fbpx
Wikipedia

Tren de la Costa

Tren de la Costa (in English: "Train of the Coast") is a suburban 15.5 km (9.6 mi), 11-station light rail line in Greater Buenos Aires, between Maipú Avenue station in the northern suburb of Olivos and Delta station in Tigre, on the Río de la Plata. The line connects with the Mitre line at Maipú station, via a footbridge across Avenida Maipú, for direct access to Retiro terminus in central Buenos Aires.

Tren de la Costa
One of the CAF-built
light rail cars that serve the line
Overview
Service typeLight rail
StatusActive
LocaleGreater Buenos Aires
PredecessorMitre Railway
First service1995; 29 years ago (1995)
Current operator(s)Trenes Argentinos
(2013–present)
Former operator(s)Sociedad Comercial del Plata
(1995–2013)
Ridership300,246 (2021)[1]
WebsiteTren de la Costa
Route
TerminiMaipú
Delta
Stops11
Distance travelled15.5 km (9.6 mi)
Average journey time30'
Service frequency30'
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Operating speed30 km/h (19 mph)
Track owner(s)Government of Argentina
Route map

Tren de la Costa is served by nine two-car trains sets. Each train has a capacity of 200 passengers and travels at an average speed of 35 km/h. The journey time is 30 minutes, with a frequency of 30 minutes. The service is currently operated by State-owned Trenes Argentinos Operaciones.

History edit

 
Former logo, from when the line was operated by SCP (1995-2013)
 
Borges station, in the residential area of Olivos

The original line was constructed between 1891 and 1896 as part of the Buenos Aires and Rosario Railway (BA&R) connecting Coghlan junction in the Buenos Aires neighbourhood of Belgrano with the port of Tigre and was known as the Tren del Bajo. Tracks ran following the course of the river, serving as an alternative route to Tigre, which was already served by the Buenos Aires Northern Railway.

The line was later absorbed by the Central Argentine Railway when this company took over the (BA&R) in 1908. The line was electrified in 1931 and after nationalisation in 1948, it became part of General Mitre Railway. In 1961 the Government of Argentina led by President Arturo Frondizi closed the B. Mitre-Delta branch due to the low number of passengers carried and high maintenance costs.[2]

In 1990 plans were formulated for the reopening of the line and with the railways being privatised in 1992, the Tren de la Costa company (part of Sociedad Comercial del Plata, controlled by local businessman Santiago Soldati) was formed to take over the concession for the service.

The track was converted from 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad gauge to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge, and re-electrified utilising an overhead system rather than the former third rail in 1994. Public services and related commercial operations began in April 1995, and the maiden ride was shared by Soldati, company and government officials, and President Carlos Menem.

 
CAF Unit 9 at Maipú in original livery

The company remodelled the eight stations of the branch and built three new stations, most of them with the concept of shopping mall centres, with San Isidro being the most representative of this. A new terminus, named "Maipú" was built just in front of former Bartolomé Mitre terminus. Both stations were connected through a pedestrian bridge over Maipú Avenue. Unlike the Retiro-B. Mitre branch, the new Maipú-Delta service was a light rail system, using articulated cars acquired from Spanish company Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF).

During the first years of service, the branch carried an average of 100,000 passengers (on weekends) due to it having been conceived as a tourist train, with Maipú, Libertador and San Isidro as its main commercial centres. Beside the Delta terminus, a new amusement park, Parque de la Costa was built, advertised as the largest in South America. Two years later, the Trillenium Casino opened beside the park and Delta station. These projects, as well as the shopping malls, were designed to be part of the "de la Costa" franchise.

Passenger numbers dropped significantly over the years following the opening of the line in 1995. Around 100,000 journeys were made each weekend initially; but, by 2005 there were just 150,000 a month, a third of which were foreign tourists.[3] While the economy later improved, this did not reverse the falloff in ridership, which declined to around 70,000 a month by 2010.[4] This affected both the railway and the amusement park. The SCP applied to the national government for a grant, but this was denied as the line was categorised as a tourist train, rather than one for public passenger transport. Most shops along the line closed.[5][6][7] The Government of Argentina revoked the concession to SCP,[8] taking over the Tren de la Costa through its subsidiary SOFSE.[9][10] This decision was published in the Argentine Official Bulletin on 3 Jun 2013.[11]

Concept edit

 
Catamaran VII operated by the Tren de la Costa franchise

The line and its stations were conceived to offer various forms of entertainment and enjoyment for both adults and children, being used by both tourists and commuters. Each station,[12] seven of which are original stations refurbished, has history and art displays, and substantial shopping areas were built at Maipú, Libertador and San Isidro. Borges Station, by the Olivos marina, was planned as 'the station of the arts' with an art café with open-air sculptures. Located nearby is the Juan Carlos Altavista Cinema (former "Cine York"), one of the oldest still operating in the world. Anchorena station was nicknamed The Tango station due to its cultural centre, and Barrancas station hosts an antiques fair.

The route between Libertador and San Isidro was adapted for use by walkers, joggers and cyclists. Delta station serves the Parque de la Costa, an amusement park, as well as Tigre's other important tourist attractions including the Trillenium Casino, a crafts fair, riverside restaurants and boat trips.

Stations edit

 
Barrancas station, where an antiques fair is held on weekends[13][14]
 
Libertador station
 
Anchorena building and platforms
Station Partido Facilities
Maipú Vicente López Accessible toilets, Parking lot, Coffeehouse, access to Mitre Line
Borges Accessible toilets, Coffeehouse
Libertador Accessible toilets, Parking lot, Coffeehouse, Supermarket, Retail
Anchorena San Isidro Accessible toilets, Parking lot, Coffeehouse
Barrancas Accessible toilets, Coffeehouse
San Isidro R Accessible toilets, Parking lot, Coffeehouse, Supermarket, Retail, Cinema
Punta Chica Accessible toilets,
Marina Nueva San Fernando Accessible toilets, Coffeehouse
San Fernando R Accessible toilets
Canal Accessible toilets, Coffeehouse
Delta [a] Tigre Accessible toilets, Coffeehouse, access to Parque de la Costa, river bus station [b] and Trilenium Casino
  New stations built by concessionary Sociedad Comercial del Plata.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The original Delta station building was inhabited by intruders when the concession was granted. To avoid delays, it was decided to build a new station some metres to the south until the problem was solved. Nowadays the original station building is operating as a restaurant.
  2. ^ The boat station (renamed "Estación Fluvial Domingo F. Sarmiento"[15]) is the original BA&R's Tigre station building. When TBA opened a new terminus in 1995, the old building fell into disuse. The Municipality of Tigre restored the building in 2000,[16] currently serving as the river bus station.

References edit

  1. ^ Informe estadístico 2021 at Trenes Argentinos
  2. ^ La línea Maipú-Delta, un potencial desaprovechado - EnElSubte, 20 April 2015.
  3. ^ "El Tren de la Costa ya cumplió 10 años y no termina de arrancar", Clarín, 10 Nov 2005
  4. ^ "Servicios Públicos", INDEC, 30 April 2010
  5. ^ "Tren de la Costa: la abrupta caída de usuarios precipitó el final de una época de oro", La Nación, 28 Jun 2013
  6. ^ "Tren de la Costa: del paseo de lujo a un objeto de colección", Clarín, 23 Apr 2012
  7. ^ "Abandono y desolación en las estaciones del Tren de la Costa", Perfil, 23 Sep 2012 13 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "El Ministerio de Transporte le rescindió el contrato al Tren de la Costa por incumplimiento", Telam, 4 Jun 2013]
  9. ^ "Estatizan el Tren de la Costa, terrenos del Parque y dos ramales de cargas ferroviarias", La Nación, 5 June 2013
  10. ^ "Tren y Parque de la Costa pasan a manos del Estado", Página/12, 5 Jun 2013
  11. ^ Resolución 477/2013 - Boletín Oficial de Argentina
  12. ^
  13. ^ "Un viaje al pasado en el Bajo de Acassuso", La Nación, 9 Feb 2010
  14. ^ "Feria de Anticuarios: tesoros y pasiones de coleccionistas", Clarín, 19 Feb 2012
  15. ^ "Transporte Fluvial" on Municipalidad de Tigre website Archived 2015-02-05 at archive.today
  16. ^ "Estación Fluvial: información"

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Tren de la Costa (unofficial)

tren, costa, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translations, trans. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish May 2022 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Tren de la Costa see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated es Tren de la Costa to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation For the planned railway line in Peru see Tren de la Costa Peru For the planned railway line between Valencia and Alicante see Tren de la Costa Spain Tren de la Costa in English Train of the Coast is a suburban 15 5 km 9 6 mi 11 station light rail line in Greater Buenos Aires between Maipu Avenue station in the northern suburb of Olivos and Delta station in Tigre on the Rio de la Plata The line connects with the Mitre line at Maipu station via a footbridge across Avenida Maipu for direct access to Retiro terminus in central Buenos Aires Tren de la CostaOne of the CAF built light rail cars that serve the lineOverviewService typeLight railStatusActiveLocaleGreater Buenos AiresPredecessorMitre RailwayFirst service1995 29 years ago 1995 Current operator s Trenes Argentinos 2013 present Former operator s Sociedad Comercial del Plata 1995 2013 Ridership300 246 2021 1 WebsiteTren de la CostaRouteTerminiMaipuDeltaStops11Distance travelled15 5 km 9 6 mi Average journey time30 Service frequency30 TechnicalTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeOperating speed30 km h 19 mph Track owner s Government of ArgentinaRoute map Tren de la Costa is served by nine two car trains sets Each train has a capacity of 200 passengers and travels at an average speed of 35 km h The journey time is 30 minutes with a frequency of 30 minutes The service is currently operated by State owned Trenes Argentinos Operaciones Contents 1 History 2 Concept 3 Stations 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Former logo from when the line was operated by SCP 1995 2013 nbsp Borges station in the residential area of Olivos vteTren de la Costa Legend nbsp Delta nbsp Canal nbsp nbsp Depot nbsp nbsp nbsp Canal San Fernando nbsp San Fernando R nbsp Marina Nueva nbsp Punta Chica nbsp San Isidro R nbsp Las Barrancas nbsp Anchorena nbsp Libertador nbsp nbsp nbsp Avenida del Libertador nbsp nbsp nbsp Mitre Line Retiro Tigre nbsp Borges nbsp Maipu nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Avenida Maipu nbsp Mitre Line Retiro Maipu The original line was constructed between 1891 and 1896 as part of the Buenos Aires and Rosario Railway BA amp R connecting Coghlan junction in the Buenos Aires neighbourhood of Belgrano with the port of Tigre and was known as the Tren del Bajo Tracks ran following the course of the river serving as an alternative route to Tigre which was already served by the Buenos Aires Northern Railway The line was later absorbed by the Central Argentine Railway when this company took over the BA amp R in 1908 The line was electrified in 1931 and after nationalisation in 1948 it became part of General Mitre Railway In 1961 the Government of Argentina led by President Arturo Frondizi closed the B Mitre Delta branch due to the low number of passengers carried and high maintenance costs 2 In 1990 plans were formulated for the reopening of the line and with the railways being privatised in 1992 the Tren de la Costa company part of Sociedad Comercial del Plata controlled by local businessman Santiago Soldati was formed to take over the concession for the service The track was converted from 5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm broad gauge to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge and re electrified utilising an overhead system rather than the former third rail in 1994 Public services and related commercial operations began in April 1995 and the maiden ride was shared by Soldati company and government officials and President Carlos Menem nbsp CAF Unit 9 at Maipu in original livery The company remodelled the eight stations of the branch and built three new stations most of them with the concept of shopping mall centres with San Isidro being the most representative of this A new terminus named Maipu was built just in front of former Bartolome Mitre terminus Both stations were connected through a pedestrian bridge over Maipu Avenue Unlike the Retiro B Mitre branch the new Maipu Delta service was a light rail system using articulated cars acquired from Spanish company Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles CAF During the first years of service the branch carried an average of 100 000 passengers on weekends due to it having been conceived as a tourist train with Maipu Libertador and San Isidro as its main commercial centres Beside the Delta terminus a new amusement park Parque de la Costa was built advertised as the largest in South America Two years later the Trillenium Casino opened beside the park and Delta station These projects as well as the shopping malls were designed to be part of the de la Costa franchise Passenger numbers dropped significantly over the years following the opening of the line in 1995 Around 100 000 journeys were made each weekend initially but by 2005 there were just 150 000 a month a third of which were foreign tourists 3 While the economy later improved this did not reverse the falloff in ridership which declined to around 70 000 a month by 2010 4 This affected both the railway and the amusement park The SCP applied to the national government for a grant but this was denied as the line was categorised as a tourist train rather than one for public passenger transport Most shops along the line closed 5 6 7 The Government of Argentina revoked the concession to SCP 8 taking over the Tren de la Costa through its subsidiary SOFSE 9 10 This decision was published in the Argentine Official Bulletin on 3 Jun 2013 11 Concept edit nbsp Catamaran VII operated by the Tren de la Costa franchise The line and its stations were conceived to offer various forms of entertainment and enjoyment for both adults and children being used by both tourists and commuters Each station 12 seven of which are original stations refurbished has history and art displays and substantial shopping areas were built at Maipu Libertador and San Isidro Borges Station by the Olivos marina was planned as the station of the arts with an art cafe with open air sculptures Located nearby is the Juan Carlos Altavista Cinema former Cine York one of the oldest still operating in the world Anchorena station was nicknamed The Tango station due to its cultural centre and Barrancas station hosts an antiques fair The route between Libertador and San Isidro was adapted for use by walkers joggers and cyclists Delta station serves the Parque de la Costa an amusement park as well as Tigre s other important tourist attractions including the Trillenium Casino a crafts fair riverside restaurants and boat trips Stations edit nbsp Barrancas station where an antiques fair is held on weekends 13 14 nbsp Libertador station nbsp Anchorena building and platforms Station Partido Facilities Maipu Vicente Lopez Accessible toilets Parking lot Coffeehouse access to Mitre Line Borges Accessible toilets Coffeehouse Libertador Accessible toilets Parking lot Coffeehouse Supermarket Retail Anchorena San Isidro Accessible toilets Parking lot Coffeehouse Barrancas Accessible toilets Coffeehouse San Isidro R Accessible toilets Parking lot Coffeehouse Supermarket Retail Cinema Punta Chica Accessible toilets Marina Nueva San Fernando Accessible toilets Coffeehouse San Fernando R Accessible toilets Canal Accessible toilets Coffeehouse Delta a Tigre Accessible toilets Coffeehouse access to Parque de la Costa river bus station b and Trilenium Casino New stations built by concessionary Sociedad Comercial del Plata See also editTrams in Buenos Aires Parque de la Costa Buenos Aires and Rosario Railway Light railNotes edit The original Delta station building was inhabited by intruders when the concession was granted To avoid delays it was decided to build a new station some metres to the south until the problem was solved Nowadays the original station building is operating as a restaurant The boat station renamed Estacion Fluvial Domingo F Sarmiento 15 is the original BA amp R s Tigre station building When TBA opened a new terminus in 1995 the old building fell into disuse The Municipality of Tigre restored the building in 2000 16 currently serving as the river bus station References edit Informe estadistico 2021 at Trenes Argentinos La linea Maipu Delta un potencial desaprovechado EnElSubte 20 April 2015 El Tren de la Costa ya cumplio 10 anos y no termina de arrancar Clarin 10 Nov 2005 Servicios Publicos INDEC 30 April 2010 Tren de la Costa la abrupta caida de usuarios precipito el final de una epoca de oro La Nacion 28 Jun 2013 Tren de la Costa del paseo de lujo a un objeto de coleccion Clarin 23 Apr 2012 Abandono y desolacion en las estaciones del Tren de la Costa Perfil 23 Sep 2012 Archived 13 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine El Ministerio de Transporte le rescindio el contrato al Tren de la Costa por incumplimiento Telam 4 Jun 2013 Estatizan el Tren de la Costa terrenos del Parque y dos ramales de cargas ferroviarias La Nacion 5 June 2013 Tren y Parque de la Costa pasan a manos del Estado Pagina 12 5 Jun 2013 Resolucion 477 2013 Boletin Oficial de Argentina Estaciones en la Costa by Pablo Guiraldes Summa magazine 14 Un viaje al pasado en el Bajo de Acassuso La Nacion 9 Feb 2010 Feria de Anticuarios tesoros y pasiones de coleccionistas Clarin 19 Feb 2012 Transporte Fluvial on Municipalidad de Tigre website Archived 2015 02 05 at archive today Estacion Fluvial informacion External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tren de la Costa Official website nbsp Tren de la Costa unofficial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tren de la Costa amp oldid 1179349975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.