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In 2016, the then governor Miguel Ángel Mancera renamed the card to Tarjeta CDMX after the Federal District was renamed to Mexico City. [citation needed] The card was discontinued on January 30, 2020, with all TDF cards remaining valid until January 31, 2020. They were replaced with the Tarjeta de Movilidad Integrada.
Transportation in Mexico City consists of multiple public transit systems that together conform the Integrated Mobility System of Mexico City (Sistema de Movilidad Integrada de la Ciudad de México). This System includes the Mexico City Metro , extensive bus/ BRT systems (the Metrobús , RTP , the trolleybus ), as well as the Xochimilco Light ...
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]
Monumento a la Revolución, a monument commemorating the Mexican Revolution located in Plaza de la República (Republic Square). Paseo de la Reforma, emblematic avenue of Mexico City. Alameda Central, public urban park in downtown Mexico City and oldest public park in the Americas. Palacio de Bellas Artes, Palace of Fine Arts, cultural center.
Line 3 runs 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Tenayuca northwest of the city southward to Pueblo Santa Cruz Atoyac, where there is connection to Metro Zapata station. [13] According to the Mexican newspaper, El Universal, construction of the first 16 km (9.9 mi) of Línea 3 (line 3) began on 5 March 2010 and was scheduled to end in April 2011. [14]
Line 12, also known as the Golden Line from its color on the system map, is a rapid transit line of the Mexico City Metro network. It travels 25.1 kilometers (15.6 mi) along the boroughs of Benito Juárez, Iztapalapa and Tláhuac in southwestern, central-southern and southeastern Mexico City, serving twenty stations.
[2] [3] It is located in the southern reaches of Mexico City, in Coyoacán borough. [2] A surface station, it is the current terminus of Line 3. [2] [4] The station was opened on 30 August 1983. [4] In 2021, the station had an average ridership of 25,858 passengers per day, making it the fifteenth busiest station in the network. [5]
Calle de República de Guatemala is a street located in the historic center of Mexico City. [1] It is named after the country of Guatemala, a name it received in 1921. [2] Museo Archivo de la Fotografía is located in this street. [3] [4]