n 2 billion after the country had filled the gaps in food shortages during the war effort 28 29 Following what was then a worldwide trend the private companies were nationalised by the government of Juan Peron beginning in 1946 with the French railways and then purchasing the British railways after an agreement was signed cancelling the British debt in 1947 30 31 Peron later claimed in an interview that the British envoys had offered him a bribe of US 100 million if the state paid an extra m n 6 billion for the railways on top of the debt cancellation 28 Ferrocarriles Argentinos divisions Edit After the 1948 nationalisation the 47 000 km 29 000 mi long Argentine railway network was separated into six divisions managed by State owned company Ferrocarriles Argentinos Of the 20 railways incorporated into Ferrocarriles Argentinos 7 were Argentine 10 were British and 3 were French prior to nationalisation There were grouped together by track gauge and location and named after important figures in Argentine History Maps of those division companies were as follows Belgrano 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in Mitre 5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm with the Tren de la Costa in 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm Roca 5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm with some stretches in 2 ft 5 1 2 in 750 mm Sarmiento 5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm San Martin 5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm Urquiza 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm Soon after the reorganisation Peron turned it into a political matter with the nationalisation becoming a symbol of national autonomy and independence from foreign powers rather than an administrative change and is still to this day regarded by justicialists as a move against neo imperialsm 32 33 Although for many years the state owned railways were able to provide a good standard of passenger and freight service over the years the changing politics of Argentina began to take its toll By the 1960s the post war economic boom had ushered in a new age of the automobile with rail transport on its way out around the world a trend from which Argentina was not left unscathed 23 Following the ousting of Peron from power the Larkin Plan was implemented to modernise transport in the country with backing from the World Bank and intended to make investments in the country s railways 34 However by 1961 its aims had changed significantly and the plan had evolved into one which prioritised automobile transportation and began lifting sections of railway an act which was put to an end following a series of strikes by railway workers in opposition to the plan 35 The government favoured road transport and opened car and truck factories in the country Diesel train shops and new car shops were opened with help from Fiat Alstom and Mitsubishi Steam locomotives were slowly phased out Later governments between 1967 and 1971 then continued investing in the railways and enacted modernisation plans renewing much of the rolling stock and the railways continued to function well 36 Under the military junta the 1970s and 1980s saw a significant decline in Argentina s railways In 1965 25 of cargo and 18 of passengers were transported by rail while by 1980 this figure had dropped to 8 and 7 respectively and Ferrocarriles Argentinos was losing US 1 million per day maintaining an ageing system with dwindling passenger numbers 37 Between 1976 and 1980 560 stations were closed along with 5 500 km 3 400 mi of track while the number of employees in railway workshops alone fell from 155 000 to 97 000 38 By the time the country returned to democratic rule the railways were in bad shape and the country was overwhelmed by the economic burdens and debts left over from the junta 39 Under this context and with the state unable to cope with the cost of managing the railways due to a large fiscal deficit the privatisation of the network came into consideration Argentine locomotive La Justicialista being inaugurated 1952 Railway workers on the San Martin Line 1969 Fiat Materfer 7131 units were emblematic of the 1960s Ferrocarriles Argentinos rolling stock outside Retiro Mitre station 1968 Ferrocarriles Argentinos poster from the 1970s Ferrocarriles Argentinos train on the Urquiza Railway 1990 Privatisation Edit Main article Railway Privatisation in Argentina During the privatisation period rail infrastructure deteriorated drastically The Once rail disaster left 49 dead and prompted calls for re nationalisation Under the presidency of Carlos Menem Argentina radically changed its economic policies moving from a more Import substitution industrialisation orientated model towards neoliberal shock therapy and the Washington Consensus under the supervision of the International Monetary Fund 40 41 Much like under the classical liberalism of the late 19th and early 20th century under these plans Argentina would sell off most of its state assets at extremely reduced prices among them the railways 36 42 During these reforms between 1992 and 1995 the government decided break up and to privatise the state owned company Ferrocarriles Argentinos FA which comprised six relatively independent divisions Sarmiento Mitre Urquiza San Martin Belgrano and Roca and granted concessions to private companies for their operation through competitive bidding while doing the same with freight services 43 At the start of the concessions the railway network was quickly reduced to one quarter of its capacity with long distance lines disappearing almost completely 23 44 At the same time as more locomotives and rolling stock were needed the private companies became increasingly reluctant to make the investment required to increase capacity and thus service quality and passenger numbers declined 23 Railway privatisation resulted in the loss of some 70 000 jobs in the railway sector over the years whilst by 1998 some 793 railway stations had been closed 45 In addition companies operating other transport means such as bus transport who had vested interests seeking the demise of the railway purchased lines for far less than their real value 46 Under privatisation substantial government subsidies continued in order to keep the system from collapsing the state continued losing money on the railways 44 During this period the railways were plagued by negligence while private operators persistently ignored warnings from inspectors whilst failing in their contractual obligations to maintain railway infrastructure 44 Similarly over the years government subsidies to the private companies increased to levels similar to the losses incurred under the state management of the railways albeit now with a much more limited service and further deteriorated infrastructure 46 The closing of much of the rail system also led to the emptying of many rural towns dependent on the railways creating ghost towns and therefore to a dismantling of the development that had taken place there since the arrival of trains 47 Argentine agriculture found itself in the difficult position of shipping its goods less efficiently using road transport which costs around 72 more than state owned rail services 48 The economic crisis in 2001 was the final blow and neither the private companies nor the government could provide the service required In 2003 the new administration of President Nestor Kirchner set it as a key policy objective to revive the national rail network Although the economic upturn saw traffic grow again the suburban rail operators were still little more than managers of government contracts rather than true entrepreneurs 49 Re nationalisation Edit See also Nuevos Ferrocarriles Argentinos Florencio Randazzo overseeing construction near Chascomus A Mitre Line electric rolling stock In 2008 the National Government formed Trenes Argentinos Operadora Ferroviaria SOFSE to manage some freight and passenger lines in the country 4 The Once Tragedy of February 2012 prompted further action by the government resulting in the revocation of the Sarmiento Line and Mitre Line concessions from Trenes de Buenos Aires TBA in May of that year with both lines eventually being put under the management of the state owned SOFSE 50 51 In June 2012 the government announced that it was renationalising some freight railways citing serious breaches of contract by the operators this culminated in the nationalisation of the Belgrano Cargas network which operates on over 10 000 km 6 200 mi of metre gauge track 52 53 This trend continued in the following years and the government began re opening services and improving on the once private services using completely new rolling stock including long distance services like the one from Buenos Aires to Mar del Plata and Buenos Aires Rosario Cordoba 54 55 This new found investment in the railways has not been limited to rolling stock since in many cases the state has completely replaced or is in the process of replacing the existing infrastructure with continuous welded rails on concrete sleepers and undertaking other works such as renovating level crossings and building new railway bridges 56 57 58 The freight network has also received significant investment from China with two investments totalling US 4 8 billion made in 2013 and 2015 59 While from 2008 to 2014 there were many indications that the state was re nationalising parts of the railway and making efforts towards improving it in 2015 it was announced that complete nationalisation of the remaining lines and services were on the table after a project was put forward that would see the resurrection of Ferrocarriles Argentinos as a state owned holding company which would incorporate SOFSE passenger services TACyL freight and ADIFSE infrastructure 7 This was put into effect in April 2015 when by overwhelming majority the Argentine Senate passed the law which re created Ferrocarriles Argentinos and effectively re nationalised the country s railways a move which saw support from all major political parties across the political spectrum 8 9 10 Expenditure for the railway network was set at AR 9 billion for 2015 while in 2016 it is expected to be AR 7 2 billion 60 Commuter rail and trams EditBuenos Aires Mendoza Cordoba Resistencia Parana La Plata Santiago del Estero and Salta are the only cities in Argentina to offer suburban passenger services most other cities rely on bus and trolleybus transportation though in the past there were more networks and most major cities had a tramway network Buenos Aires Edit Map of the Buenos Aires Commuter Rail Network Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan rail system is the second most extensive in the Americas after New York s commuter rail system with about 259 stations covering 900 km 559 mi and 7 rail lines serving more than 1 4 million commuters daily in the Greater Buenos Aires area 61 62 Commuter rail services from the suburbs is mostly operated by SOFSE though some private operators remain The rail lines converge at five rail terminals all of them in Buenos Aires with two Retiro and Constitucion rail terminals being the busiest train stations in Argentina though there is a plan to connect all the lines in one central underground station for easy transfer 61 Metropolitan railway transportLine Operator Length Km N stations Annual ridership 2014 62 Mitre Trenes Argentinos 185 5 55 18 330 512Belgrano Norte Ferrovias 54 3 22 28 876 619Belgrano Sur Trenes Argentinos 66 3 30 10 974 454Roca Trenes Argentinos 237 2 70 115 032 946San Martin Trenes Argentinos 56 3 19 39 239 510Sarmiento Trenes Argentinos 184 1 40 39 663 847Urquiza Metrovias 29 9 23 12 585 106Totals 813 259 264 702 994 Constitucion second busiest rail station in the country A San Martin Line CSR SDD7 diesel electric locomotive Buenos Aires City s commuter rail provides 1800 trains carrying 1 4 million passengers each business day in the city of Buenos Aires its suburbs in Greater Buenos Aires and several far reaching satellite towns 61 Service is provided by private companies and spreads out from five central stations in Buenos Aires Retiro Constitucion Once and Federico Lacroze all serving both long distance and local passenger services and Buenos Aires Station which despite its name is a secondary rail terminus serving only local commuter services and will cease to be a terminal once the Belgrano Sur Line is extended to Constitucion 63 The Retiro and Constitucion train stations are linked by Line C of the Buenos Aires Underground Once is served by Line A of the underground via its Plaza Miserere station and by Line H s Once station while Federico Lacroze is served by Line B 64 The smaller Buenos Aires Station is accessible by some city bus services and it is the only railway terminus in Buenos Aires that has no access to the Buenos Aires Underground though it is connected to the Metrobus Sur line 65 Most trains leave at regular 8 20 minute intervals though for trains travelling a longer distance service may be less frequent 66 Fares are cheap and tickets can be purchased at ticket windows or through the SUBE card machines at stations 67 Most of the lines are electrified several are diesel powered while some of these are currently being electrified and some of the lines share traffic with freight services Buenos Aires area commuter rail lines were privatised in the 1990s and passengers had complained for years about poor commuter rail services on lines leading from Constitucion station in downtown Buenos Aires to the capital s southern suburbs 68 However in recent years all but two of the services have been re nationalised and are operated by Trenes Argentinos SOFSE 69 Light rail and trams Edit Main article Trams in Buenos Aires A tram running in Buenos Aires c 1947 Anchorena station on the Tren de la Costa light rail line Buenos Aires once had one of the most extensive tramway systems in the world with a 875 km 544 mi network in the city proper alone which gained the city global notoriety as being The City of Trams in the late 19th and early 20th century 70 71 The system remained popular throughout its existence but despite this it was dismantled in the mid 1960s in favour of bus transport 72 Today some minor tram services remain as well as light rail services in the city proper and Greater Buenos Aires The light rail Tren de la Costa Train of the Coast which serves tourists and local commuters runs from the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires to Tigre along the river for approximately 15 km 9 mi The line connects directly to the Mitre Line at Maipu Bartolome Mitre station in the northern suburb of Olivos for direct access to Retiro terminus in the centre of the city 73 An experimental project of a short run tramway line Tranvia del Este was inaugurated in 2007 in the Puerto Madero district of Buenos Aires The 2 km prototype line ran between the Cordoba and Independencia avenues ridership was not as expected and the line closed in 2012 74 A Historic Tramway operates on weekends and holidays in the Caballito neighbourhood of the capital with free fares and using vintage rolling stock from the now defunct Buenos Aires tramway network 75 76 Another tramway line the Buenos Aires Premetro operates as a feeder at the end of Underground Line E running through some of the city s southern districts 77 Though there is currently only one Premetro line E2 originally many other lines were planned to run as feeder services to the Buenos Aires Underground however due to their planned construction coinciding with the privatisation of the Underground network these never materialised 78 The creation of new lines has been proposed as late as 2012 however it is now accepted that with the creation of the Metrobus network in 2011 the need for further Premetro lines has been made redundant 79 80 Ticketing Edit The Buenos Aires public transit system uses a ticketing system All tickets are bought at ticket booths and ticket printing consoles at railway stations and on board certain trains Tickets can be bought either using cash or by using the SUBE card also used throughout the country for buses tollbooths and underground 67 Ticket cost differ depending on the payment method If the tickets are bought using SUBE the user can benefit from a government subsidy which translates to a substantially reduced fare 81 Children under three years of age children in school uniform retired people receiving pensions and the disabled do not have to pay to use these services in most cases 82 Similarly university students and staff have a 20 discount with a 50 discount proposed in 2015 83 needs update Electrification Edit An electric commuter rail train crossing a bridge over the Matanza River The new Roca Line EMUs are like those used on other lines but using overhead lines instead of third rail Although the first electric railway between Retiro and Tigre was inaugurated in 1916 major electrification projects were not adopted The large size of the country its long distances and flat topography mean that major electrification does not make much sense economically although some suburban networks in Buenos Aires Metropolitan Area were electrified After several decades of the Buenos Aires rail service being under funded there is presently an ongoing modernisation plan so as to provide much needed improvement in services and the trend is towards electrification of several lines Similarly ongoing maintenance and investment has continued on existing electric lines such as with the 845 million purchase of 705 CSR electric multiple unit cars from China for the Mitre Sarmiento and Roca lines in 2013 84 The first line to receive this improvement was the Roca Line network in the southern part of the city where work is already in progress and several new segments electrified in 2012 such as the Glew Alejandro Korn route and the Temperley Remedios de Escalada route 85 86 The electrification of this line from Constitucion railway station in Buenos Aires to the city of La Plata was completed in 2017 87 In 2018 all routes were electrified except Bosques Villa Elisa route which only a portion is in service with diesel trains 88 It is expected that the San Martin Line will finish the electrification of its diesel segments in 2022 89 and there are plans to electrify the Belgrano Sur Line and remaining parts of the Sarmiento Line 90 91 92 Both the Mitre and Sarmiento lines received completely new CSR electric multiple units in 2014 The Roca line s 300 coaches of the same type are in service as the electrification of its remaining diesel segments was completed in 2018 except Bosques Villa Elisa route 88 In 2008 approximately 42 7 258 km 160 mi from a total rail network of 604 km 375 mi of the Buenos Aires and Greater Buenos Aires area excluding outer suburban satellite cities of Capilla del Senor Lobos Mercedes Lujan Zarate and Canuelas but including the city of La Plata was electrified This is expected to increase by the end of 2015 when major electrification works are completed needs update La Plata Edit La Plata railway station La Plata is mostly served by the Roca Line including the University train of La Plata which runs from the central station to the National University of La Plata 93 The segment of the Roca Line which runs from Buenos Aires Constitucion to La Plata and its suburbs is electrified with new rolling stock stations and track with works having commenced in 2014 and completed in 2017 94 This line also provides commuter services to La Plata s city centre from neighborhoods like Tolosa Ringuelet City Bell and Villa Elisa with a frequency of one train every 25 minutes which is expected to drop to 12 minutes after the electrification is completed 95 Up until the 1980s there were also other commuter services on the General Roca Railway to nearby towns and suburbs however they are no longer in use and there are no indications that they will be reactivated 96 Mendoza Edit Main article Metrotranvia Mendoza Passengers boarding a Siemens Duewag U2 in Mendoza The Metrotranvia Mendoza Spanish for Mendoza Light Rail or fast tramway is a public light rail transport system for the city of Mendoza Argentina served by articulated light rail cars operating on newly relaid tracks in former Ferrocarril General San Martin mainline right of way The tram system is unusual in the sense that unlike the rest of railway services in Argentina 97 the rail cars on this line run on the righthand track instead of the left The tram serves the metropolitan area of Mendoza which includes the departments of Las Heras Central district Godoy Cruz Maipu and Lujan de Cuyo As of 2013 only one line runs a 12 5 km 8 mi stretch between Mendoza Central Station and General Gutierrez in Maipu on double track 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge track 98 The finished project includes four lines 46 5 km 29 mi in length and 50 stations also connecting downtown with the Airport 99 100 Construction of the first line Linea Verde or Green Line 101 began in March 2009 102 The system opened for regular service on 8 October 2012 101 In February 2014 the local Government announced the start of constructing works for the second line linking the city centre with the North up to Panquehua in Las Heras Department 103 Neuquen Edit Main article Tren del Valle A Materfer CMM 400 2 DMU crossing one of the Neuquen Cipolletti bridges The Tren del Valle Train of the Valley is a service that runs between the cities of Neuquen and Cipolletti in Neuquen and Rio Negro provinces expected to begin operating in July 2015 with 22 services per day 104 While in the first phase of the reactivation of this line closed in the 1990s after the privatisation of the network takes it between these two cities after the opening it will continue to be extended to General Roca Plottier and Anelo in 2015 and 2016 105 106 The line uses Argentine built Materfer CMM 400 2 DMUs and General Roca Railway tracks which have been replaced along with the restoration of existing railway bridges while parts of its route will be shared with YPF freight services that serve the vast Vaca Muerta oil fields in the provinces 104 107 108 This line was once operated by the Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway before railway nationalisation in 1948 Parana Edit The Parana urban railway is served by two local lines which run on the standard gauge General Urquiza Railway and link Parana city Capital of Entre Rios province with Colonia Avellaneda and Villa Fontana The two lines are 9 and 13 4 km long but there are further plans to expand the system Villa Fontana s line was inaugurated in August 2010 up to Oro Verde and expanded to Villa Fontana in 2011 Colonia Avellaneda s line was inaugurated in March 2011 109 110 Parana city is also linked with interurban services to Concepcion del Uruguay and Concordia Entre Rios main cities 111 Resistencia Edit It serves Great Resistencia the capital city of the province of Chaco with a 10 km line to Puerto Vilelas with 8 stations and a 20 km line to Puerto Tirol with 16 stations From the intermediate station of Cacui in the Puerto Tirol Line leaves the interstate line to Los Amores in the province of Santa Fe The whole network uses the former General Belgrano Railway 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge tracks 112 The system was originally operated by Chaco Railway Services owned by the Province s Government but in May 2010 operation was transferred to SOFSE the state owned railway company managed by the National Government 113 Santa Fe Edit Main article Santa Fe Urban Train The Santa Fe Urban Train is project initiated in 2014 for a 3 7 km line which runs through the city of Santa Fe in Santa Fe Province using metre gauge General Belgrano Railway tracks 114 In June 2015 the service underwent successful testing on the line and its 8 brand new stops using Argentine built TecnoTren railbuses 115 Once fully opened in 2015 this will be the first commuter rail service in the city since railway privatisation in the 1990s while it is estimated that using the train will be 40 faster than existing bus transport 116 117 Santiago del Estero Edit Main article Tren al Desarrollo The historical city of Santiago del Estero will have a commuter rail service called Tren al Desarrollo which will run on a series of newly built viaducts over the city as well as existing General Mitre Railway broad gauge tracks 118 The 8 km line has undergone testing using Argentine TecnoTren rolling stock and will open to the public in 2016 though its central terminus was inaugurated in 2015 119 120 121 After its aperture the line will be further extended to the outskirts of the city though it has also been considered to extend the line to the nearby city of San Miguel de Tucuman 122 123 Historical networks Edit Rosario once had a 192 km network of trams 124 See also List of town tramway systems in Argentina Up until the mid twentieth century most major cities in Argentina had a tramway network though today only a small number remain 125 126 La Plata was the first Argentine city to receive an electric tramway network in 1892 rather than Buenos Aires which would see its existing network electrified from 1897 onwards 72 By the mid 1960s most cities had their tram networks dismantled and replaced with colectivos and trolleybuses La Plata was the last city to operate trams in Argentina with its last service operating in December 1966 until the 1980s when the Buenos Aires PreMetro began operations 75 126 Mass transit EditBuenos Aires Underground Edit Map of the current underground network Line A 200 Series rolling stock at San Pedrito station Main article Buenos Aires Underground The Buenos Aires Underground Subterraneo de Buenos Aires locally known as Subte is a metro system that serves the city of Buenos Aires the network was inaugurated in 1913 by the Anglo Argentine Tramways Company being the first of its kind in Latin America and in the entire Southern Hemisphere and Spanish speaking world 127 It currently has six lines with a seventh underway a further two planned carrying 365 million passengers per year on a 52 km 32 mi network with 83 stations 128 129 The network expanded quickly in its early years but the rate of expansion had slowed by the 1960s with serious attempts at expansion and modernisation only occurring in recent years 130 Other projects Edit Buenos Aires commuter rail network with the Red de Expresos Regionales tunnels completed In the city of Cordoba Argentina there is a project to build an underground system the Cordoba Metro which would make it the second metro system in Argentina 131 The network will be 33 kilometres long with 26 stations on 3 lines with a total cost of 1 8 billion 132 The city of Rosario has also proposed having its own metro system which is currently being evaluated 133 Work has also begun in Buenos Aires to move the Sarmiento Line underground in an effort to decrease journey times whilst improving traffic conditions above ground The project will be undertaken in three stages and when completed would mean that 32 6 kilometres of the line between Caballito and Moreno will be completely underground with station entrances above ground similar to a metro system 134 The existing above ground line has continued to operate while work has occurred below ground for the corresponding sections 135 136 There is also a project announced in 2015 to create a 16 km 9 9 mi series of tunnels to connect Retiro railway station Once railway station and Constitucion railway station 137 The result of this would be the Red de Expresos Regionales which would link together all of Buenos Aires existing 812 km 505 mi commuter rail network allowing for passengers to travel from one side of Greater Buenos Aires to the other making only one connection at a central underground station underneath the Obelisco The project will cost 1 8 billion and will be carried out in three stages taking 8 years for it to be fully completed though some parts are due to commence operation sooner 61 Intercity passenger services Edit Long distance CNR CKD8 passenger train on the General Roca Railway Argentina rail passenger services interactive map Staff checking tickets in a pullman class carriage on a long distance train Argentina scrapped many of its uneconomical long distance passenger train services during the early 1990s and privatised by concession contract several main routes to Trenes de Buenos Aires TBA Ferrocentral Ferrobaires and Trenes Especiales Argentinos The new services were not what passengers were used to and with the exception of the Buenos Aires Rosario Cordoba and Tucuman corridors provided erratic and poor quality services In recent years however government policy has changed to one in which the state intends to re open and operate all services which were formally closed 138 Under privatisation many services ceased to operate for a variety of reasons Among these were previously iconic routes such as Buenos Aires Posadas and Buenos Aires Bariloche 139 140 Recently however the national government has been replacing very large segments of track in important corridors and routes using continuous welded rails on concrete sleepers to accommodate trains running at speeds of 160 km h 141 142 Many of these improvements are nearing completion while others are under way and some are in the planning stages Long distance rail travel in Argentina has been described as considerably cheaper than air or bus travel but also much slower with maximum speeds of 50 km h even on the newer stretches opened in 2017 143 In 2014 there was a 600 increase in spending on railway infrastructure being spent on projects around the country to revive long distance services while this expenditure is expected to be even higher in 2015 144 145 To accommodate this revival in long distance services Retiro railway station will receive a new expansion for the services being operated by SOFSE 146 Similar projects are nearing completion in cities like Rosario where a completely new railway terminal has been built in addition to the existing ones 147 At the same time the high speed rail project which had been planned for the Buenos Aires Rosario Cordoba corridor has been put on hold since for the moment the routes are being refurbished for the 160 km h services which are considered to be a higher priority though as of 2015 Chinese proposals for high speed rail are still being considered 148 149 Routes Edit Main articles Ferrobaires and Operadora Ferroviaria Sociedad del Estado Retiro railway station in Buenos Aires Inter city services are currently served by two State owned railway companies Trenes Argentinos that manages all the long distance passenger rail services and Ferrobaires operating services in Buenos Aires Province Ferrobaires has been criticised for the quality of its service 150 though there have been signs that the company owned by the province of Buenos Aires rather than the national government may be dissolved when its remaining services are taken over by Trenes Argentinos 151 Nowadays some of the most important cities of Argentina are served by train departing from Constitucion Once and Retiro terminus located in the centre of Buenos Aires Some cities currently are Mar del Plata Rosario both stations Norte and Sur Cordoba General Pico Santa Rosa Rufino and San Miguel de Tucuman 152 Other regional services are operated by their respectives Provinces such as Tren a las Nubes operated by the Government of Salta and Servicios Ferroviarios Patagonico also known as Tren Patagonico by the Rio Negro Province Tourist railways Edit Historic Tramway in Caballito Buenos Aires Tren de las Sierras The Old Patagonian Express crossing the Rio Chico Polvorilla viaduct used by the Tren a las Nubes Buenos Aires Avellaneda Park Historic Train a miniature railway which runs through a park in the west of the city reopened in 2015 after 9 years without services 153 Capilla del Senor Historic Train was an 80 km 50 mi heritage railway operated by the Ferroclub Argentino The train was pulled by steam locomotives running on tracks originally built by Buenos Aires Central Railway The service ceased in 2011 The Tranvia Historico de Buenos Aires is a Heritage Tramway inaugurated in 1980 in the Caballito neighborhood on existing vintage street tracks 71 Cordoba Tren de las Sierras is a 150 km 93 mi 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in railway line between Alta Cordoba station in the centre of the city of Cordoba and Cosquin 154 It s popular with tourists because of its scenic route through the Sierras Chicas of Cordoba Province Entre Rios Villa Elisa Historic Train was opened and operated by Ferroclub Central Entrerriano a local non profit association formed by railway enthusiasts Since then the service has been running trains pulled by steam locomotives between the cities of Villa Elisa and Caseros in Entre Rios Province covering a distance of 36 km 22 mi 155 with a total journey time of 120 minutes 156 Mendoza The Wine Train Tren del Vino was a project that would provide railway transportation to locals running along wine producing districts of Mendoza 157 The route had been set from cities of La Colonia in Alto Verde to Lujan de Cuyo with diesel locomotive trains with 3 coaches each Despite of its opening had been announced for 2008 158 Tren del Vino never made its inaugural trip Nevertheless in April 2014 state owned Trenes Argentinos Cargas y Logistica took over the transportation of wine carrying the production of Mendoza Province 159 Misiones The Rainforest Ecological Train is a small environmentally friendly train that runs for 3 7 km 2 mi through the rainforest inside Iguazu National Park in the north of the province of Misiones 160 Patagonia The narrow gauge Old Patagonian Expres popularly known as La Trochita is a 402 km 250 mi long narrow gauge 750 mm 2 ft 5 1 2 in heritage railway in Patagonia using steam locomotives It is said to be the only narrow gauge long distance steam train in operation in the world 161 162 The Tren Historico a Vapor was a short run from Bariloche to Perito Moreno 4 6 0 steam manufactured in Scotland in 1912 by the North British Locomotive Company in Glasgow the Cedar and Mahogany carriages were originally made in England The service was opened in 2001 163 although it was closed later remaining inactive up until the present day Rosario The Bicentennial Tramway runs through the city of Rosario with two different routes and a total of 19 stops 164 Rosario got its first trams in 1906 however after they closed in 1962 much of the track was covered in tarmac so the vintage units have been converted to run on rubber tires 165 166 In June 2015 a heritage tram began running on rails using one of the original trams from the restored network the intention is to provide more heritage services and restore more trams 167 Salta Tren a las Nubes in the province of Salta crosses canyons and cliffs before arriving at San Antonio de los Cobres The railway is approximately 4 220 metres 13 850 ft above mean sea level while its tracks and rolling stock were refurbished in 2015 168 169 170 Tierra del Fuego The Southern Fuegian Railway called Tren del Fin del Mundo The Train at the End of the World is the world s southernmost railway in the province of Tierra del Fuego operating on narrow gauge 500 mm 19 3 4 in using steam locomotives 171 Freight EditThere are several private freight operators in Argentina along with the state owned Trenes Argentinos Cargas y Logistica In 2012 the network carried 12 111 million tonne kilometres tonnes x distance travelled 172 The amount of freight carried by individual operators in 2014 was as follows A Nuevo Central Argentino freight train on the General Mitre Railway Freight carried in Argentina 2014 Operator Freight carried tonnes 173 TypeNuevo Central Argentino 7 408 914 PrivateFerrosur Roca 5 258 301 PrivateFerroexpreso Pampeano 3 500 009 PrivateTACyL 3 155 301 State ownedTotal 19 317 525 Trenes Argentinos Cargas y Logistica TACyL is a state owned company created out of the Belgrano Cargas network after the national government terminated the company s contract in 2013 returning it to state control while citing the lack of competitiveness in the private sector as a primary reason for the move 174 175 Later that year the government revoked concessions from Brazilian company America Latina Logistica citing serious contract violations and imposing heavy fines on the company for being in breach of contract 176 The services managed by this company were also integrated into the new TACyL holding company 177 Following the creation of TACyL the national government began investing heavily in the country s freight network with an AR 12 billion investment to improve its infrastructure renewing 30 of the rails over the following 2 years 178 This investment also included purchasing 100 locomotives and 3 500 freight cars from China for TACyL which are expected to arrive in 2015 while a separate investment saw the purchase of a further 1 000 cars from Argentine company Fabricaciones Militares 178 179 Further renovation of infrastructure for passenger lines such as the complete replacement of rails on the Buenos Aires Rosario Cordoba Tucuman route of the General Mitre Railway will aid private operators such as Nuevo Central Argentino who use those segments 180 181 Soon after nationalisation the government began looking to expand the fleet of the company and began making orders both domestically and abroad One order consisted of 1000 freight wagons from Argentine state owned company Fabricaciones Militares 179 The company also ordered 100 locomotives and 3 500 carriages from China as part of a plan that also included the purchase of 30 000 rails to repair parts of the line 182 In September 2015 it was announced that the original Chinese investment of US 2 4 billion in the Argentine freight network was being doubled to US 4 8 billion and new purchases and infrastructure projects would ensue 183 Rolling stock EditSee also Category Rolling stock manufacturers of Argentina and Buenos Aires Underground rolling stock Prior to the deterioration of the rail network Argentina had a greater number of rolling stock manufacturers which supplied trains and cars throughout the railways however today only a few companies like Materfer Grupo Emepa TecnoTren and Fabricaciones Militares remain While Materfer make the CMM 400 2 diesel multiple units and the MTF 3300 diesel cargo locomotives Emepa manufacture the Alerce EMU DMU which is to be used on the Belgrano Norte Line 184 185 At the same time Fabricaciones Militares only makes freight cars such as those used in the Belgrano Cargas network though in the past they made electric trains for suburban and underground lines 179 There have been signs that the industry is reviving and expanding while at the same time there are many workshops around the country which refurbish and modernise older rolling stock 186 187 Though the industry is being revived the country no longer has the capacity to manufacture long distance locomotives and EMUs for suburban lines so these are mostly imported from China and are made by companies such as CSR Corporation Limited and China CNR Corporation with CSR planning to open a factory in Argentina and purchasing the Argentine company Emprendimientos Ferroviarios which is now its subsidiary 188 189 An Emepa Alerce DMU Commuter rail rolling stock A Materfer CMM 400 2 on the Tren del Valle EMD locomotives are widely used for freight CNR CKD8 long distance rolling stock A CSR SDD7 train on the San Martin Line A Belgrano Sur Line CNR DMU A Tecnotren railbusInternational rail links to adjacent countries Edit Bolivia 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge both countries Two rail connections between Villazon Bolivia La Quiaca Argentina and Yacuiba Bolivia Salvador Mazza Argentina Brazil break of gauge 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in gauge in Argentina and 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge in Brazil Bridge over Uruguay River linking Paso de los Libres Argentina and Uruguaiana Brazil Chile South Trans Andean Railway was a proposal of a link between Zapala Argentina and Lonquimay Chile 1 676 mm 5 ft 6 in gauge in both countries 190 Chile Transandine Railway between Mendoza and Santa Rosa de Los Andes now defunct but under reconstruction 191 This mountain railway of 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge with rack railway sections had a break of gauge 5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in at either end Chile Salta Antofagasta railway single 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge linking Salta to Antofagasta The Tren a las Nubes is a tourist service running for 217 km on the Argentine side Paraguay Posadas Encarnacion 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in gauge both countries service began in 2014 192 San Roque Gonzalez de Santa Cruz Bridge Uruguay Tren de los Pueblos Libres 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in in both countries a short lived service made to re open the once closed link It ceased operation after all concessions to the private company TBA were revoked following the Once Tragedy 193 Incidents EditSee also Benavidez rail disaster 2011 Flores rail crash and 2012 Buenos Aires rail disaster The 1970 accident in Benavidez is the worst in Argentina s history Flores railway station location of the 2011 rail accident The worst rail accident in Argentina in terms of fatalities occurred on 1 February 1970 when two trains collided near Ingeniero Maschwitz in Greater Buenos Aires 194 195 This due to a passenger train carrying 700 people coming to a halt with mechanical problems while a long distance General Mitre Railway train carrying 500 passengers from Tucuman crashed into it from behind 196 The total death toll was 142 people with 368 injured 196 197 From 2008 to 2012 there were a series of rail accidents which eventually led to the re nationalisation of the rail network Before dawn on 9 March 2008 a passenger train slammed into a bus at a rural Argentine level crossing near Dolores some 125 miles 201 km south of Buenos Aires killing 18 people and leaving at least 47 others injured The bus driver ignored the warning lights and lowered crossing gates 198 On 13 September 2011 a passenger train operated by Trenes de Buenos Aires hit a bus on a level crossing at Flores in Buenos Aires during the morning rush hour killing 11 people and injuring 265 199 The train derailed and crashed into a train standing at the platform in the adjacent station The bus driver had ignored warning lights and a partly lowered barrier 200 The second worst rail accident in terms of fatalities occurred on 22 February 2012 a passenger train operated by TBA crashed into the solid buffers at the Once station near downtown Buenos Aires killing 51 people and injuring over 700 others 201 202 President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner called for two days of national mourning following the accident 203 Following these accidents all of TBA s concessions were revoked and the national government began restoring rail infrastructure and purchasing brand new rolling stock for Buenos Aires commuter rail lines as well as huge investment across the country 6 144 204 These moves eventually led to the complete re nationalisation of the country s railway network with safety concerns under private operation being one of the primary reasons 205 206 See also Edit Trains portal Argentina portalTransportation in Argentina Buenos Aires Underground Ferrocarriles Argentinos 2015 Rail transport by country State owned Argentine Railway Companies List of secondary industrial and Decauville railways in ArgentinaReferences Edit 2018 Informe Estadistico Annual Red ferroviaria de pasajeros del area metropolitano de Buenos Aires PDF www argentina gob ar Retrieved 31 August 2020 Informe Estadistico Gerencia de Control de Gestion Ferroviaria PDF www argentina gob ar Retrieved 31 August 2020 a b CIA World Factbook Argentina a b Resolution 163 2015 Infoleg Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Estaciones nuevas y modernas para las lineas metropolitanas ADIFSE December 2014 a b Comenzaron a funcionar los nuevos trenes ADIFSE November 2014 a b Asi es el proyecto que recrea Ferrocarriles Argentinos EnElSubte March 2015 a b Otro salto en la recuperacion de soberania Pagina 12 16 April 2015 a b Es ley la creacion de Ferrocarriles Argentinos EnElSubte 15 April 2015 a b Ferrocarriles Argentinos Randazzo agradecio a la oposicion parlamentaria por acompanar en su recuperacion Archived 16 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Sala de Prensa de la Republica Argentina 15 April 2015 The tragedy of Argentina A century of decline The Economist 14 February 2014 a b Breve Historia de los FERROCARRILES ARGENTINOS su Construccion su Destruccion su Importancia y Proyecto de Recuperacion Universidad Tecnologica Nacional 2013 p 6 El Ferrocarril en La Argentina Ferrocarriles del Sud August 2011 a b Ferrocarriles Argentinos una historia de entrega y de luchas Soy Ferroviario 2 April 2015 Breve Resena La Fraternidad Los Ferrocarriles Sus origenes TodoTren Breve Historia de los Ferrocarriles Argentinos La Gazeta Currency converter The National Archives Breve Historia de los FERROCARRILES ARGENTINOS su Construccion su Destruccion su Importancia y Proyecto de Recuperacion Universidad Tecnologica Nacional 2013 p 22 Ortiz Raul Scalabrini 2006 Historia de los Ferrocarriles Argentinos Lancelot p 32 ISBN 978 9871677979 a b Thompson Andrew 1992 Informal Empire An Exploration in the History of Anglo Argentine Relations 1810 1914 Journal of Latin American Studies 24 2 419 436 doi 10 1017 S0022216X00023440 S2CID 146684269 Ferrocarriles del Estado at CEPAL Library a b c d Breve historia de los ferrocarriles argentinos entre la nacionalizacion y la privatizacion Notas 9 April 2015 Argentina s Economic Crisis An Absence of Capitalism Heritage org 19 April 2001 Archived from the original on 19 January 2012 Breve Historia de los FERROCARRILES ARGENTINOS su Construccion su Destruccion su Importancia y Proyecto de Recuperacion Universidad Tecnologica Nacional 2013 p 24 Crisis y Nacionalizacion Ferroviaria La Fraternidad JSTOR The Economic Journal Vol 68 No 271 Sept 1958 pp 589 593 Retrieved on 14 June 2008 a b Juan Domingo Peron anuncia la nacionalizacion de los ferrocarriles Juan Domingo Peron anuncia la nacionalizacion de los ferrocarriles Argentina ar 1 Mar 2015 1945 Britain Imperial ambitions of a starving nation 2nd Look December 2009 La red ferroviaria argentina Ministerio de Educacion Los Ferrocarriles Sus origenes Todo Tren BREVE HISTORIA DE LOS FERROCARRILES ARGENTINOS La Gazeta El primer objetivo estrategico La Independencia Economica una de las tres banderas del justicialismo Cuadro de situacion financiero en 1946 Historia del Peronismo El plan Larkin y la resistencia obrera Laguna Paiva Historia de los Organismos y Empresas del Estado Ferrocarriles Argentinos Ministerio de Planificacion a b El Proceso de Concesion y Desarme de Ferrocarriles Argentinos La Fraternidad El SISTEMA FERROVIARIO DE LA REPUBLICA ARGENTINA Revista Geografica Digital January 2013 Breve historia de la privatizacion de los ferrocarriles en la Argentina Tiempo Argentino February 2012 Encyclopaedia Britannica Book of the Year 1986 World Affairs Argentina Argentina Meeting Bankers In Effort To Cut Its Huge Debt Chicago Tribune 29 January 1992 Teubal Miguel 1 September 2004 Rise and Collapse of Neoliberalism in Argentina PDF Journal of Developing Societies 20 3 4 173 188 doi 10 1177 0169796X04050957 S2CID 154820279 Retrieved 28 May 2015 Rodriguez Boetsch Leopoldo 19 January 2007 Public service privatisation and crisis in Argentina Development in Practice 15 3 4 302 315 doi 10 1080 09614520500076092 S2CID 154305689 El proceso de privatizaciones en la Argentina desde una perspectiva del Balance de Pagos MECON a b c Privatisation Derailed Argentina s Rail System IPS News 24 February 2012 El servicio ferroviario argentino de las ultimas dos decadas el antes y despues de las privatizaciones Monografias com a b Privatizacion de los ferrocarriles Ramal que para ramal que cierra Contra Molinos de Sortilegios 24 July 2013 Como Perdimos el Ferrocarril Agentino Ancaloo 29 September 2008 El regreso del tren de cargas al Mercado Central favorecera a la pequena y mediana empresa Telam 6 May 2015 Argentina sets a new course Archived 23 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Railway Gazette International Retrieved on 19 May 2008 Finalmente el Gobierno le saco las concesiones del Sarmiento y del Mitre a TBA Clarin 24 May 2012 El gobierno nacional estatizo los ferrocarriles Sarmiento y Mitre Infobae ALL concessions revoked Railway Gazette International Retrieved 10 June 2013 Nueva empresa estatal para el Belgrano Cargas Pagina 12 23 May 2013 Randazzo Estamos saldando una deuda con las ciudades del interior del pais Exitosa prueba en la renovada via a Rosario EnElSubte March 2015 CRoNICA FERROVIARIA En tren de Buenos Aires a Cordoba a 36 kilometros por hora 11 March 2015 Rescinden contratos a privados y vuelve Ferrocarriles Argentinos EnElSubte March 2015 Randazzo Este paso bajo nivel es parte del importante proceso de renovacion ferroviaria de la Linea Sarmiento Cronica Ferroviaria February 2015 A tres meses del cambio de Gobierno firman un acuerdo ferroviario por US 2 400 millones Clarin 8 September 2015 Invertiran este ano 9 000 millones de pesos para mejorar la infraestructura ferroviaria Telam 25 May 2015 a b c d Detalles del proyecto para conectar todos los ferrocarriles urbanos debajo del Obelisco Buenos Aires Ciudad 12 May 2015 a b Estadisticas del transporte ferroviario Total 2014 CNRT website Ministry of Transport Elevaran las trazas del ferrocarril San Martin y del Belgrano Sur InfoBAE 16 December 2014 Mapa de la red Archived 13 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Metrovias Inauguraron el nuevo centro de transbordo Saenz EnElSubte 19 March 2015 Servicios lineas metropolitanas SOFSE a b SUBE Ministerio del Interior y Transporte Reshaping Argentina s Railways Japan Railway amp Transport Review No 2 pp 23 29 Retrieved on 24 June 2008 servicios lineas metropolitanas SOFSE Historia del tranvia en Buenos Aires Archived 10 April 2015 at archive today Revista Digital ead a b Un viaje por la historia de la ciudad en el viejo Tramway ElDiario es 21 March 2015 a b APUNTES SOBRE LA HISTORIA DEL TRANVIA EN BUENOS AIRES Archived 28 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine Biblioteca Popular Federico Lacroze La linea Maipu Delta un potencial desaprovechado EnElSubte 20 April 2015 El tren de Puerto Madero ocho meses sin servicio y un futuro incierto Cronista 23 May 2013 a b Cross Barry April 2001 Buenos Aires Brand new pre Metro line Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Tramways amp Urban Transit pp 136 137 UK Light Rail Transit Association Ian Allan Publishing La AAT celebra con un festival los 150 anos del tranvia EnElSubte 12 July 2013 Nuestra compania Que hacemos Our Company What We Do in Spanish Metrovias Archived from the original on 16 July 2015 Retrieved 29 May 2015 Por que la linea D no llega hasta Puente Saavedra EnElSubte 25 June 2013 Premetro a Puente de la Noria en el olvido por el Metrobus del Sur EnElSubte 16 August 2013 Proponen que el Premetro absorba el recorrido del Metrobus del Sur Plan canje de electrodomesticos beneficios con la tarjeta SUBE y subsidio a las garrafas Tiempo 27 March 2015 Tarifas Tren Mitre Creacion del Boleto Docente para el Transporte Publico ferroviario y automotor Cronica Ferroviaria 18 March 2015 Los trenes que se vienen desde China Pagina 12 23 September 2013 Electrificaran todos los ramales del Ferrocarril Roca Retrieved on 23 June 2008 Spanish Informe Anual 2012 Ministerio del Interior y Transporte 6 June 2013 Se inauguro el Roca electrico a La Plata En El Subte com 18 October 2017 a b Ya funciona el Roca Via Circuito En El Subte com 12 October 2018 El tren San Martin sera electrico Argentina gob ar 23 July 2018 Tras reunirse con autoridades del BID Randazzo senalo que Argentina obtendra financiamiento para otros importantes proyectos ferroviarios Ministerio del Interior y Transporte 4 August 2015 Anunciaron la electrificacion del Sarmiento hasta Mercedes El Nuevo Cronista 27 March 2015 Randazzo Quiero comprometerme aqui a que en los proximos anos no mas alla de 24 meses se inicie el proceso de electrificacion del ferrocarril hasta Mercedes Cronica Ferroviaria 27 March 2015 Comenzo a rodar el Tren Universitario University of La Plata La Presidenta presento los 300 vagones cero kilometro destinados al ferrocarril Roca que a fin de ano estara electrificado Sala De Prensa de La Republica Argentina 5 March 2015 Comenzaron las obras de electrificacion del ramal Constitucion La Plata InfoBae 3 December 2014 Ramal LA PLATA PIPINAS El Tren Lechero La Pagina del Rio de La Plata 14 January 2004 El dia en que Argentina dejo de manejar por la izquierda Autoblog 23 September 2014 Ya ejecutaron el 55 de las obras del metrotranvia Jornada Online 20 July 2010 Preparan el terreno para los rieles del Metrotranvia a Las Heras Los Andes 22 January 2015 Proyectos para los recorridos del Metrotranvia al Aeropuerto Lujan y Maipu Diario Uno 19 January 2015 a b Mendoza light rail service begins December 2012 Tramways amp Urban Transit p 451 LRTA Publishing ISSN 1460 8324 Metrotranvia deal signed Railway Gazette International 24 February 2009 Retrieved 9 July 2013 Second stage of Metrotranvia signed by Government Info News Mendoza 31 January 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2014 a b Randazzo anuncio que el tren del valle entre Cipolletti y Neuquen comenzara a funcionar el 20 de julio Telam 2 June 2015 Randazzo pone fecha a llegada a Roca del tren del Alto Valle Rio Negro 2 June 2015 Tren del Valle Reuniones para que llegue hasta Plottier y Senillosa Municipalidad de Plottier En pocos dias vuelve el Tren a Neuquen y Rio Negro Taringa 8 June 2015 Randazzo anuncio que el Tren del Valle llegara hasta Plottier y Roca Mejor Informado 2 June 2015 Parana Oro Verde Cnia Avellaneda en Satelite Ferroviario Horarios Parana Colonia Avellaneda Trenes Argentinos Sofse Parece que la solucion vino rapida y el tren de pasajeros ahora llega hasta Concordia Cronica Ferroviaria 4 April 2014 Trenes Argentinos Operaciones 29 December 2017 Sefecha paso a la Nacion in Spanish Resistencia Editorial Chaco S A 10 May 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2013 Proyecto Tren Urbano Santa Fe Ciudad 5 June 2015 Probaron el tren urbano El Litoral 8 June 2015 El Tren Urbano aprobo el examen y funciono sin problemas en las vias UNO Santa Fe 8 June 2015 El futuro tren urbano realizara su recorrido en solo 10 minutos DERF 9 January 2015 Tren al Desarrollo obra pronto a ser inaugurada SDE Government Randazzo visito la futura estacion del Tren al Desarrollo en Santiago del Estero Telam 17 Jun 2014 Santiago del Estero La estacion Forum del Tren del Desarrollo impacta por su diseno on Cronica Ferroviaria 11 May 2015 Iniciaran pruebas del Tren al Desarrollo en la estacion Forum El Liberal 12 May 2015 El tren al desarrollo unira Santiago Banda y Las Termas El Liberal 18 Jun 2014 El Tren al Desarrollo unira Santiago del Estero y Tucuman Cadena3 20 Jun 2014 Los tranvias de Rosario vuelven de la historia Pagina 12 25 November 2007 Morrison Allen 1996 Latin America by Streetcar New York Bonde Press pp 143 157 ISBN 978 0 9622348 3 5 a b Tranvias Argentinos Tranvias de Cordoba Se cumplieron 100 anos del primer viaje en subte Ambito 1 December 2013 Aumento un 12 la cantidad de usuarios que usan el subte a diario La Nacion 7 May 2015 SBASE planea dejar iniciada la linea F para 2015 EnElSubte 10 September 2014 Planes e Inversiones Buenos Aires Ciudad Diario La Voz Del Interior Archived 29 June 2012 at archive today Retrieved on 10 July 2009 Spanish Cordoba metro redesigned Railway Gazette 19 February 2012 Reimpulsan la construccion de un Subte en Rosario EnElSubte 29 July 2014 Soterramiento del Ferrocarril Sarmiento Secretaria de Transporte 8 September 2011 Ceremony marks start of Sarmiento tunnelling Railroad Gazette 5 July 2012 Fotos de la obra del soterramiento del Ferrocarril Sarmiento Taringa Macri promete una estacion central debajo del Obelisco La Nacion 9 May 2015 Randazzo Ramal que arranca no para nunca mas Sala de prensa de la Republica Argentina 28 February 2015 F Lacroze Apostoles Posadas Satelite Ferroviario 8 December 2014 Viedma Jacobacci Bariloche Satelite Ferroviario 16 March 2015 Tren a Rosario arranca el miercoles tardara 6 30 horas EnElSubte Mar del Plata Dia a dia avanzan las obras de renovacion de via Cronica Ferroviaria 2 April 2015 CoMO SE VIAJA EN LOS TRENES ARGENTINOS DE LARGA DISTANCIA Turismo de Bolsillo Retrieved 17 August 2019 a b Se publican en la web las obras ferroviarias de ADIF y sus contratos ADIFSE 26 May 2014 Obras ADIFSE Nuevo acceso y andenes para larga distancia en Retiro Mitre EnElSubte 2 April 2015 Se ultiman detalles para la llegada del tren a Rosario ADIFSE 26 January 2015 Randazzo sepulta el proyecto de tren bala a Cordoba La Voz 20 December 2012 El tren chino de alta velocidad vigoriza America Latina People Daily 26 January 2015 Randazzo volvio a atacar con dureza a Scioli La Nacion 13 March 2015 El caso Ferrobaires Cronica Ferroviaria 24 March 2015 Horarios y Destinos Satelite Ferroviario Los vecinos del parque Avellaneda volvieron a disfrutar del historico tren de la alegria La Nacion 2 September 2015 Randazzo recibio el tren que vuelve a unir Alta Cordoba con Cosquin Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Ministerio del Interior y Trasporte 17 Mar 2015 Tren turistico de Villa Elisa on Girasol Hosteria 15 trenes turisticos de la Argentina Clarin 24 May 2015 Mendoza Wine Train 26 May 2008 El Tren del Vino comenzara a rodar por Mendoza en 2008 Los Andes 10 Nov 2007 Salio de Mendoza el primer tren con vino el mismo que usara San Juan San Juan 8 Apr 2015 Rainforest Train Iguazu National Park Ingeniero Jacobacci Journal Old Patagonian Express Puff Puff Puffs to Its End New York Times 20 June 1992 The Old Patagonian Express Narrow Gauge Heaven Accidentado viaje inaugural de un tren de vapor en Bariloche La Nacion 14 Jul 2001 Recorridos El Tranvia del Bicentinario Imagenes El Tranvia del Bicentinario A un siglo de su puesta en marcha quieren que vuelva a rodar un tranvia La Capital 29 October 2006 El tranvia historico de Rosario vuelve a circular este domingo Impulso 6 June 2015 El Tren a las Nubes El Sol 7 April 2015 Despues de ocho meses volvio el Tren a las Nubes La Nacion 5 April 2015 El tren mas famoso del pais vuelve a las nubes Perfil 1 Apr 2015 Transported for life Ushuaia Prison The Presidio Railways of the Far South 25 May 2008 Railways goods transported million ton km World Bank 7 1 menos de carga transportada por ferrocarril en el 2014 Bolsa de Comercio de Rosario 13 February 2015 Belgrano Railway returns to state control Railway Gazette International Retrieved 27 May 2015 Estatizan el ferrocarril Belgrano Cargas La Nacion 23 May 2013 Argentina Seizes Railway From Brazil s ALL Over Contract Breach Bloomberg 4 June 2013 Gobierno anuncio estatizacion del ferrocarril de cargas America Latina Logistica Argentina ar 4 June 2013 a b Apuntan a recuperar los trenes de cargas con una inversion de casi 12 000 millones de pesos Telam 16 November 2014 a b c Fabricaciones Militares construira mas de 1000 vagones para el Belgrano Cargas Archived 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Fabricaciones Militares Realizaron primera apertura de sobres de la renovacion de vias a Cordoba EnElSubte 30 April 2015 Nuestra Red Nuevo Central Argentino Avanza la renovacion del Belgrano Cargas con financiamiento chino Telam 14 February 2015 Duplicaran el credito chino para cargas invertiran mas de 4800 millones de USD EnElSubte 14 September 2015 Nuevo servicio diferencial en el Belgrano Norte con coches de fabricacion nacional Secretaria de Transporte 25 March 2015 Ferroviario Materfer Tecnicos espanoles colaboraran con la recuperacion de los talleres ferroviarios argentinos Telam 23 July 2013 Tecnologia e innovacion ferroviaria en la Argentina Pagina 12 19 April 2014 La fabrica de trenes china CSR Sifang se instalara en la Argentina Telam 4 November 2014 CSR adquiere EMFER y desembarca en la Argentina EnElSubte 24 February 2014 Initiative for Regional Infrastructure Integration in South America PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 June 2007 Retrieved 20 May 2008 En julio se licitara tren Los Andes Mendoza Archived 10 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 26 May 2008 Spanish Empezo a circular el tren que une Posadas y Encarnacion Territorio Digital January 2015 El tren que unia Argentina y Uruguay dejo de funcionar de modo definitivo El Dia 28 May 2012 Un convoy del Ferrocarril General Mitre hoy NCA proveniente de Tucuman embistio a otro detenido Archived 25 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Todo Tren The Times Tuesday 3 February 1970 pg 7 Issue 57784 col A a b La Bajada 71 Autorneto 22 September 2009 Uno de los peores accidentes ferroviarios del pais Clarin 10 March 2008 Argentina train bus collision Argentina Bus and Trains Crash Killing at Least 11 British Broadcasting Corporation 14 September 2011 Retrieved 24 February 2012 Al Menos Once Muertos y 228 Heridos en la Mayor Tragedia con Trenes en la Ciudad en Casi 50 Anos Clarin in Spanish Buenos Aires 13 September 2011 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Rozenwasser Einat 25 February 2012 Un operativo que resulto eficaz pero que ahora revela fallas Clarin in Spanish Archived from the original on 20 October 2012 Retrieved 25 February 2012 Tragedia ferroviaria en Once ya son 50 los muertos y hay 703 heridos Once rail tragedy Already 50 dead and 703 wounded Infobae in Spanish 22 February 2012 Archived from the original on 25 February 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2012 El gobierno nacional decreto duelo y suspendio el carnaval The national government declares mourning and suspends the Carnival La Nacion in Spanish 22 February 2012 Archived from the original on 23 February 2012 Retrieved 22 February 2012 Finalmente el Gobierno le saco las concesiones del Sarmiento y del Mitre a TBA Clarin 24 May 2012 Las claves de la estatizacion Pagina 12 16 April 2015 Oficial el Gobierno promulgo la ley de estatizacion de los ferrocarriles La Nacion 21 May 2015 Bibliography EditPendle George Railways in Argentina History Today Feb 1958 8 2 pp 119 125 Latin Tracks Latin American railway magazine Mario J Lopez and Jorge A Waddell Nueva Historia del Ferrocarril en la Argentina 150 anos de Politica Ferroviaria A New History of Railways in Argentina 150 Years of Railway Policies Ediciones Lumiere 2007 ISBN 978 987 603 032 8External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rail transport in Argentina Old Patagonian express official site Asociacion Amigos del Tranvia official site Spanish Tren Historico a Vapor Historical Steam Train official site Tren del Fin del Mundo official site Historia del Ferrocarril Spanish Ing Livio Dante Porta s First Locomotive Argentina Railway map of Argentina Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rail transport in Argentina amp oldid 1151229041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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