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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]
This is a list of the stations of the Madrid Metro. Line 1 Pinar ... Feria de Madrid; Aeropuerto T1-T2-T3; Barajas; Aeropuerto T4; Line 9
Madrid Metro lines 6, 8 and 10: Madrid: Sol* C-3: Madrid Metro lines 1, 2 and 3: Madrid: Atocha* C-1, C-2, C-3, C-5, C-7, C-8, C-10: Renfe Operadora-operated high-speed and long-distance rail services Madrid Metro line 1 at Atocha Renfe station National and international coach services: Madrid: Villaverde Bajo C-3 — Madrid: Villaverde Alto* C ...
Estadio Metropolitano ([esˈtaðjo metɾopoliˈtano], formerly Estadio Olímpico) is a station on Line 7 of the Madrid Metro.It is located in fare Zone A. [1] Passengers going eastbound to stations beyond this station will have to change trains from line 7A to 7B using the island platform, the same situation happens for those coming from the towns of Coslada and San Fernando.
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.
The Line 1 was the first line of the Madrid Metro, and was inaugurated on 17 October 1919. It was opened to the public on 31 October 1919. It originally ran from Cuatro Caminos and Sol , containing 6 intermediate stops: Red de San Luis (now Gran Vía), Hospicio (now Tribunal), Bilbao , Chamberí , Martinez Campos (now Iglesia), and Ríos Rosas .
This list of metro systems includes electrified rapid transit train systems worldwide. In some parts of the world, metro systems are referred to as subways, undergrounds, tubes, mass rapid transit (MRT), metrô or U-Bahn. As of 22 December 2024, 204 cities in 63 countries operate 884 metro lines.