Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In November 2024, Metro Madrid announced that they had ordered 80 new trainsets from Spanish manufacturer CAF, with a total cost of about €950 million. [72] 40 of these trains will be of the broad loading gauge type; these are to be used on line and will be fully driverless – a first for the Madrid Metro. [73]
The C-4 is a line and rail service of Cercanías Madrid commuter rail network, operated by Renfe Operadora. It runs from Colmenar Viejo and Alcobendas – San Sebastián de los Reyes north of Madrid to Parla south of Madrid. [1] The C-4 shares tracks for part of its length with Madrid commuter rail service line C-3 through the city of Madrid ...
List of Madrid Metro stations. 6 languages. ... Unofficial network map - as of 2013. This is a list of the stations of the Madrid Metro. Line 1
Line 4 is a rapid transit line of the Madrid Metro connecting the west and center of Madrid with the said city's northeastern end, running between Argüelles and Pinar de Chamartín. It consists of a total of 23 narrow-gauge stations with 60-metre platforms.
Reverted to version as of 14:33, 28 July 2020 (UTC) This map is for the current network. For planned expansions, see File:Madrid Metro Map 2019-2023.svg 11:36, 7 January 2022
A harsh debate between the Madrid regional government (which operates the Metro) and the central government (which operates the Cercanías) about who is responsible for building the line to the new terminal of the Barajas Airport delayed the construction of any rail link. The Madrid Metro Line 8 extension to Terminal 4 opened in May 2007, while ...
Line 2 of the Madrid Metro is a rapid transit line in Madrid.It runs through the city center between the Las Rosas and Cuatro Caminos stations, for a total of 20 stations (the Cuatro Caminos - La Elipa section with 60-metre platforms and the La Almudena - Las Rosas with 90-metre platforms), linked by 14.1 km of track in a narrow gauge tunnel, with a journey that lasts approximately 33 minutes.
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.