Line 9 (Madrid Metro)

Line 9
Paco de Lucía Station
Paco de Lucía Station
Overview
Native nameLínea 9
OwnerCRTM
LocaleMadrid
Termini
Stations29
Websitemetromadrid.es/en/linea/linea-9
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemMadrid Metro
Operator(s)CRTM
Rolling stockCAF 5000, 6000
AnsaldoBreda 7000, 9000
History
Opened31 January 1980; 44 years ago (1980-01-31)
Technical
Line length39.5 km (24.5 mi)
CharacterUnderground
Track gauge1,445 mm (4 ft 8+78 in)
Route map

Paco de Lucía
Mirasierra
Herrera Oria
Barrio del Pilar
Ventilla
Plaza de Castilla
Duque de Pastrana
Pío XII
Colombia
Concha Espina
Cruz del Rayo
Avenida de América
Núñez de Balboa
Príncipe de Vergara
Ibiza
Sainz de Baranda
Estrella
Vinateros
Artilleros
Pavones
Valdebernardo
Vicálvaro
San Cipriano
Puerta de Arganda
Zone
A
B1
Rivas Urbanizaciones
Rivas Futura
Zone
B1
B2
Rivas Vaciamadrid
Zone
B2
B3
La Poveda
Arganda del Rey

Line 9 of the Madrid Metro is a rapid transit line in Madrid that originally opened on 31 January 1980 between Sainz de Baranda and Pavones. Later it was extended from Avenida de América to Herrera Oria on 3 June 1983, though this section was at the time separate from the original part until the missing fragment from Avenida de América to Sainz de Baranda was opened on 24 February 1986.

History

On 1 December 1998, the line was extended from Pavones to Puerta de Arganda. The stations in this section were marked with a unique wall color in each station, making it easy to spot one's destination from the train. For example, Pavones is white, Valdebernardo is yellow, Vicálvaro is a light shade of turquoise, and San Cipriano is orange. This approach is being applied in many other new or recently refurbished stations like Sevilla on Line 2, though there is no representation of the colours on official system maps.

On 11 July 2008, the infill station Rivas Futura opened, located between Rivas-Urbanizaciones and Rivas Vaciamadrid.

On 28 March 2011, the line was extended north from Herrera Oria to Mirasierra. On 25 March 2015 the line was extended further north to Paco de Lucía. Originally, this station was to be named Costa Brava, but because musician and guitarist Paco de Lucía died in 2014, the Transport Authorities decided to change its name to pay tribute. A Cercanías railway station opened on 5 February 2018, providing a connection between the two rail systems.[1]

Line 9B

At Puerta de Arganda, an island platform was built, so passengers who required to use the southern extension ("line 9B") can move directly across the platform to from the primary route ("line 9A"). This southern extension runs through mostly unpopulated areas connecting the two towns of Rivas-Vaciamadrid and Arganda del Rey. The line runs with only two or three car trains at comparatively long intervals through scenic landscape of Spanish desert. Rivas-Urbanizaciones and Arganda del Rey are underground stations with large island platforms, and Rivas Futura, Rivas Vaciamadrid and La Poveda are surface stations with side platforms. Given the continuous growth of particularly Rivas-Vaciamadrid, there are many plans for the future of Line 9B. Most concretely, the municipal government intends to construct a new station at Calle José Saramago between Rivas-Urbanizaciones and Rivas Futura[2][3] and to cover a stretch of tracks to remedy the current state of surface segments effectively cutting the city in half.[4]

Rolling stock

Class 5000 and 9000 usually run on Line 9A with occasional class 6000s, and class 6000s usually run on Line 9B.

See also

References

  1. ^ "La estación de Cercanías Mirasierra-Paco de Lucía, en servicio desde este martes". 5 February 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
  2. ^ González, Celia (2019-03-28). "Rivas cede a la Comunidad una parcela para construir una nueva estación de Metro en la calle de José Saramago". Diario de Rivas (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-09-12.
  3. ^ "Parcela cedida por Rivas para la construcción de una cuarta estación de Metro". Google My Maps. Retrieved 2019-09-12.
  4. ^ Errejón, Miriam (2019-09-11). "Rivas organizará una consulta ciudadana no vinculante para seleccionar el proyecto que cubrirá las vías del Metro". Diario de Rivas (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-09-12.

External links

  • Madrid Metro (official website)
  • Schematic map of the Metro network – from the official site (in English)
  • Madrid at UrbanRail.net
  • ENGLISH User guide, ticket types, airport supplement and timings
  • Network map (real-distance)
  • Madrid Metro Map
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