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Constitución de 1917 is a terminal station at the southeastern end of line 8 of the Mexico City Metro in Mexico City, Mexico. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] In 2019, the station had an average ridership of 100,043 passengers per day, making it the fourth busiest station in the network.
Alegoría a la Ciudad de México y el Sistema de Transporte Colectivo at Line 5's lobby. Inside the station, there is a cultural display, an Internet café, a women's defense module, and a health module. [2] Outside the station, a public ministry office was established in 2002 to reduce criminal offenses within the station. [36]
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.
1985 plan for the Mexico City Metro with the earlier project for Line 12. In the 1980s, the Comisión de Vialidad y Transporte Urbano (COVITUR), an organization of the Federal District Department, presented a plan for the Mexico City Metro based on several studies and reports related to the rapid growth of the city and its demand for public transportation.
This station is one of the most important metro terminus in the city. It serves Mexico City's western bus depot, [9] which connects with areas of western Mexico such as México state, Michoacán, Jalisco, Querétaro and others. The Observatorio Mexico City Metro station is the 1st station of Line 1 and the Mexico City Metro system. Service at ...
Line 5 of the Mexico City Metro was built in early 1980s by Cometro, a subsidiary of Empresas ICA. [2] The line was inaugurated on 19 December 1981 and originally ran from Pantitlán (in Venustiano Carranza) to Consulado station (in the limits of Venustiano Carranza and Gustavo A. Madero), [3] with seven operative stations and a 9.154 kilometers (5.688 mi) long track. [4]
Peter Maxwell Davies's Vesalii Icones (1969), for male dancer, solo cello and instrumental ensemble, brings together the Stations of the Cross and a series of drawings from the anatomical treatise De humani corporis fabrica (1543) by the Belgian physician Andreas van Wesel .
View of the La Raza transportation hub from the outside of Line 3. La Raza is a metro transfer station in the Gustavo A. Madero borough, in northern Mexico City.The Line 3 station is situated below Avenida de los Insurgentes, while the Line 5 station lies along the intersection of Leoncavallo and Paganini Streets, near Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas.