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This diagram is current as of July 2021.This is a route-map template for Transportation in New Mexico, a United States railway network.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.
New Mexico Central Railroad: ATSF: 1908 1918 New Mexico Central Railway: New Mexico Central Railway: ATSF: 1918 1972 Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway: New Mexico Gateway Railroad: NMGR 2001 2006 N/A New Mexico Midland Railway: 1904 1931 none, route abandoned [1] hauled coal from Carthage to San Antonio, NM [1] New Mexico and Southern ...
The New Mexico Rail Runner Express (AAR reporting mark NMRX) is a commuter rail system serving the metropolitan areas of Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico.It is administered by the New Mexico Department of Transportation (NMDOT) and the Rio Metro Regional Transit District (Rio Metro), a regional transportation agency, while Herzog Transit Services currently [when?] holds the contract for ...
NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – A major winter storm brought heavy snow across New Mexico. Areas across the state are experiencing difficult and dangerous driving conditions. Areas seeing some of the ...
The Santa Fe Southern Railway (reporting mark SFSR) is a short line railroad in New Mexico, United States.In addition to carrying freight on occasion, it also operates as a tourist railroad called Sky Railway that carries passengers between Lamy and Santa Fe: a distance of 18.1 miles (29.1 km). [1]
Santa Fe County/NM 599 is a station on the New Mexico Rail Runner Express commuter rail line, located southwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico, in Santa Fe County. It opened August 1, 2009. The station platform is located in the median of Interstate Highway 25 adjacent to the State Highway 599 exit. A walkway over the northbound lanes of I-25 connects ...
The Southern Transcon is a main line of the BNSF Railway comprising 11 subdivisions between Southern California and Chicago, Illinois.Completed in its current alignment in 1908 by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, when it opened the Belen Cutoff in New Mexico (going through eastern New Mexico, northwestern Texas, briefly part of western Oklahoma and to Kansas) and bypassed the steep ...
The Pecos Valley Railway was established in 1890 by J.J. Hagerman to serve the growing irrigated agricultural area in southeastern New Mexico. From Pecos, Texas it reached Eddy (now Carlsbad) in 1891 and Roswell in 1892, but further expansion was delayed by the depression of 1893 .