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Wikipedia

Mexico City Metro

The Mexico City Metro (Spanish: Metro de la Ciudad de México) is a rapid transit system that serves the metropolitan area of Mexico City, including some municipalities in the State of Mexico. Operated by the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo (STC), it is the second largest metro system in North America after the New York City Subway.

Mexico City Metro
FE-10 in line 12 of the Mexico City Metro
Overview
Native nameSistema de Transporte Colectivo - Metro
OwnerSistema de Transporte Colectivo (STC)
Area servedGreater Mexico City
LocaleMexico City
Transit typeRapid transit
Number of lines12[1]
Line number1-9, 12, A, B
Number of stations195[1]
Daily ridership4,534,383 (2019)[2]
Annual ridership1.655 billion (2019)[2]
WebsiteMetro de la Ciudad de México
Operation
Began operation4 September 1969; 54 years ago (1969-09-04)[3]
Operator(s)Sistema de Transporte Colectivo (STC)
Number of vehicles390[4]
Technical
System length200.9 km (124.8 mi) in revenue service; (226.5 km (140.7 mi) considering maintenance tracks)[5]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
(2 lines); and roll ways along the outside of conventional standard gauge track (Rubber-tired metro) (10 lines)
System map

The inaugural STC Metro line was 12.7 kilometres (7.9 mi) long, serving 16 stations, and opened to the public on 4 September 1969.[3] The system has expanded since then in a series of fits and starts. As of 2015, the system has 12 lines,[1] serving 195 stations,[1] and 226.49 kilometres (140.73 mi) of route.[1] Ten of the lines are rubber-tired. Instead of traditional steel wheels, they use pneumatic traction, which is quieter and rides smoother in Mexico City's unstable soils. The system survived the 1985 Mexico City earthquake.[6]

Of the STC Metro's 195 stations,[1] 44 serve two or more lines (correspondencias or transfer stations).[7] Many stations are named for historical figures, places, or events in Mexican history. It has 115 underground stations[1] (the deepest of which are 35 metres [115 ft] below street level); 54 surface stations[1] and 26 elevated stations.[1] All lines operate from 5 a.m. to midnight.[citation needed] At the end of 2007, the Federal District government announced the construction of the most recent STC Metro line, Line 12, which was built to run approximately 26 kilometres (16 mi)[8] towards the southeastern part of the city, connecting with Lines 7, 3, 2 and 8. This line opened on 30 October 2012.[9]

The Metro has figured in Mexico's cultural history, as the inspiration for a musical composition for strings, "Metro Chabacano"[10] and Rodrigo "Rockdrigo" González's 1982 song, "Metro Balderas". It was also a filming location for the 1990 Hollywood movie Total Recall.[11] Public intellectual Carlos Monsiváis has commented on the cultural importance of the Metro, "a space for collective expression, where diverse social sectors are compelled to mingle every day".[12]

History edit

Concept of the Metro and early plans edit

 
Original "Plan Maestro" for the Mexico City Metro

By the second half of the twentieth century, Mexico City had serious public transport issues, with congested main roads and highways, especially in the downtown zone, where 40 percent of the daily trips in the city were concentrated. 65 of the 91 lines of bus and electric transport served this area. With four thousand units in addition to 150,000 personal automobile peak hours, the average speed was less than walking pace.

The principal promoter of the construction of the Mexico City Metro was engineer Bernardo Quintana, who was in charge of the construction company Ingenieros Civiles y Asociados (Civil Engineers and Associates). He carried out a series of studies that resulted in a draft plan which would ultimately lead to the construction of the Mexico City Metro. This plan was shown to different authorities of Mexico City but it was not made official until 29 April 1967, when the Government Gazette ("Diario Oficial de la Federación") published the presidential decree that created a public decentralized organism, the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo, with the proposal to build, operate and run an underground rapid transit network as part of Mexico City's public transport system.[13]

The Mexico City Metro benefited from a great amount of technical assistance made available by France. RATP's engineering branch SOFRETU played a major role in its initial planning and the design of the first lines, hence the choice of tyre/rail technology.

On 19 June 1967, at the crossroads of Chapultepec Avenue with Avenida Bucareli, the inauguration ceremony for the Mexico City Metro took place. Two years later, on 4 September 1969, an orange train made the inaugural trip between Zaragoza and Insurgentes stations, thus beginning daily operation up to today.[14]

 
Mexico City Metro train in Bellas Artes station, decorated with images related to the city
 
Model of the Templo Mayor of Aztec Tenochtitlan displayed at Zócalo/Tenochtitlan station. Such displays in some stations are an opportunity to educate Metro riders about the city's history.

First stage (1967–1972) edit

The first stage of construction comprised the construction, done by Grupo ICA, and inauguration of lines 1, 2 and 3. This stage involved engineers, geologists, mechanics, civil engineers, chemists, hydraulic and sanitation workers, electricians, archaeologists, and biologists; specialists in ventilation, statistics, computation, and in traffic and transit; accountants, economists, lawyers, workers and laborers. Between 1,200 and 4,000 specialists and 48,000 workers participated, building at least one kilometre (0.62 mi) of track per month, the fastest rate of construction ever for a subway.[citation needed]

During this stage of construction workers uncovered two archaeological ruins, one Aztec idol, and the bones of a mammoth (on display at Talismán station).[15]

By the end of the first stage, namely on 10 June 1972, the STC Metro had 48 stations and a total length of 41.41 kilometres (25.73 mi): Line 1 ran from Observatorio to Zaragoza, Line 2 from Tacuba southwest to Tasqueña and line 3 from Tlatelolco to Hospital General in the south, providing quick access to the General Hospital of Mexico.

Second stage (1977–1982) edit

No further progress was reached during President Luis Echeverría's government, but during José López Portillo's administration, a second stage began. The Comisión Ejecutiva del Metro (Executive Technical Commission of Mexico City Metro) was created in order to be in charge of expanding the STC Metro within the metropolitan area of Mexico City.

Works began with the expansion of Line 3 towards the north from Tlatelolco to La Raza in 1978 and to the current terminal Indios Verdes in 1979, and towards the south from Hospital General to Centro Médico in 1980 and to Zapata months later. Construction of lines 4 and 5 was begun and completed on 26 May – 30 August 1982, respectively; the former from Martín Carrera to Santa Anita and the latter from Politécnico to Pantitlán. Line 4 was the first STC Metro line built as an elevated track, owing to the lower density of big buildings.

Third stage (1983–1985), and the 1985 earthquake edit

This construction stage took place from the beginning of 1983 through the end of 1985. Lines 1, 2 and 3 were expanded to their current lengths, and new lines 6 and 7 were built. The length of the network was increased by 35.29 kilometres (21.93 mi) and the number of stations to 105.

Line 3's route was expanded from Zapata station to Universidad station on 30 August 1983. Line 1 was expanded from Zaragoza to the current terminal Pantitlán, and line 2 from Tacuba to the current terminal Cuatro Caminos. These last two were both inaugurated on 22 August 1984.

Line 6's route first ran from El Rosario to Instituto del Petróleo; Line 7 was opened from Tacuba to Barranca del Muerto and runs along the foot of the Sierra de las Cruces mountain range that surrounds the Valley of Mexico at its west side, outside of the ancient lake zone. This made it possible for Line 7 to be built as a deep-bore tunnel.

On the morning of 19 September 1985, a magnitude 8.0 earthquake struck Mexico City. Many buildings as well as streets were left with major damage making transportation on the ground difficult, but the STC Metro was not damaged because a rectangular structure had been used instead of arches, making it resistant to earthquakes, thus proving to be a safe means of transportation in a time of crisis.[citation needed]

On the day of the quake, the Metro stopped service and completely shut down for fear of electrocution. This caused people to get out of the tunnels from wherever they were and onto the street to try to get where they were going.[16] At the time, the Metro had 101 stations, with 32 closed to the public in the weeks after the event. On Line 1, there was no service in stations Merced, Pino Suárez, Isabel la Católica, Salto del Agua, Balderas or Cuauhtémoc. On Line 2, there was no service between stations Bellas Artes and Tasqueña. On Line 3 only Juárez and Balderas were closed. Line 4 continued to operate normally. All of the closed stations were in the historic center area, with the exception of the stations of Line 2 south of Pino Suárez. These stations were located above the ground. The reason these stations were closed was not due to damage to the Metro proper, but rather because of surface rescue work and clearing of debris.[17]

Fourth stage (1985–1987) edit

Fourth stage saw the completion of Line 6 from Instituto del Petróleo to its eastern terminal Martín Carrera and Line 7 to the north from Tacuba to El Rosario. Line 9 was the only new line built during this stage. It originally ran from Pantitlán to Centro Médico, and its expansion to Tacubaya was completed on 29 August 1988. For Line 9, a circular deep-bore tunnel and an elevated track were used.

Fifth stage (1988–1994) edit

For the first time, a service line of the Mexico City Metro ran into the State of Mexico: planned as one of more líneas alimentadoras (feeding lines to be named by letters, instead of numbers), line A was fully operational by its first inauguration on 12 August 1991. It runs from Pantitlán to La Paz, located in the municipality of the same name. This line was built almost entirely above ground, and to reduce the cost of maintenance, steel railway tracks and overhead lines were used instead of pneumatic traction, promoting the name metro férreo (steel-rail metro) as opposed to the previous eight lines that used pneumatic traction.

The draft for Line 8 planned a correspondencia (transfer station) in Zócalo, namely the exact center of the city, but it was canceled due to possible damage to the colonial buildings and the Aztec ruins, so it was replanned and now it runs from Garibaldi, which is still downtown, to Constitución de 1917 in the southeast of the city. The construction of line 8 began in 1988 and was completed in 1994.

With this, the length of the network increased 37.1 kilometres (23.1 mi), adding two lines and 29 more stations, giving the metro network at that point a total of 178.1 kilometres (110.7 mi), 154 stations and 10 lines.

Sixth stage (1994–2000) edit

Assessment for line B began in late 1993. Line B was intended as a second línea alimentadora for northeastern municipalities in the State of Mexico, but, unlike line A, it used pneumatic traction. Construction of the subterranean track between Buenavista (named after the old Buenavista train station) and Garibaldi began in October 1994. Line B was opened to the public in two stages: from Buenavista to Villa de Aragón on 15 December 1999, and from Villa de Aragón to Ciudad Azteca on 30 November 2000.

Seventh stage (2008–2014) edit

Plans for a new STC Metro line started in 2008, although previous surveys and assessments were made as early as 2000. Line 12's first service stage was planned for completion in late 2009 with the creation of track connecting Axomulco, a planned new transfer station for Line 8 (between Escuadrón 201 and Atlalilco) to Tláhuac. The second stage, connecting Mixcoac to Tláhuac, was to be completed in 2010.

Construction of Line 12 started in 2008, assuring it would be opened by 2011. Nevertheless, completion was delayed until 2012. Free test rides were offered to the public in some stations, and the line was fully operational on 30 October 2012. With minor changes, Line 12 runs from Mixcoac to Tláhuac, serving southern Mexico City for the first time. At 24.31 kilometres (15.11 mi) long, it is the longest line in the system.

Line 12 differs from previous lines in several aspects: no hawkers are allowed, either inside the train or inside the stations; it is the first numbered line to use steel railway tracks; one must have a Tarjeta DF smart card to access any station since Metro tickets are no longer accepted.

In the book Los hombres del Metro,[citation needed] the original planning of Line 12 is described; although it was to begin at Mixcoac as it does today, Atlalilco and Constitución de 1917 stations of Line 8 were to be part of Line 12. The same map shows that Line 8 would have reached the Villa Coapa area and that it would not have had a terminal at Garibaldi, but at Indios Verdes, linking with Line 3. In addition, the book shows that Line 7 would have terminated at San Jerónimo. None of these plans have been confirmed by the Mexico City government.

In 2015, mayor Miguel Ángel Mancera announced the construction of two more stations and a terminal for Line 12: Valentín Campa,[18] Álvaro Obregón and Observatorio, both west of Mixcoac. With this, Line 12 is to be connected to Line 1, providing new metro access to the Observatorio zone, which will become the terminal for the intercity train between Mexico City and Toluca.[19][20]

Archaeological finds edit

The metro system's construction has resulted in more than 20 thousand archeological finds, from various time periods in the history of the indigenous people.[21] The excavations needed to make way for the rails gave opportunities to find artifacts from different periods of the region's inhabitants, in areas that are now densely urbanized.[citation needed] Objects and small structures were found, with origins spanning from prehistoric times to the 20th century. Some examples of artifacts preserved by the Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History (Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México (INAH)) are: parts of pyramids (like an altar to the Mexica god Ehecatl), a sculpture of the goddess Coatlicue, and remains of a mammoth.[22] The altar to Ehécatl is now in Pino Suárez station, between lines 1 and 2, and is called by the INAH the smallest archeological site in Mexico. The metro has led to a large quantity of archeological finds, and has also let archaeologists understand more about the pattern of ancient civilizations in the Mexican capital by analyzing its underground from various time periods.

Architecture edit

Distinguished architects were hired to design and construct the stations on the first metro line, such as Enrique del Moral, Félix Candela, Salvador Ortega and Luis Barragán. Examples of Candela's work can be seen in San Lázaro, Candelaria, and Merced stations on Line 1.[citation needed]

Network map edit

 


Lines, stations, names, colors, and logos edit

 
Mexico City Metro system diagram
 
Pino Suárez logo, showing the intersection of Line 1 (the "Pink Line") and Line 2 (the "Blue Line"). The colors and iconography mark lines and stations without the need for literacy.
 
Zapata logo. The icon shows a stylized, eyeless Emiliano Zapata
 
Garibaldi / Lagunilla logo, Line B is the only bicolor line

Each line offers one service only, and to each line, a number (letter if feeding line) and color are assigned. Every assigned color is present on square-shaped station logos, system maps and street signs, and neither colors nor numbers have been changed. Line B is the only exception to the color assignment, as green (upper half) and grey (lower half) are used, producing thus bicolor logos and signs. Gray only may be used to avoid confusion with line 8, which uses a similar green.

The names of metro stations are often historical in nature, highlighting people, places, and events in Mexican history. There are stations commemorating aspects of the Mexican Revolution and the revolutionary era. When it opened in 1969 with line 1 (the "Pink Line"), two stations alluded to the Revolution. Most directly referencing the Revolution was Pino Suárez, named after Francisco I. Madero's vice president, who was murdered with him in February 1913. The other was Balderas, whose icon is a cannon, alluding to the Ciudadela armory where the coup against Madero was launched. In 1970, Revolución opened, with the station at the Monument to the Revolution. As the Metro expanded, further stations with names from the revolutionary era opened. In 1980, two popular heroes of the Revolution were honored, with Zapata explicitly commemorating the peasant revolutionary from Morelos. A sideways commemoration was División del Norte, named after the Army that Pancho Villa commanded until its demise in the Battle of Celaya in 1915.

The year 1987 saw the opening of the Lázaro Cárdenas station. In 1988, Aquiles Sedán honors the first martyr of the Revolution. In 1994, Constitución de 1917 opened, as did Garibaldi, named after the grandson of Italian fighter for independence, Giuseppe Garibaldi. The grandson had been a participant in the Mexican Revolution. In 1999, the radical anarchist Ricardo Flores Magón was honored with the station of the same name. Also opening in 1999 was Romero Rubio, named after the leader of Porfirio Díaz's Científicos, whose daughter, Carmen Romero Rubio, became Díaz's second wife.[23] In 2012, a new Metro line opened with an Hospital 20 de Noviembre stop, a hospital named after the date that Francisco I. Madero in his 1910 Plan de San Luis Potosí called for rebellion against Díaz. There are no Metro stops named for Madero, Carranza, Obregón, or Calles, and only an oblique reference to Villa in Metro División del Norte.

Each station is identified by a minimalist logo, first designed by Lance Wyman, who had also designed the logo for the 1968 Mexico Olympics.[24] Logos are generally related to the name of the station or the area around it. At the time of Line 1's opening, Mexico's illiteracy rate was high.[25][26] As of 1960, 38% of Mexicans over the age of five were illiterate and only 5.6% of Mexicans had completed elementary school.[27] Since one-third of the Mexican population could not read or write and most of the rest had not completed high school, it was thought that patrons would find it easier to guide themselves with a system based on colors and visual signs.[citation needed]

The logos are not assigned at random; rather, they are designated by considering the surrounding areas, such as:

The logos' background colors reflect those of the line the station serves. Stations serving two or more lines show the respective colors of each line in diagonal stripes, as in Salto del Agua. This system was adopted for the Guadalajara and Monterrey metros, and for the Mexico City Metrobús. Although logos are no longer necessary due to literacy being now widespread, their usage has remained.

Line Northern/Western terminal[3] Southern/Eastern terminal[3] Total stations[3] Passenger track[28] Inauguration[3] Ridership
(2019)[2]
  Line 1 Observatorio (W) Pantitlán (E) 20 16.65 kilometres (10.35 mi) 4 September 1969 242,787,412
  Line 2 Cuatro Caminos (N) Tasqueña (S) 24 20.71 kilometres (12.87 mi) 1 August 1970 269,149,446
  Line 3 Indios Verdes (N) Universidad (S) 21 21.28 kilometres (13.22 mi) 20 November 1970 222,368,257
  Line 4 Martín Carrera (N) Santa Anita (S) 10 9.36 kilometres (5.82 mi) 29 August 1981 29,013,032
  Line 5 Politécnico (N) Pantitlán (S) 13 14.44 kilometres (8.97 mi) 19 December 1981 86,512,999
  Line 6 El Rosario (W) Martín Carrera (E) 11 11.43 kilometres (7.10 mi) 21 December 1983 49,945,822
  Line 7 El Rosario (N) Barranca del Muerto (S) 14 17.01 kilometres (10.57 mi) 20 December 1984 108,152,051
  Line 8 Garibaldi / Lagunilla (N) Constitución de 1917 (S) 19 17.68 kilometres (10.99 mi) 20 July 1994 133,620,679
  Line 9 Tacubaya (W) Pantitlán (E) 12 13.03 kilometres (8.10 mi) 26 August 1987 113,765,528
  Line A Pantitlán (W) La Paz (E) 10 14.89 kilometres (9.25 mi) 12 August 1991 112,288,064
Line B Ciudad Azteca (N) Buenavista (S) 21 20.28 kilometres (12.60 mi) 15 December 1999 152,545,958
  Line 12 Mixcoac (W)[9] Tláhuac (E)[9] 20[9] 24.11 kilometres (14.98 mi) 30 October 2012[9] 134,900,367

Under construction:

Line Northern/Western terminal Southern/Eastern terminal Total stations
  Line 12 western extension Observatorio (W) Mixcoac (E) 3

Transfers to other systems edit

Annual passenger ridership
Year Ridership % Change
2002 1,396,408,190 -
2003 1,375,089,433 -1.55%
2004 1,441,659,626 +4.84%
2005 1,440,744,414 -0.06%
2006 1,416,995,974 -1.65%
2007 1,352,408,424 -4.56%
2008 1,460,144,568 +7.38%
2009 1,414,907,798 -3.20%
2010 1,530,352,732 +8.16%
2011 1,594,903,897 +4.22%
2012 1,608,865,177 +0.88%
2013 1,684,936,618 +4.73%
2014 1,614,333,594 -4.19%
Sources:[29][30][31][32][33][34][35]
 
Interior of a subway on line 2 of the subway in Mexico City.

The Mexico City Metro offers in and out-street transfers to four major rapid transit systems: the Mexico City Metrobús and State of Mexico Mexibús bus rapid transit systems, the Mexico City light rail system and the Ferrocarril Suburbano (FSZMVM) commuter rail. None of these are part of the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo network and an extra fare must be paid for access.

Metrobús line 1 was inaugurated in 2005. According to the 1985 STC Metro Master Plan, Metrobús Line 1 roughly follows the route planned for STC Metro Line 15 by 2010, which was never built. Every transfer is out-of-station, but the same smart card may be used for payment. All five lines (Line 5 to be built during 2013) offer a connection to at least one STC Metro station. STC Metro stations that connect to Metrobús lines include Indios Verdes, La Raza, Chilpancingo, Balderas, Etiopía / Plaza de la Transparencia, Insurgentes Sur and others.

The sole light rail line running from Tasqueña to Xochimilco is operated by the Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos and is better known as Tren Ligero. Line 2 terminal Tasqueña offers an in-station transfer, but an extra ticket must be purchased.

In 2008, the Ferrocarril Suburbano commuter rail, commonly known as Suburbano, was inaugurated with a sole line running from Cuatitlán to Buenavista as of 2013. STC Metro offers two in-station transfers: Line B terminal Buenavista to the Suburbano terminal of the same name, and Line 6 station Ferrería / Arena Ciudad de México into Suburbano station Fortuna. An extra fare must be paid, and a Ferrocarril Suburbano smart card is required for access.

Another commuter rail, Tren Interurbano de Pasajeros Toluca-Valle de México is estimated to be completed in 2023. This line will connect Observatorio station in Mexico City with Toluca.

Fares and pay systems edit

A single ticket, currently MXN $5.00, allows a rider one trip anywhere within the system with unlimited transfers. A discounted rate of MXN $3.00 is available upon application for women head of households, the unemployed, and students with scarce resources.[36] Mexico City Metro offers free service to the elderly, the physically impaired, and children under the age of 5 (accompanied by an adult). Tickets can be purchased at booths. They are made of paper and have a magnetic strip on them, and are recycled upon being inserted into a turnstile.

 
Rechargeable card in use

Until 2009, a STC Metro ticket cost MXN $2.00 ( 0.10, or US$ 0.15 in 2009); one purchased ticket allowed unlimited distance travel and transfer at any given time for one day, making the Mexico City Metro one of the cheapest rail systems in the world.[37] Only line A's transfer in Pantitlán required a second payment before 13 December 2013. In January 2010, the price rose to MXN $3.00 ( 0.15, or US$ 0.24), a fare that remained until 13 December 2013; a 2009 survey showed that 93% of citizens approved of the increase, while some said they would be willing to pay even more if needed.[38]

STC Metro rechargeable cards were first available for an initial cost of MXN $10.00. The card would be recharged at the ticket counter in any station (or at machines in some Metro stations) to a maximum of MXN $120.00 (around  6.44, or US$ 7.05 in 2015) for 24 trips.[39]

In an attempt to modernize public transport, in October 2012, the Mexico City government implemented the use of a prepaid fare card, or stored-value card, called Tarjeta DF (Tarjeta del Distrito Federal, literally Federal District Card) as a payment method for STC Metro, Metrobús and the city's trolleybus and light rail systems, though they are all managed by different organizations.[40] Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos manages both the Xochimilco Light Rail line and the city's trolleybus system. Previous fare cards that were valid only on STC Metro or Metrobús remained valid for the system for which they were acquired.[41]

Rolling stock edit

 
Schematic of rolling stock used on the Mexico City Metro

As of April 2012, 14 types of standard gauge rolling stock totalling a number of 355 trains running in 6-or 9-car formation are currently in use on the Mexico City Metro. Most of the stock is rapid transit type, with the exception of the Line A stock, which is light metro. Four manufacturers have provided rolling stock for the Mexico City Metro, namely the French Alstom (MP-68, NM-73, NM-79), Canadian Bombardier (FM-95A and NM-02), Spanish CAF (NM-02, FE-07, FE-10 and NM-16 and Mexican Concarril (NM-83 and FM-86) (now Bombardier Transportation Mexico, in some train types with the help of Alstom and/or Bombardier).

The maximum design speed limit is 80 km/h (50 mph) (average speed 35.5 km/h or 22.1 mph) for rubber-tired rolling stock and 100 km/h (62 mph) (average speed 42.5 km/h or 26.4 mph) for steel-wheeled rolling stock. Forced-air ventilation is employed and the top portion of windows can be opened so that passenger comfort is enhanced by the combination of these two types of ventilation. Like the rolling stock used in the Paris Métro and the Montreal Metro, the numbering of the Mexico City Metro's rolling stock are specified by year of design (not year of first use).

In chronological order, the types of rubber-tired rolling stock are: MP-68, NM-73A, NM-73B, NM-73C, NM-79, MP-82, NC-82, NM-83A, NM-83B, NE-92, NM-02 and NM-16; and the types of steel-wheeled rolling stock are: FM-86, FM-95A, FE-07, and FE-10.

From May 2024, Line 1 will receive 30 new rubber-tired trains manufactured by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive in China, replacing earlier rolling stock. This is in line with ongoing upgrading works for Line 1, including the installation of CBTC.[42][43]

Gallery edit

Major incidents edit

 
Mexico City Metro Central Control building, in Delicias street, in Centro Histórico. The building caught fire in 2021.

On 20 October 1975, two trains crashed in Viaducto station while both were going towards Tasqueña station. The first was stopped picking up passengers when it was hit by another train that did not stop in time. According to official reports, from 31 to 39 people died, and between 71 and 119 were injured. After the crash, automatic signals were incorporated to all lines.[44]

On 18 September 2009, a man was vandalizing the walls of Balderas station with a marker before being confronted by a police officer. He took out a gun and killed the officer and a construction worker who tried to disarm him, and injured 5 others.[44]

On 4 May 2015, two trains heading towards Politécnico station on Line 5 crashed in Oceanía station. The first was leaving to Aragón station and was requested to stop and wait, while the second did not deactivate the autopilot and crashed into it at the end of the platform. 12 people were injured.[45]

On 10 March 2020, two trains heading towards Observatorio station on Line 1 crashed in Tacubaya station. The first train was parked at the platform when it was hit by another train that was coming in reverse. 1 person died and 41 were injured, all inside the second train, as people in the parked train had been evacuated moments before the crash.[46][47]

On 9 January 2021, the Central Control Center serving lines 1 to 6 caught fire. During the fire, a female police officer was killed due to a fall in the building. All the stations on those lines temporarily remained closed and provisional transport service was provided by city buses and police vehicles. According to the Metro authorities, the service in lines 4, 5, and 6 would be normalized in days, while that in lines 1, 2, and 3 in several months.[48]

On 3 May 2021, a train was traveling on Line 12 between the Olivos and Tezonco stations when a girder supporting the overpass on which the train was traveling collapsed, killing 26 and injuring more than 70.[49] Service on Line 12 was later suspended, while STC warned residents to avoid the site of the collapse.[50][51][52]

On 7 January 2023 at 09:16 local time, two trains collided between Potrero and La Raza stations on Line 3, killing one and injuring 57.[53][54] In addition to other minor events,[55][56][57] city officials said that this accident was a result of sabotage to the Fourth Transformation platform to affect the image of Claudia Sheinbaum, then mayor of the city and a potential candidate on the 2024 Mexican general election.[58][59]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i [Operations figures] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de México. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "Afluencia de estación por línea 2019" (in Spanish). Metro CDMX. from the original on 8 April 2021. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f [Inaugurations and Extensions in Chronological Order Until 2000] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  4. ^ [Vehicle Fleet] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de México. Archived from the original on 8 October 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  5. ^ [Operations figures] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de México. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  6. ^ Luis M. Castañeda, Spectacular Mexico: Design, Propaganda, and the 1968 Olympics. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 2014, p. 243
  7. ^ Coordinación de Desarrollo Tecnológico. (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de México. Archived from the original on 28 February 2017.
  8. ^ [Did You Know... Line 12] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico. Archived from the original on 17 September 2011. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  9. ^ a b c d e [Line 12] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  10. ^ "Metro Chabacano by Javier Álvarez". from the original on 10 February 2020. Retrieved 14 September 2016 – via www.youtube.com.
  11. ^ Castañeda, Spectacular Mexico pp. 241-42.
  12. ^ Castañeda, Spectacular Mexico citing Monsiváis, "El metro: Viaje hacia el fin del apretujón," in Carlos Monsiváis, Los rituales del caos. Mexico City: Ediciones Era 1995, 109-10.
  13. ^ "29/04/1967 - Edición Matutina". Diario Oficial de la Federacion (in Spanish). 29 April 1967. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  14. ^ The Mexico City Metro Modern Railways issue 432 September 1984 pages 477-480
  15. ^ "Etapas de construcción de la red del STC Metro" [Stages of construction of the STC Metro network] (in Spanish). Mexico City Metro (STC). from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  16. ^ "Suicidios in Tlatelolco:Sismo en Mexico" (in Spanish). Mexico City: La Prensa. 14 September 2005. p. 2.
  17. ^ Michoacan (in Maroc) Mexico City. 1999. pp. 8–28.
  18. ^ Cruz, Alejandro (15 February 2013). "Ponen Valentín Campa a tren del Metro; nueva estación también llevará su nombre". La Jornada. from the original on 27 August 2017. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  19. ^ "Anuncia Mancera la próxima ampliación de la Línea 12 del Metro" [Mancera announces the forthcoming extension of Metro Line 12]. El Sol de México (in Spanish). Organización Editorial Mexicana. 14 February 2013. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  20. ^ Robles, Johana (15 February 2013). "Plantean alargar la L-12 del Metro hasta Alta Tensión" [Extension of Metro line 12 to the 'Alta Tensión' area proposed]. El Universal (in Spanish). from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  21. ^ "Mexico City Subway Dig Yields Aztec Remains and Artifacts - History in the Headlines". HISTORY.com. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  22. ^ "Remains of a mammoth uncovered near Mexico City". BBC News. 25 June 2016. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  23. ^ Perhaps enough time had passed since the Revolution and Romero Rubio was just a name with no historical significance to ordinary Mexicans. In 2000, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) lost the presidential election to the candidate of the National Action Party (PAN).
  24. ^ Castañeda, Spectacular Mexico, pp. 151-55, 221-28.
  25. ^ Marianne Ström, Metro-art in the Metro-polis (Paris: ACR Edition, 1994), 210. ACR Edition is the actual name of this book's publisher, not an indicator of a particular edition.
  26. ^ John Ross, El Monstruo: Dread and Redemption in Mexico City (New York: Nation Books, 2009), 239.
  27. ^ Francisco Alba, The Population of Mexico: Trends, Issues, and Policies (New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1982), 52.
  28. ^ [Line lengths (km)] (in Spanish). Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
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  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 August 2015. Retrieved 9 March 2008.
  36. ^ [Discounted fare of 3 pesos] (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  37. ^ Schwandl, Robert (2007). "UrbanRail.Net > Central America > Mexico > Ciudad de Mexico Metro". from the original on 31 March 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 28 February 2013.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 March 2015.
  40. ^ "Arranca el uso de la TarjetaDF para Metro, Metrobús y Trolebús" [Use of the TarjetaDF for Metro, Metrobús and Trolleybus begins]. Excélsior (in Spanish). 17 October 2012. from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 January 2013.
  42. ^ "El Metro se renueva: Así serán los nuevos trenes de la Línea 1". 2 May 2022.
  43. ^ "Cómo serán los trenes nuevos de la Línea 1 del Metro?". 3 May 2022.
  44. ^ a b Tiempo Real magazine (18 September 2012). "El Metro de la Ciudad de México, como escenario de eventos trágicos, y muy trágicos" (in Spanish). Sin Embargo. from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  45. ^ Valdez, Ilich (12 May 2015). "Error humano causó choque de trenes en Metro Oceanía". Milenio (in Spanish). from the original on 4 April 2020. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  46. ^ Cruz, Héctor; Ruiz, Kevin (12 March 2020). "Convoy se deslizó hacia atrás 70km/h: investigación". El Universal (in Spanish). from the original on 24 May 2020. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  47. ^ "Subway collision kills one, leaves dozens injured in Mexico City". DW. from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  48. ^ "Fire kills police officer, shuts down 6 lines of Mexico City Metro". Mexico News Daily. 11 January 2021. from the original on 11 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  49. ^ "Mexico City metro overpass collapse kills 23". BBC News. 4 May 2021. from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  50. ^ "Sube a 24 la cifra de muertos por el derrumbe del metro de Ciudad de México". SWI swissinfo.ch (in Spanish). 4 May 2021. from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  51. ^ "Overpass collapse on Mexico City metro kills at least 24". AP NEWS. 4 May 2021. from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  52. ^ "Cierran toda la Línea 12 del Metro; RTP brindará servicio de apoyo". Chilango (in Spanish). 4 May 2021. from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  53. ^ "Qué se sabe del choque de trenes en el Metro de CDMX que dejó al menos 1 muerto y casi 60 lesionados". BBC News Mundo (in Spanish). 7 January 2023. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  54. ^ "Metro realiza las maniobras necesarias para reapertura completa de la línea 3". Forbes México (in Mexican Spanish). 8 January 2023. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  55. ^ "Chicken loose on subway tracks halts service in Mexico City". AP News. 16 May 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  56. ^ Peralta, Omar (24 January 2023). "Se le cayeron aspas en Metro de CDMX; la acusaron de sabotaje y solo quería arreglar su lavadora". Yahoo (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  57. ^ Pérez Ángeles, Vianey (16 January 2023). "Sabotaje en Metro Polanco: Cilindro de seguridad desprendido provocó la separación de vagones (VIDEO)". SDP Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  58. ^ "Choque en Línea 3: Chilangos 'no compran' teoría de Sheinbaum sobre sabotaje". El Financiero (in Spanish). 19 January 2023. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  59. ^ García, Carina (11 January 2023). "Legisladores morenistas y aliados piden indagar 'sabotaje' en Metro de la CDMX". Expansión (in Spanish). Retrieved 16 June 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Beltrán González, José Antonio. Historia de los nombres de las estaciones del metro. Mexico City 1973.
  • Castañeda, Luis. M. Spectacular Mexico: Design, Propaganda, and the 1968 Olympics, chapter 5, "Subterranean Scenographies: Time Travel at the Mexico City Metro". Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 2014.
  • Davis, Diane E. Urban Leviathan: Mexico City in the Twentieth Century. Philadelphia: Temple University Press 1994.
  • Derou, Georges. "El metro de ciudad de México visto por los franceses," Presencia 1 (1970).
  • "El arte del metro mexicano," Life en Español. 29 September 1969.
  • Espinosa Ulloa, Jorge. El metro: Una solución al problema del transporte urbano. Mexico City: Representaciones y Servicios de Ingeniería 1975.
  • Giniger, Henry, "Mexico City Subway Runs Deep into the Past: Relics of 600 Years in vast Quantity Are Being Unearthed," New York Times, 16 January 1969, 8.
  • Gussinyer, Jordi. "Hallazgos en el metro: Conjunto de adoratorios superpuestos en Pino Suárez," Boletín del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia 36 (June 1969).
  • Gómez Mayorga, Mauricio. "Planificación: La ciudad de México y sus transportes," Calli 3 (1960).
  • "Mexico City's Subway is for Viewing," Fortune, December 1969.
  • Monsiváis, Carlos, "El metro: Viaje hacia el fin del apretujón," in Carlos Monsiváis, Los rituales del caos. Mexico City: Ediciones Era 1995.
  • Navarro, Bernardo and Ovidio González, Metro, Metrópoli, México. Xochimilco: UAM,Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas, 1989.
  • Novo, Salvador, "Crónica" in El metro de México: Primera memoria. Mexico City: Sistema de Transporte Colectivo-Metro 1973.
  • Novo, Salvador, New Mexican Grandeur, trans. Noel Lindsay. Mexico City: PEMEX 1967.
  • Rodríguez, Antonio. "La solución: El metro o el monorriel?" Siempre! 1 September 1965.
  • Valencia Ramírez, Ariel. "Tecnología y cultura en el metro," Presencia 1 (1970).
  • Villoro, Juan. "The Metro" in Rubén Gallo, ed. Mexico City Reader, trans. Lorna Scott Fox. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press 2004.
  • Wise, Sydney Thomas. "Mexico City's Metro--The World's Highest Subway--Quietly Rolls Along," New York Times, 3 August 1969.
  • Wyman, Lance, "Subway Signage" in Peter Blake, Subways of the World Examined by the Cooper-Hewitt Museum. New York: Cooper-Hewitt Museum 1977.
  • Zamora, Adolfo. La cuestión del tránsito en una ciudad que carece de subsuelo adecuado para vía subterráneas o elevadas. Mexico City: XVI Congreso Internacional de Planificación y de la Habitación, August 1939.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Mexico City subway at Wikimedia Commons
  • Mexico City Metro - official website (in Spanish)
  • Metro Chabacano, string quartet performance
  • 2019 Google Doodle for the Mexico City Subway's 50th anniversary

mexico, city, metro, this, article, lead, section, contains, information, that, included, elsewhere, article, please, help, improve, lead, february, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, spanish, metro, ciudad, méxico, rapid, transit, system, tha. This article s lead section contains information that is not included elsewhere in the article Please help improve the lead February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Mexico City Metro Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico is a rapid transit system that serves the metropolitan area of Mexico City including some municipalities in the State of Mexico Operated by the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo STC it is the second largest metro system in North America after the New York City Subway Mexico City MetroFE 10 in line 12 of the Mexico City MetroOverviewNative nameSistema de Transporte Colectivo MetroOwnerSistema de Transporte Colectivo STC Area servedGreater Mexico CityLocaleMexico CityTransit typeRapid transitNumber of lines12 1 Line number1 9 12 A BNumber of stations195 1 Daily ridership4 534 383 2019 2 Annual ridership1 655 billion 2019 2 WebsiteMetro de la Ciudad de MexicoOperationBegan operation4 September 1969 54 years ago 1969 09 04 3 Operator s Sistema de Transporte Colectivo STC Number of vehicles390 4 TechnicalSystem length200 9 km 124 8 mi in revenue service 226 5 km 140 7 mi considering maintenance tracks 5 Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge 2 lines and roll ways along the outside of conventional standard gauge track Rubber tired metro 10 lines System mapThe inaugural STC Metro line was 12 7 kilometres 7 9 mi long serving 16 stations and opened to the public on 4 September 1969 3 The system has expanded since then in a series of fits and starts As of 2015 update the system has 12 lines 1 serving 195 stations 1 and 226 49 kilometres 140 73 mi of route 1 Ten of the lines are rubber tired Instead of traditional steel wheels they use pneumatic traction which is quieter and rides smoother in Mexico City s unstable soils The system survived the 1985 Mexico City earthquake 6 Of the STC Metro s 195 stations 1 44 serve two or more lines correspondencias or transfer stations 7 Many stations are named for historical figures places or events in Mexican history It has 115 underground stations 1 the deepest of which are 35 metres 115 ft below street level 54 surface stations 1 and 26 elevated stations 1 All lines operate from 5 a m to midnight citation needed At the end of 2007 the Federal District government announced the construction of the most recent STC Metro line Line 12 which was built to run approximately 26 kilometres 16 mi 8 towards the southeastern part of the city connecting with Lines 7 3 2 and 8 This line opened on 30 October 2012 9 The Metro has figured in Mexico s cultural history as the inspiration for a musical composition for strings Metro Chabacano 10 and Rodrigo Rockdrigo Gonzalez s 1982 song Metro Balderas It was also a filming location for the 1990 Hollywood movie Total Recall 11 Public intellectual Carlos Monsivais has commented on the cultural importance of the Metro a space for collective expression where diverse social sectors are compelled to mingle every day 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Concept of the Metro and early plans 1 2 First stage 1967 1972 1 3 Second stage 1977 1982 1 4 Third stage 1983 1985 and the 1985 earthquake 1 5 Fourth stage 1985 1987 1 6 Fifth stage 1988 1994 1 7 Sixth stage 1994 2000 1 8 Seventh stage 2008 2014 1 9 Archaeological finds 1 10 Architecture 2 Network map 3 Lines stations names colors and logos 4 Transfers to other systems 5 Fares and pay systems 6 Rolling stock 6 1 Gallery 7 Major incidents 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp Sound of Mexico City Metro train arriving at a station source source At General Anaya station Problems playing this file See media help Concept of the Metro and early plans edit nbsp Original Plan Maestro for the Mexico City MetroBy the second half of the twentieth century Mexico City had serious public transport issues with congested main roads and highways especially in the downtown zone where 40 percent of the daily trips in the city were concentrated 65 of the 91 lines of bus and electric transport served this area With four thousand units in addition to 150 000 personal automobile peak hours the average speed was less than walking pace The principal promoter of the construction of the Mexico City Metro was engineer Bernardo Quintana who was in charge of the construction company Ingenieros Civiles y Asociados Civil Engineers and Associates He carried out a series of studies that resulted in a draft plan which would ultimately lead to the construction of the Mexico City Metro This plan was shown to different authorities of Mexico City but it was not made official until 29 April 1967 when the Government Gazette Diario Oficial de la Federacion published the presidential decree that created a public decentralized organism the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo with the proposal to build operate and run an underground rapid transit network as part of Mexico City s public transport system 13 The Mexico City Metro benefited from a great amount of technical assistance made available by France RATP s engineering branch SOFRETU played a major role in its initial planning and the design of the first lines hence the choice of tyre rail technology On 19 June 1967 at the crossroads of Chapultepec Avenue with Avenida Bucareli the inauguration ceremony for the Mexico City Metro took place Two years later on 4 September 1969 an orange train made the inaugural trip between Zaragoza and Insurgentes stations thus beginning daily operation up to today 14 nbsp Mexico City Metro train in Bellas Artes station decorated with images related to the city nbsp Model of the Templo Mayor of Aztec Tenochtitlan displayed at Zocalo Tenochtitlan station Such displays in some stations are an opportunity to educate Metro riders about the city s history First stage 1967 1972 edit The first stage of construction comprised the construction done by Grupo ICA and inauguration of lines 1 2 and 3 This stage involved engineers geologists mechanics civil engineers chemists hydraulic and sanitation workers electricians archaeologists and biologists specialists in ventilation statistics computation and in traffic and transit accountants economists lawyers workers and laborers Between 1 200 and 4 000 specialists and 48 000 workers participated building at least one kilometre 0 62 mi of track per month the fastest rate of construction ever for a subway citation needed During this stage of construction workers uncovered two archaeological ruins one Aztec idol and the bones of a mammoth on display at Talisman station 15 By the end of the first stage namely on 10 June 1972 the STC Metro had 48 stations and a total length of 41 41 kilometres 25 73 mi Line 1 ran from Observatorio to Zaragoza Line 2 from Tacuba southwest to Tasquena and line 3 from Tlatelolco to Hospital General in the south providing quick access to the General Hospital of Mexico Second stage 1977 1982 edit No further progress was reached during President Luis Echeverria s government but during Jose Lopez Portillo s administration a second stage began The Comision Ejecutiva del Metro Executive Technical Commission of Mexico City Metro was created in order to be in charge of expanding the STC Metro within the metropolitan area of Mexico City Works began with the expansion of Line 3 towards the north from Tlatelolco to La Raza in 1978 and to the current terminal Indios Verdes in 1979 and towards the south from Hospital General to Centro Medico in 1980 and to Zapata months later Construction of lines 4 and 5 was begun and completed on 26 May 30 August 1982 respectively the former from Martin Carrera to Santa Anita and the latter from Politecnico to Pantitlan Line 4 was the first STC Metro line built as an elevated track owing to the lower density of big buildings Third stage 1983 1985 and the 1985 earthquake edit This construction stage took place from the beginning of 1983 through the end of 1985 Lines 1 2 and 3 were expanded to their current lengths and new lines 6 and 7 were built The length of the network was increased by 35 29 kilometres 21 93 mi and the number of stations to 105 Line 3 s route was expanded from Zapata station to Universidad station on 30 August 1983 Line 1 was expanded from Zaragoza to the current terminal Pantitlan and line 2 from Tacuba to the current terminal Cuatro Caminos These last two were both inaugurated on 22 August 1984 Line 6 s route first ran from El Rosario to Instituto del Petroleo Line 7 was opened from Tacuba to Barranca del Muerto and runs along the foot of the Sierra de las Cruces mountain range that surrounds the Valley of Mexico at its west side outside of the ancient lake zone This made it possible for Line 7 to be built as a deep bore tunnel On the morning of 19 September 1985 a magnitude 8 0 earthquake struck Mexico City Many buildings as well as streets were left with major damage making transportation on the ground difficult but the STC Metro was not damaged because a rectangular structure had been used instead of arches making it resistant to earthquakes thus proving to be a safe means of transportation in a time of crisis citation needed On the day of the quake the Metro stopped service and completely shut down for fear of electrocution This caused people to get out of the tunnels from wherever they were and onto the street to try to get where they were going 16 At the time the Metro had 101 stations with 32 closed to the public in the weeks after the event On Line 1 there was no service in stations Merced Pino Suarez Isabel la Catolica Salto del Agua Balderas or Cuauhtemoc On Line 2 there was no service between stations Bellas Artes and Tasquena On Line 3 only Juarez and Balderas were closed Line 4 continued to operate normally All of the closed stations were in the historic center area with the exception of the stations of Line 2 south of Pino Suarez These stations were located above the ground The reason these stations were closed was not due to damage to the Metro proper but rather because of surface rescue work and clearing of debris 17 Fourth stage 1985 1987 edit Fourth stage saw the completion of Line 6 from Instituto del Petroleo to its eastern terminal Martin Carrera and Line 7 to the north from Tacuba to El Rosario Line 9 was the only new line built during this stage It originally ran from Pantitlan to Centro Medico and its expansion to Tacubaya was completed on 29 August 1988 For Line 9 a circular deep bore tunnel and an elevated track were used Fifth stage 1988 1994 edit For the first time a service line of the Mexico City Metro ran into the State of Mexico planned as one of more lineas alimentadoras feeding lines to be named by letters instead of numbers line A was fully operational by its first inauguration on 12 August 1991 It runs from Pantitlan to La Paz located in the municipality of the same name This line was built almost entirely above ground and to reduce the cost of maintenance steel railway tracks and overhead lines were used instead of pneumatic traction promoting the name metro ferreo steel rail metro as opposed to the previous eight lines that used pneumatic traction The draft for Line 8 planned a correspondencia transfer station in Zocalo namely the exact center of the city but it was canceled due to possible damage to the colonial buildings and the Aztec ruins so it was replanned and now it runs from Garibaldi which is still downtown to Constitucion de 1917 in the southeast of the city The construction of line 8 began in 1988 and was completed in 1994 With this the length of the network increased 37 1 kilometres 23 1 mi adding two lines and 29 more stations giving the metro network at that point a total of 178 1 kilometres 110 7 mi 154 stations and 10 lines Sixth stage 1994 2000 edit Assessment for line B began in late 1993 Line B was intended as a second linea alimentadora for northeastern municipalities in the State of Mexico but unlike line A it used pneumatic traction Construction of the subterranean track between Buenavista named after the old Buenavista train station and Garibaldi began in October 1994 Line B was opened to the public in two stages from Buenavista to Villa de Aragon on 15 December 1999 and from Villa de Aragon to Ciudad Azteca on 30 November 2000 Seventh stage 2008 2014 edit Plans for a new STC Metro line started in 2008 although previous surveys and assessments were made as early as 2000 Line 12 s first service stage was planned for completion in late 2009 with the creation of track connecting Axomulco a planned new transfer station for Line 8 between Escuadron 201 and Atlalilco to Tlahuac The second stage connecting Mixcoac to Tlahuac was to be completed in 2010 Construction of Line 12 started in 2008 assuring it would be opened by 2011 Nevertheless completion was delayed until 2012 Free test rides were offered to the public in some stations and the line was fully operational on 30 October 2012 With minor changes Line 12 runs from Mixcoac to Tlahuac serving southern Mexico City for the first time At 24 31 kilometres 15 11 mi long it is the longest line in the system Line 12 differs from previous lines in several aspects no hawkers are allowed either inside the train or inside the stations it is the first numbered line to use steel railway tracks one must have a Tarjeta DF smart card to access any station since Metro tickets are no longer accepted In the book Los hombres del Metro citation needed the original planning of Line 12 is described although it was to begin at Mixcoac as it does today Atlalilco and Constitucion de 1917 stations of Line 8 were to be part of Line 12 The same map shows that Line 8 would have reached the Villa Coapa area and that it would not have had a terminal at Garibaldi but at Indios Verdes linking with Line 3 In addition the book shows that Line 7 would have terminated at San Jeronimo None of these plans have been confirmed by the Mexico City government In 2015 mayor Miguel Angel Mancera announced the construction of two more stations and a terminal for Line 12 Valentin Campa 18 Alvaro Obregon and Observatorio both west of Mixcoac With this Line 12 is to be connected to Line 1 providing new metro access to the Observatorio zone which will become the terminal for the intercity train between Mexico City and Toluca 19 20 Archaeological finds edit The metro system s construction has resulted in more than 20 thousand archeological finds from various time periods in the history of the indigenous people 21 The excavations needed to make way for the rails gave opportunities to find artifacts from different periods of the region s inhabitants in areas that are now densely urbanized citation needed Objects and small structures were found with origins spanning from prehistoric times to the 20th century Some examples of artifacts preserved by the Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia de Mexico INAH are parts of pyramids like an altar to the Mexica god Ehecatl a sculpture of the goddess Coatlicue and remains of a mammoth 22 The altar to Ehecatl is now in Pino Suarez station between lines 1 and 2 and is called by the INAH the smallest archeological site in Mexico The metro has led to a large quantity of archeological finds and has also let archaeologists understand more about the pattern of ancient civilizations in the Mexican capital by analyzing its underground from various time periods Architecture edit Distinguished architects were hired to design and construct the stations on the first metro line such as Enrique del Moral Felix Candela Salvador Ortega and Luis Barragan Examples of Candela s work can be seen in San Lazaro Candelaria and Merced stations on Line 1 citation needed Network map edit nbsp Lines stations names colors and logos editMain articles Mexico City metro lines and List of Mexico City metro stations nbsp Mexico City Metro system diagram nbsp Pino Suarez logo showing the intersection of Line 1 the Pink Line and Line 2 the Blue Line The colors and iconography mark lines and stations without the need for literacy nbsp Zapata logo The icon shows a stylized eyeless Emiliano Zapata nbsp Garibaldi Lagunilla logo Line B is the only bicolor lineEach line offers one service only and to each line a number letter if feeding line and color are assigned Every assigned color is present on square shaped station logos system maps and street signs and neither colors nor numbers have been changed Line B is the only exception to the color assignment as green upper half and grey lower half are used producing thus bicolor logos and signs Gray only may be used to avoid confusion with line 8 which uses a similar green The names of metro stations are often historical in nature highlighting people places and events in Mexican history There are stations commemorating aspects of the Mexican Revolution and the revolutionary era When it opened in 1969 with line 1 the Pink Line two stations alluded to the Revolution Most directly referencing the Revolution was Pino Suarez named after Francisco I Madero s vice president who was murdered with him in February 1913 The other was Balderas whose icon is a cannon alluding to the Ciudadela armory where the coup against Madero was launched In 1970 Revolucion opened with the station at the Monument to the Revolution As the Metro expanded further stations with names from the revolutionary era opened In 1980 two popular heroes of the Revolution were honored with Zapata explicitly commemorating the peasant revolutionary from Morelos A sideways commemoration was Division del Norte named after the Army that Pancho Villa commanded until its demise in the Battle of Celaya in 1915 The year 1987 saw the opening of the Lazaro Cardenas station In 1988 Aquiles Sedan honors the first martyr of the Revolution In 1994 Constitucion de 1917 opened as did Garibaldi named after the grandson of Italian fighter for independence Giuseppe Garibaldi The grandson had been a participant in the Mexican Revolution In 1999 the radical anarchist Ricardo Flores Magon was honored with the station of the same name Also opening in 1999 was Romero Rubio named after the leader of Porfirio Diaz s Cientificos whose daughter Carmen Romero Rubio became Diaz s second wife 23 In 2012 a new Metro line opened with an Hospital 20 de Noviembre stop a hospital named after the date that Francisco I Madero in his 1910 Plan de San Luis Potosi called for rebellion against Diaz There are no Metro stops named for Madero Carranza Obregon or Calles and only an oblique reference to Villa in Metro Division del Norte Each station is identified by a minimalist logo first designed by Lance Wyman who had also designed the logo for the 1968 Mexico Olympics 24 Logos are generally related to the name of the station or the area around it At the time of Line 1 s opening Mexico s illiteracy rate was high 25 26 As of 1960 38 of Mexicans over the age of five were illiterate and only 5 6 of Mexicans had completed elementary school 27 Since one third of the Mexican population could not read or write and most of the rest had not completed high school it was thought that patrons would find it easier to guide themselves with a system based on colors and visual signs citation needed The logos are not assigned at random rather they are designated by considering the surrounding areas such as The reference places that are located around the stations e g the logo for Salto del Agua fountain depicts a fountain The topology of an area e g Coyoacan in Nahuatl place of coyotes depicts a coyote The history of the place e g Juarez named after President Benito Juarez depicts his silhouette The logos background colors reflect those of the line the station serves Stations serving two or more lines show the respective colors of each line in diagonal stripes as in Salto del Agua This system was adopted for the Guadalajara and Monterrey metros and for the Mexico City Metrobus Although logos are no longer necessary due to literacy being now widespread their usage has remained Line Northern Western terminal 3 Southern Eastern terminal 3 Total stations 3 Passenger track 28 Inauguration 3 Ridership 2019 2 Line 1 Observatorio W Pantitlan E 20 16 65 kilometres 10 35 mi 4 September 1969 242 787 412 Line 2 Cuatro Caminos N Tasquena S 24 20 71 kilometres 12 87 mi 1 August 1970 269 149 446 Line 3 Indios Verdes N Universidad S 21 21 28 kilometres 13 22 mi 20 November 1970 222 368 257 Line 4 Martin Carrera N Santa Anita S 10 9 36 kilometres 5 82 mi 29 August 1981 29 013 032 Line 5 Politecnico N Pantitlan S 13 14 44 kilometres 8 97 mi 19 December 1981 86 512 999 Line 6 El Rosario W Martin Carrera E 11 11 43 kilometres 7 10 mi 21 December 1983 49 945 822 Line 7 El Rosario N Barranca del Muerto S 14 17 01 kilometres 10 57 mi 20 December 1984 108 152 051 Line 8 Garibaldi Lagunilla N Constitucion de 1917 S 19 17 68 kilometres 10 99 mi 20 July 1994 133 620 679 Line 9 Tacubaya W Pantitlan E 12 13 03 kilometres 8 10 mi 26 August 1987 113 765 528 Line A Pantitlan W La Paz E 10 14 89 kilometres 9 25 mi 12 August 1991 112 288 064Line B Ciudad Azteca N Buenavista S 21 20 28 kilometres 12 60 mi 15 December 1999 152 545 958 Line 12 Mixcoac W 9 Tlahuac E 9 20 9 24 11 kilometres 14 98 mi 30 October 2012 9 134 900 367Under construction Line Northern Western terminal Southern Eastern terminal Total stations Line 12 western extension Observatorio W Mixcoac E 3Transfers to other systems editAnnual passenger ridership Year Ridership Change2002 1 396 408 190 2003 1 375 089 433 1 55 2004 1 441 659 626 4 84 2005 1 440 744 414 0 06 2006 1 416 995 974 1 65 2007 1 352 408 424 4 56 2008 1 460 144 568 7 38 2009 1 414 907 798 3 20 2010 1 530 352 732 8 16 2011 1 594 903 897 4 22 2012 1 608 865 177 0 88 2013 1 684 936 618 4 73 2014 1 614 333 594 4 19 Sources 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 Main articles Suburban Railway of the Valley of Mexico Metropolitan Area Toluca Mexico City commuter rail Xochimilco Light Rail and Mexico City Metrobus nbsp Interior of a subway on line 2 of the subway in Mexico City The Mexico City Metro offers in and out street transfers to four major rapid transit systems the Mexico City Metrobus and State of Mexico Mexibus bus rapid transit systems the Mexico City light rail system and the Ferrocarril Suburbano FSZMVM commuter rail None of these are part of the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo network and an extra fare must be paid for access Metrobus line 1 was inaugurated in 2005 According to the 1985 STC Metro Master Plan Metrobus Line 1 roughly follows the route planned for STC Metro Line 15 by 2010 which was never built Every transfer is out of station but the same smart card may be used for payment All five lines Line 5 to be built during 2013 offer a connection to at least one STC Metro station STC Metro stations that connect to Metrobus lines include Indios Verdes La Raza Chilpancingo Balderas Etiopia Plaza de la Transparencia Insurgentes Sur and others The sole light rail line running from Tasquena to Xochimilco is operated by the Servicio de Transportes Electricos and is better known as Tren Ligero Line 2 terminal Tasquena offers an in station transfer but an extra ticket must be purchased In 2008 the Ferrocarril Suburbano commuter rail commonly known as Suburbano was inaugurated with a sole line running from Cuatitlan to Buenavista as of 2013 STC Metro offers two in station transfers Line B terminal Buenavista to the Suburbano terminal of the same name and Line 6 station Ferreria Arena Ciudad de Mexico into Suburbano station Fortuna An extra fare must be paid and a Ferrocarril Suburbano smart card is required for access Another commuter rail Tren Interurbano de Pasajeros Toluca Valle de Mexico is estimated to be completed in 2023 This line will connect Observatorio station in Mexico City with Toluca Fares and pay systems editA single ticket currently MXN 5 00 allows a rider one trip anywhere within the system with unlimited transfers A discounted rate of MXN 3 00 is available upon application for women head of households the unemployed and students with scarce resources 36 Mexico City Metro offers free service to the elderly the physically impaired and children under the age of 5 accompanied by an adult Tickets can be purchased at booths They are made of paper and have a magnetic strip on them and are recycled upon being inserted into a turnstile nbsp Rechargeable card in useUntil 2009 a STC Metro ticket cost MXN 2 00 0 10 or US 0 15 in 2009 one purchased ticket allowed unlimited distance travel and transfer at any given time for one day making the Mexico City Metro one of the cheapest rail systems in the world 37 Only line A s transfer in Pantitlan required a second payment before 13 December 2013 In January 2010 the price rose to MXN 3 00 0 15 or US 0 24 a fare that remained until 13 December 2013 a 2009 survey showed that 93 of citizens approved of the increase while some said they would be willing to pay even more if needed 38 STC Metro rechargeable cards were first available for an initial cost of MXN 10 00 The card would be recharged at the ticket counter in any station or at machines in some Metro stations to a maximum of MXN 120 00 around 6 44 or US 7 05 in 2015 for 24 trips 39 In an attempt to modernize public transport in October 2012 the Mexico City government implemented the use of a prepaid fare card or stored value card called Tarjeta DF Tarjeta del Distrito Federal literally Federal District Card as a payment method for STC Metro Metrobus and the city s trolleybus and light rail systems though they are all managed by different organizations 40 Servicio de Transportes Electricos manages both the Xochimilco Light Rail line and the city s trolleybus system Previous fare cards that were valid only on STC Metro or Metrobus remained valid for the system for which they were acquired 41 Rolling stock edit nbsp Schematic of rolling stock used on the Mexico City MetroAs of April 2012 14 types of standard gauge rolling stock totalling a number of 355 trains running in 6 or 9 car formation are currently in use on the Mexico City Metro Most of the stock is rapid transit type with the exception of the Line A stock which is light metro Four manufacturers have provided rolling stock for the Mexico City Metro namely the French Alstom MP 68 NM 73 NM 79 Canadian Bombardier FM 95A and NM 02 Spanish CAF NM 02 FE 07 FE 10 and NM 16 and Mexican Concarril NM 83 and FM 86 now Bombardier Transportation Mexico in some train types with the help of Alstom and or Bombardier The maximum design speed limit is 80 km h 50 mph average speed 35 5 km h or 22 1 mph for rubber tired rolling stock and 100 km h 62 mph average speed 42 5 km h or 26 4 mph for steel wheeled rolling stock Forced air ventilation is employed and the top portion of windows can be opened so that passenger comfort is enhanced by the combination of these two types of ventilation Like the rolling stock used in the Paris Metro and the Montreal Metro the numbering of the Mexico City Metro s rolling stock are specified by year of design not year of first use In chronological order the types of rubber tired rolling stock are MP 68 NM 73A NM 73B NM 73C NM 79 MP 82 NC 82 NM 83A NM 83B NE 92 NM 02 and NM 16 and the types of steel wheeled rolling stock are FM 86 FM 95A FE 07 and FE 10 From May 2024 Line 1 will receive 30 new rubber tired trains manufactured by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive in China replacing earlier rolling stock This is in line with ongoing upgrading works for Line 1 including the installation of CBTC 42 43 Gallery edit Steel wheeled rolling stock nbsp FM 86 nbsp nbsp FM 95A nbsp nbsp FE 07 nbsp nbsp FE 10 nbsp Rubber tired rolling stock nbsp MP 68 nbsp nbsp nbsp NM 73 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NM 79 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NC 82 nbsp nbsp nbsp MP 82 nbsp nbsp NM 83 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NE 92 nbsp nbsp nbsp NM 02 nbsp nbsp Major incidents edit nbsp Mexico City Metro Central Control building in Delicias street in Centro Historico The building caught fire in 2021 On 20 October 1975 two trains crashed in Viaducto station while both were going towards Tasquena station The first was stopped picking up passengers when it was hit by another train that did not stop in time According to official reports from 31 to 39 people died and between 71 and 119 were injured After the crash automatic signals were incorporated to all lines 44 On 18 September 2009 a man was vandalizing the walls of Balderas station with a marker before being confronted by a police officer He took out a gun and killed the officer and a construction worker who tried to disarm him and injured 5 others 44 On 4 May 2015 two trains heading towards Politecnico station on Line 5 crashed in Oceania station The first was leaving to Aragon station and was requested to stop and wait while the second did not deactivate the autopilot and crashed into it at the end of the platform 12 people were injured 45 On 10 March 2020 two trains heading towards Observatorio station on Line 1 crashed in Tacubaya station The first train was parked at the platform when it was hit by another train that was coming in reverse 1 person died and 41 were injured all inside the second train as people in the parked train had been evacuated moments before the crash 46 47 On 9 January 2021 the Central Control Center serving lines 1 to 6 caught fire During the fire a female police officer was killed due to a fall in the building All the stations on those lines temporarily remained closed and provisional transport service was provided by city buses and police vehicles According to the Metro authorities the service in lines 4 5 and 6 would be normalized in days while that in lines 1 2 and 3 in several months 48 On 3 May 2021 a train was traveling on Line 12 between the Olivos and Tezonco stations when a girder supporting the overpass on which the train was traveling collapsed killing 26 and injuring more than 70 49 Service on Line 12 was later suspended while STC warned residents to avoid the site of the collapse 50 51 52 On 7 January 2023 at 09 16 local time two trains collided between Potrero and La Raza stations on Line 3 killing one and injuring 57 53 54 In addition to other minor events 55 56 57 city officials said that this accident was a result of sabotage to the Fourth Transformation platform to affect the image of Claudia Sheinbaum then mayor of the city and a potential candidate on the 2024 Mexican general election 58 59 See also editList of Latin American rail transit systems by ridership List of North American rapid transit systems by ridership List of metro systems List of Mexico City Metro stations List of Mexico City Metro lines Metro systems by annual passenger rides Metrobus Xochimilco Light Rail Rubber tired metro Servicio de Transportes Electricos Transport in Mexico City Tren SuburbanoReferences edit a b c d e f g h i Cifras de operacion Operations figures in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 a b c Afluencia de estacion por linea 2019 in Spanish Metro CDMX Archived from the original on 8 April 2021 Retrieved 27 April 2020 a b c d e f Inauguraciones y Ampliaciones en Orden Cronologico Hasta 2000 Inaugurations and Extensions in Chronological Order Until 2000 in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Parque Vehicular Vehicle Fleet in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 8 October 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 LONGITUDES DE LAS LINEAS Operations figures in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 5 July 2018 Luis M Castaneda Spectacular Mexico Design Propaganda and the 1968 Olympics Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 2014 p 243 Coordinacion de Desarrollo Tecnologico Clasificacion de las estaciones por su uso y por su tipo in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 28 February 2017 Sabias Que Linea 12 Did You Know Line 12 in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 17 September 2011 Retrieved 13 October 2013 a b c d e Linea 12 Line 12 in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Metro Chabacano by Javier Alvarez Archived from the original on 10 February 2020 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via www youtube com Castaneda Spectacular Mexico pp 241 42 Castaneda Spectacular Mexico citing Monsivais El metro Viaje hacia el fin del apretujon in Carlos Monsivais Los rituales del caos Mexico City Ediciones Era 1995 109 10 29 04 1967 Edicion Matutina Diario Oficial de la Federacion in Spanish 29 April 1967 Retrieved 6 May 2021 The Mexico City Metro Modern Railways issue 432 September 1984 pages 477 480 Etapas de construccion de la red del STC Metro Stages of construction of the STC Metro network in Spanish Mexico City Metro STC Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Suicidios in Tlatelolco Sismo en Mexico in Spanish Mexico City La Prensa 14 September 2005 p 2 Michoacan in Maroc Mexico City 1999 pp 8 28 Cruz Alejandro 15 February 2013 Ponen Valentin Campa a tren del Metro nueva estacion tambien llevara su nombre La Jornada Archived from the original on 27 August 2017 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Anuncia Mancera la proxima ampliacion de la Linea 12 del Metro Mancera announces the forthcoming extension of Metro Line 12 El Sol de Mexico in Spanish Organizacion Editorial Mexicana 14 February 2013 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Robles Johana 15 February 2013 Plantean alargar la L 12 del Metro hasta Alta Tension Extension of Metro line 12 to the Alta Tension area proposed El Universal in Spanish Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Mexico City Subway Dig Yields Aztec Remains and Artifacts History in the Headlines HISTORY com Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Remains of a mammoth uncovered near Mexico City BBC News 25 June 2016 Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Perhaps enough time had passed since the Revolution and Romero Rubio was just a name with no historical significance to ordinary Mexicans In 2000 the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI lost the presidential election to the candidate of the National Action Party PAN Castaneda Spectacular Mexico pp 151 55 221 28 Marianne Strom Metro art in the Metro polis Paris ACR Edition 1994 210 ACR Edition is the actual name of this book s publisher not an indicator of a particular edition John Ross El Monstruo Dread and Redemption in Mexico City New York Nation Books 2009 239 Francisco Alba The Population of Mexico Trends Issues and Policies New Brunswick Transaction Books 1982 52 Longitudes de las Lineas KM Line lengths km in Spanish Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2015 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2015 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2015 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2015 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2015 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2015 Sistema de Transporte Colectivo de la Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 14 August 2015 Retrieved 9 March 2008 Tarifa Deferenciada de 3 Pesos Discounted fare of 3 pesos in Spanish Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 21 August 2016 Schwandl Robert 2007 UrbanRail Net gt Central America gt Mexico gt Ciudad de Mexico Metro Archived from the original on 31 March 2016 Retrieved 16 August 2011 Aprueban usuarios incremento a la tarifa del Metro Spanish Archived from the original on 5 June 2013 Retrieved 28 February 2013 STC Tarjeta Recargable Spanish Archived from the original on 16 March 2015 Arranca el uso de la TarjetaDF para Metro Metrobus y Trolebus Use of the TarjetaDF for Metro Metrobus and Trolleybus begins Excelsior in Spanish 17 October 2012 Archived from the original on 28 July 2014 Retrieved 14 October 2013 STC Nueva Tarjeta del Distrito Federal Spanish Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 El Metro se renueva Asi seran los nuevos trenes de la Linea 1 2 May 2022 Como seran los trenes nuevos de la Linea 1 del Metro 3 May 2022 a b Tiempo Real magazine 18 September 2012 El Metro de la Ciudad de Mexico como escenario de eventos tragicos y muy tragicos in Spanish Sin Embargo Archived from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Valdez Ilich 12 May 2015 Error humano causo choque de trenes en Metro Oceania Milenio in Spanish Archived from the original on 4 April 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Cruz Hector Ruiz Kevin 12 March 2020 Convoy se deslizo hacia atras 70km h investigacion El Universal in Spanish Archived from the original on 24 May 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Subway collision kills one leaves dozens injured in Mexico City DW Archived from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Fire kills police officer shuts down 6 lines of Mexico City Metro Mexico News Daily 11 January 2021 Archived from the original on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 11 January 2021 Mexico City metro overpass collapse kills 23 BBC News 4 May 2021 Archived from the original on 4 May 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Sube a 24 la cifra de muertos por el derrumbe del metro de Ciudad de Mexico SWI swissinfo ch in Spanish 4 May 2021 Archived from the original on 4 May 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Overpass collapse on Mexico City metro kills at least 24 AP NEWS 4 May 2021 Archived from the original on 4 May 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Cierran toda la Linea 12 del Metro RTP brindara servicio de apoyo Chilango in Spanish 4 May 2021 Archived from the original on 4 May 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Que se sabe del choque de trenes en el Metro de CDMX que dejo al menos 1 muerto y casi 60 lesionados BBC News Mundo in Spanish 7 January 2023 Retrieved 8 January 2023 Metro realiza las maniobras necesarias para reapertura completa de la linea 3 Forbes Mexico in Mexican Spanish 8 January 2023 Retrieved 8 January 2023 Chicken loose on subway tracks halts service in Mexico City AP News 16 May 2023 Retrieved 17 May 2023 Peralta Omar 24 January 2023 Se le cayeron aspas en Metro de CDMX la acusaron de sabotaje y solo queria arreglar su lavadora Yahoo in Spanish Retrieved 18 June 2023 Perez Angeles Vianey 16 January 2023 Sabotaje en Metro Polanco Cilindro de seguridad desprendido provoco la separacion de vagones VIDEO SDP Noticias in Spanish Retrieved 18 June 2023 Choque en Linea 3 Chilangos no compran teoria de Sheinbaum sobre sabotaje El Financiero in Spanish 19 January 2023 Retrieved 18 June 2023 Garcia Carina 11 January 2023 Legisladores morenistas y aliados piden indagar sabotaje en Metro de la CDMX Expansion in Spanish Retrieved 16 June 2023 Further reading editBeltran Gonzalez Jose Antonio Historia de los nombres de las estaciones del metro Mexico City 1973 Castaneda Luis M Spectacular Mexico Design Propaganda and the 1968 Olympics chapter 5 Subterranean Scenographies Time Travel at the Mexico City Metro Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 2014 Davis Diane E Urban Leviathan Mexico City in the Twentieth Century Philadelphia Temple University Press 1994 Derou Georges El metro de ciudad de Mexico visto por los franceses Presencia 1 1970 El arte del metro mexicano Life en Espanol 29 September 1969 Espinosa Ulloa Jorge El metro Una solucion al problema del transporte urbano Mexico City Representaciones y Servicios de Ingenieria 1975 Giniger Henry Mexico City Subway Runs Deep into the Past Relics of 600 Years in vast Quantity Are Being Unearthed New York Times 16 January 1969 8 Gussinyer Jordi Hallazgos en el metro Conjunto de adoratorios superpuestos en Pino Suarez Boletin del Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia 36 June 1969 Gomez Mayorga Mauricio Planificacion La ciudad de Mexico y sus transportes Calli 3 1960 Mexico City s Subway is for Viewing Fortune December 1969 Monsivais Carlos El metro Viaje hacia el fin del apretujon in Carlos Monsivais Los rituales del caos Mexico City Ediciones Era 1995 Navarro Bernardo and Ovidio Gonzalez Metro Metropoli Mexico Xochimilco UAM Instituto de Investigaciones Economicas 1989 Novo Salvador Cronica in El metro de Mexico Primera memoria Mexico City Sistema de Transporte Colectivo Metro 1973 Novo Salvador New Mexican Grandeur trans Noel Lindsay Mexico City PEMEX 1967 Rodriguez Antonio La solucion El metro o el monorriel Siempre 1 September 1965 Valencia Ramirez Ariel Tecnologia y cultura en el metro Presencia 1 1970 Villoro Juan The Metro in Ruben Gallo ed Mexico City Reader trans Lorna Scott Fox Madison University of Wisconsin Press 2004 Wise Sydney Thomas Mexico City s Metro The World s Highest Subway Quietly Rolls Along New York Times 3 August 1969 Wyman Lance Subway Signage in Peter Blake Subways of the World Examined by the Cooper Hewitt Museum New York Cooper Hewitt Museum 1977 Zamora Adolfo La cuestion del transito en una ciudad que carece de subsuelo adecuado para via subterraneas o elevadas Mexico City XVI Congreso Internacional de Planificacion y de la Habitacion August 1939 External links edit nbsp Media related to Mexico City subway at Wikimedia Commons Mexico City Metro official website in Spanish Metro Chabacano string quartet performance 2019 Google Doodle for the Mexico City Subway s 50th anniversary Portals nbsp Mexico nbsp Trains Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mexico City Metro amp oldid 1187502238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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