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Madrid Metro

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Madrid Metro
Image:MetroMadridLogo.png
Locale Madrid
Transit type Rapid transit
Began operation 1919
System length 282.5 km (175.5 mi)[1]
No. of lines 13
No. of stations 231[1]
Madrid Light Metro
Image:LogoMetroLigero.png
Locale Madrid
Transit type Light metro
Began operation 2007
System length 28 km (17 mi)
No. of lines 3
No. of stations 38
typical Madrid metro entrance, designed by Antonio Palacios, at Tribunal station
typical Madrid metro entrance, designed by Antonio Palacios, at Tribunal station


The Madrid Metro is the large metro system serving the city of Madrid. It is one of the largest metro systems in the world, which is especially remarkable considering Madrid's population of approximately 3.5 million (Madrid city) to 6 million (metropolitan area). In fact, it is among the top 10 longest metros in the world, though Madrid is approximately the twenty fifth most populous metropolitan area in the world. It is also one of many fast growing systems in the world, rivaled, among many others, by the Seoul Metro or the Beijing Subway.

Contents

History

The first line of the Madrid metro opened on 17 October 1919 under the direction of the Compañía de Metro Alfonso XIII, with 8 stations and 3.5 km. It was constructed in a narrow section and the stations had 60 m platforms. The enlargement of this line and the construction of two others followed shortly after 1919. In 1936, the network had three lines and a branch line between Opera and Norte railway station. All these stations served as air raid shelters during the Spanish Civil War.

After the civil war the public works to extend the network went on little by little. In 1944 a fourth line was constructed and it absorbed the branch of line 2 between Goya and Diego de León in 1958, a branch that was intended to be part of line 4 since its construction but was exploited as a branch of line 2 until the construction of line 4.

In the sixties, a suburban railway was constructed between Plaza de España and Carabanchel, linked to lines 2 (in Noviciado station with a long aisle) and 3. A fifth metro line was constructed as well with narrow section but 90 m platforms. Shortly after opening the first section of line 5, the platforms in line 1 were enlarged from 60 to 90 m, closing Chamberí station since it was too close to Iglesia (less than 500 m). Chamberí has been closed ever after and it is planned to rearrange the station to install a Museum.

At the beginning of the seventies, the network was subsequently greatly expanded to cope with the influx of population and urban sprawl from Madrid's economic boom. New lines were planned with large 115 m platforms. Lines 4 and 5 were enlarged as well. In 1979, bad management led to a crisis. Works already started were finished during the eighties and all remaining projects were abandoned. After all these projects, 100 km of rail track had been completed and the suburban railway had also disappeared since it had been extended to Alonso Martínez and thence converted to line 10.

At the beginning of the nineties, control of the network was transferred to a public enterprise, Metro de Madrid. More large-scale expansion projects were presented. Lines 1, 4 and 7 were extended and a new line 11 was constructed towards the outlying areas of Madrid. Lines 8 and 10 were joined into a longer line 10, a new line 8 was constructed to expand the underground network towards the airport and the enlarged line 9 was the first to leave the outskirts of Madrid to arrive in Rivas-Vaciamadrid and Arganda del Rey, two towns located in the southeast suburbs of Madrid.

A huge project in early 2000s installed approximately 50 km of new metro tunnels, including a direct connection between downtown Madrid (Nuevos Ministerios) and the airport, lengthening (line 8), and adding service to the outskirts with a huge 40 km loop called MetroSur serving Madrid's southern suburbs.

MetroSur, one of the largest ever civil engineering projects in Europe, opened on 11 April 2003. It includes 40 km of tunnel and 28 new stations, including an interchange station and an additional station on Line 10, which connects it to the city centre and stations linking to the local train network. Its construction began in June 2000 and the whole loop was completed in less than three years. It connects Getafe, Móstoles, Alcorcón, Fuenlabrada, and Leganés, five towns located in the area south of Madrid.

Most of the current efforts of Madrid provincial government are channeled towards the enlargement of the Metro network. In the recently finished 2003-2007 term, President Esperanza Aguirre funded a multi-billion dollar project, which has added to, joined, or extended almost all of the metro lines. The project included the addition of 90 km and the construction of 80 new stations. It has carried the underground railway to many districts that had never previously had Metro service (Villaverde, Manoteras, Carabanchel Alto, La Elipa, Pinar de Chamartín) and to the eastern and northern outskirts as well (Coslada, San Fernando de Henares, Alcobendas, San Sebastián de los Reyes). For the first time in Madrid, 3 interurban light rail lines were built to the western outskirts (Pozuelo de Alarcón, Boadilla del Monte), mL2 and mL3 (ML for Metro Ligero) and to the new northern districts of Sanchinarro and Las Tablas. As a last-minute addition, a project on line 8 connected it to the new T4 terminal of Madrid-Barajas Airport.

Station design and setup

Stations in the Madrid metro reveal their age in their design: older stations on the narrow lines are often quite compact, rather like the stations on the Paris Metro. They were decorated with tilings in different colour schemes depending on the station. In recent years, most of these stations have been refurbished with single coloured plates matching those in the newest ones. The stations built between the late 70s and the early 90s are slightly more spacious and most of them have cream colored walls.

On the other hand, the most recent stations are built with space in mind, and are considered amogst the best in the world for their natural-like lighting and ample entryways. The colour scheme varies between stations, using single-colored plates and covering the whole station in light colors. Recently built transfer stations have white walls, but this is not the norm.

Most stations are built with two side platforms, and a handful of them (the busiest transfers) have a central island platform theoretically dedicated to exits. This system was originally used in the Barcelona Metro and is called the Spanish solution. Stations with this setup include:

  • Line 4 Arguelles
  • Line 5 Aluche, Campamento
  • Line 6 Avenida De América, Manuel Becerra, Pacífico, Sáinz De Baranda, Plaza Elíptica, Oporto, Nuevos Ministerios
  • Line 7 Avenida De América, Pueblo Nuevo, Estadio Olímpico
  • Line 8 Campo De Las Naciones, Aeropuerto T4
  • Line 9 Puerta De Arganda, Rivas Urbanizaciones, Arganda Del Rey
  • Line 10 Tres Olivos, Joaquín Vilumbrales

Finally, some stations have a particular setup which allows extremely fast transfers between two lines: one goes through the outer side of two island platforms, while the other goes through the inner side. Usually the setup is tuned so that trains going in the same direction surround the same platform, i.e. if you transfer off a northbound train to board another northbound one, you only have to stay in the same platform. However, if you want to board a southbound train, you'd need to switch platforms. The only stations with this setup are Príncipe Pío (Image:Madrid-MetroLinea6.pngImage:Madrid-MetroLinea10.pngImage:Madrid-MetroRamal.png) and Casa de Campo (Image:Madrid-MetroLinea5.pngImage:Madrid-MetroLinea10.png).

Lines

Image:Madrid Metro Map.svg
Unofficial map - network as of June 2007

The Metro network has 231 stations on 12 lines plus one branch line, totalling 282 km, of which approximately 92% is underground.[citation needed] Additionally, some 30 km of Metro Ligero (light rail) lines serve the various regions of the metropolitan area which have been deemed not populated enough to justify the extraordinary spending of new Metro lines. Most of the ML track length is on surface, usually running on platforms separated from normal road traffic. However, ML1 line has some underground stretches and stations. Traditionally, the Madrid metro was restricted to the city proper, but today nearly one third of its track length runs outside the border of the Madrid municipality. Today, the Metro network is divided in five regions:

  • MetroMadrid (zone A): the core network inside the Madrid city borders, with over two thirds of the overall length. Also includes the light rail line Image:Madrid MetroLigero1.svg.
  • MetroSur (zones B1 and B2): line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea12.png and the last two stations of line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea10.png, Joaquín Vilumbrales and Puerta del Sur. Runs through the southern cities of Alcorcón, Leganés, Getafe, Fuenlabrada and Móstoles.
  • MetroEste (zone B1): a prolongation of line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea7.png from Estadio Olímpico to Hospital de Henares through the municipalities of Coslada and San Fernando de Henares.
  • MetroNorte (zone B1): opened in 2007, includes the stretch of line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea10.png from La Granja to Hospital del Norte. Services the northern outskirts of Madrid and the towns of Alcobendas and San Sebastián de los Reyes. There is a train interchange inside the line at Tres Olivos station.
  • MetrOeste (zones B1 and B2): comprised by the Metro Ligero lines Image:Madrid MetroLigero2.svg and Image:Madrid MetroLigero3.svg. Connects the towns of Pozuelo de Alarcón and Boadilla del Monte to line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea10.png at Colonia Jardín station.
  • TFM (zones B1, B2 and B3): a prolongation of line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea9.png from Puerta de Arganda, the first ever outside the borders of Madrid, services the cities of Rivas-Vacíamadrid and Arganda del Rey.

At most of the borders between the regions, one has to switch trains even when staying in the same line, because the train frequency is higher in the core MetroMadrid than in the outer regions.

Madrid also has an extensive commuter train (Cercanías) network operated by Renfe, the national rail line, which is intermodal with the metro network. In fact, 22 Cercanías stations have connections to the Metro network, which is indicated on the official map by the Cercanías logo. Many of the new lines since 1999 have been build to link to or end at Cercanías stations, like the ML2 line, which ends at the Aravaca station providing a fast entry into Madrid though the C-7 or C-10 commuter lines and arriving in only one step to the bus and Metro hub Príncipe Pío (Image:Madrid-MetroLinea6.pngImage:Madrid-MetroLinea10.pngImage:Madrid-MetroRamal.png).

See also the list of Madrid metro stations.

Line Terminus Length Stations Loading gauge Platform Main service by Configuration
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea1.png Pinar de Chamartín – Valdecarros 23.8 km / 14.7 miles 33 narrow 90 m CAF s. 2000-A M.R-M.R-R.M
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea2.png La Elipa – Cuatro Caminos 9.5 km / 5.9 miles 16 60 m CAF s. 3000 MRRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea3.png Villaverde Alto – Moncloa 16.4 km / 10.2 Miles 18 90 m CAF s. 3000 MRSSRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea4.png Argüelles – Pinar de Chamartín 16 km / 9.9 miles 23 60 m CAF s. 3000 MRRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea5.png Alameda de Osuna – Casa de Campo 23.2 km / 14.5 miles 32 90 m CAF s. 2000-B M.R-M.R-R.M
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea6.png Circular 23.5 km / 14.6 miles 28 wide 115 m CAF s. 5000 M.M-M.M-M.M
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea7.png Pitis – Estadio Olímpico – Hospital del Henares 31.2 km / 19.4 miles 29 AnsaldoBreda s. 9000 MRSSRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea8.png Nuevos Ministerios – Aeropuerto 16.4 km / 10.2 miles 8 CAF s. 8000 MRSM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea9.png Herrera Oria – Puerta de Arganda – Arganda del Rey 38 km / 23.6 miles 26 CAF s. 6000 & 8000 MRM-MRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea10.png Hospital del Norte – Tres Olivos – Puerta del Sur 39.9 km / 24.8 miles 31 AnsaldoBreda s. 7000 MRSSRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea11.png Plaza Elíptica – La Peseta 5.3 km / 3.3 miles 6 CAF s. 3000 MRSSRM
Image:Madrid-MetroLinea12.png MetroSur 40.7 km / 25.3 miles (Circular) 28 CAF s. 8000 MRM-MRM
Image:Madrid-MetroRamal.png Ópera – Príncipe Pío 1.1 km / 0.7 miles 2 narrow 60 m CAF s. 2000 M.R-R.M
MLImage:Madrid MetroLigero1.svg Pinar de Chamartín – Las Tablas 5.4 km / 3.4 miles 9 tramway 32 m Alstom Citadis 302 MRRRM
MLImage:Madrid MetroLigero2.svg Colonia Jardín – Estación de Aravaca 8.7 km / 5.4 miles 13
MLImage:Madrid MetroLigero3.svg Colonia Jardín – Puerta de Boadilla 13,7 km / 8.6 miles 16
Notes
  • Line Image:Madrid-MetroRamal.png is for Ramal ("branch")
  • Old stations are not accessible to people with disabilities but since 1995 all new stations must be accessible by law. Thus, both new stations and renewed old ones have elevators for people on wheelchairs, huge signs for the visually impaired, etc.
  • All narrow loading gauge lines except line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea5.png had originally 60m platforms. Line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea1.png was the first to have theirs extended to 90m, while line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea3.png had to wait until the 2000s: prior to its recent extension to the southern district of Villaverde, it was completely closed for nearly a year and thoroughly renewed. Thus, one of the worst lines of the network, both in terms of trains and facilities, became the shiniest between the narrow-gauged, and was the first to receive the all-new CAF Series 3000 trains.
  • Configurations: M - engine (Motor), R - passive (Remolque), S - cabless engine (motor Sin cabina). Dots/dashes mean crossable/complete basic unit separation, while their absence implies a walkable aisle throughout the joined units.
  • Alstom Citadis 302 tramways have one motor "car", one suspended, one with bogie but without motors, one suspended, one motor.

Rolling stock

Traditionally, the trains operating in the Madrid Metro have been built and supplied by the Spanish company Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF). This was particularly true under Francisco Franco's dictatorship, due to the politic of autarchy his administration initially pursued. However, in recent years the Italian Ansaldobreda has also provided trains for the wide-profile lines.

Every rolling unit in the Madrid Metro has a unique ID that singles it out in the whole network. Those IDs are grouped by the rolling unit model (the "series") and thus is used to categorize the trains, as they bear no user-visible statement of the model specified by the manufacturer. An ID is made up of:

  • A letter indicating the type of rolling unit: M for a car with both engines and driver's cabin (Spanish Motor), R for an engineless car, with or without drivers cabin (Spanish Remolque) and S for a cabinless car with engines (Spanish motor Sin cabina).
  • A dash separating the two components
  • A three or four digit number indicating the unit's series and the position within it. Usually, the series is indicated by the thousands and hundreds (i.e. 5281 indicates a series 5000, subseries 200 train).

Trainsets currently in use

Narrow profile

Image:Madrid - Estación Marqués de Vadillo - 20060910.jpg
A series 2000-B "bubble" metro train on line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea5.png at Marqués de Vadillo station.
  • CAF series 2000: This series has two separate subseries usually called A and B. The first iteration, while reliable and practical, was extremely "box-like" in its looks. In contrast, the B subseries trainsets can be told apart by its sleeker, rounder forms, which has granted them the surname of "bubble" (Spanish burbuja) for their round driver cabin. Series 2000A are currently the more numerous in the network: 530 cars[2] were built and delivered between 1985 and 1993[3], having serviced every narrow profile line. They are also among the oldest stock in operation in the Madrid Metro, so some of them (namely, those servicing lines Image:Madrid-MetroLinea2.png and Image:Madrid-MetroRamal.png) have been scheduled for retirement with the purchase of newer series 3000 sets. However, the most reliable ones are being refurbished and painted with new, lighter colors like the ones used in Series 3000, and will continue to service line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea1.png indeterminately. Series 2000B were delivered in lesser numbers (about 126 cars) between 1997 and 1998[4], with the inclusion of air conditioning and visual/vocal reminders of the next stations. They are currently used in line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea5.png, with no plans for retirement.
    • CAF series 3000: The newest of the narrow line trainsets, series 3000 were commissioned for the reopening of line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea3.png after its complete renewal in the early 2000s. Their constituent subunits can be completely joined through crossable articulations, making it possible to go from the head to the tail without actually exiting the train. This has earned them the surname of "boa", a term usually applied in Spain to double-length buses with such joints. They are currently servicing lines Image:Madrid-MetroLinea3.png and Image:Madrid-MetroLinea4.png, but newer purchases are also scheduled to replace the trains in lines Image:Madrid-MetroLinea2.png and Image:Madrid-MetroRamal.png before 2010. Series 3000 trains look rather like a narrowed version of series 8000, while the inner decoration uses mainly yellow and light blue tones.

    Wide profile

    • CAF series 5000: Currently servicing line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea6.png, this model has had a long history: the first trainsets were delivered in 1974[5] for the newly-opened, first wide-profile line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea7.png, while the latest subseries, 5500, of which 24 trainsets of 6 cars each were built, entered service in 1993[6]. They were the last to use the old, square "box-like" design from CAF, which was already becoming unpopular for its exaggerate priming of effectiveness versus aesthetics. The first iteration featured a wood lookalike coating for the inner walls and a novel seat distribution in two-seat rows perpendicular to the train walls, making them look not unlike older regional trains. Subseries 5100-5200 returned to the traditional seating along the train walls, but still included another feature from the first iteration, automatic opening of all the gates in the train. The final subseries, 5500, has a distinct, darker color scheme and returns to the usual on-demand opening of train gates with a button on each one. Being the oldest rolling stock in operation in the wide profile lines, this series is scheduled for replacement by the newer Ansaldobreda series 9000 in 2008-2009, while negotiations are open for its sale to the Buenos Aires Metro.
      • Image:Madrid - Estación Concha Espina - 20060910.jpg
        A CAF series 6000 train entering Concha Espina station.
        CAF series 6000':This model, of which 29 trainsets were built and delivered in 1998[7], was the first by CAF to feature a new, sleeker and rounder design. As it was to serve TFM, the stretch of line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea9.png connecting Madrid to Arganda del Rey (the first extension of the Metro network outside Madrid proper), its interior resembles the regional Cercanías trains more closely than any other Metro trains: compact seats in couples set perpendicularly to the train walls, more places to grasp in case of a sudden brake/acceleration, etc. They were also the first to include luminous panels stating their destination, as the line they service was effectively split in two stretches, and travellers had to switch trains at Puerta de Arganda. Finally, they primed the "boa train" layout (see CAF s.3000), but the walkable aisle only spanned two cars, while a trainset would usually carry 4 or 6. Series 6000 is currently the main service for line Image:Madrid-MetroLinea9.png.
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