Mexico City metro lines
Presented below are the lines within the Mexico City Metro system, as of 2014, organized by number. The order in which they are listed follows the convention used by Sistema de Transporte Colectivo (the public company that manages the system) to list the stations in north-south and west-east fashion. This system however may or may not be used by other sources.
In addition to listing all current 195 stations, the opening date of each one of them is also provided, including their type of construction, which can fit in one of three categories: underground, surface ("street-level") and elevated (in form of an elevated viaduct). In total, 127 stations are under ground, 52 are located on street-level and 16 are elevated.
Line 1: Observatorio – Pantitlán
It is the only line in the system where all stations run underground, and although a section of the track past the Observatorio terminal is located on the street-level, it is only used for train maintenance. Six stations connect with other metro lines. Line 1 is served by MP-68 trains, built in France in 1968 and NE-92 trains, built in Spain in 1992.
The line is built under several main avenues: Parque Lira, Circuito Interior, Avenida de los Insurgentes, Avenida Chapultepec, Arcos de Belén, Balderas, Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas, José María Izazaga, Isabel la Católica, Anillo de Circunvalación, Congreso de la Unión, Eduardo Molina, and Ignacio Zaragoza, it commutes with lines 7 and 9 at the Station Tacubaya, line 3 at Balderas, line 8 at Salto del Agua, line 2 at Pino Suárez, line 4 at Candelaria, line B at San Lázaro and lines 5, 9 and A at Pantitlán.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Line 1 of Mexico City Metro. |
Station | Logo | Opening date | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Observatorio | Observatory | June 10, 1971 | Underground | |
Tacubaya | Water bowl | November 20, 1970 | ||
Juanacatlán | Butterfly | April 11, 1970 | ||
Chapultepec | Grasshopper | September 4, 1969 | ||
Sevilla | Aqueduct | |||
Insurgentes | Bell | |||
Cuauhtémoc | Eagle head | |||
Balderas | Cannon | |||
Salto del Agua | Fountain | |||
Isabel la Católica | Caravel | |||
Pino Suárez | Aztec shrine | |||
Merced | Huacal Basket with fruit | |||
Candelaria | Duck | |||
San Lázaro | Steam locomotive | |||
Moctezuma | Moctezuma plume headdress | |||
Balbuena | Four flowers | |||
Boulevard Puerto Aéreo | A bridge | |||
Gómez Farías | Constitution of 1857 | |||
Zaragoza | Ignacio Zaragoza and horse | |||
Pantitlán | Two flags | August 22, 1984 |
Line 2: Cuatro Caminos – Tasqueña
Line 2 was the second line in the system to open, in 1970. After two expansions, the line has 24 stations over a total track length of 23.431 km, of which 20.713 km are passenger track. The line has a general northwest-south direction passing through the city center and its color is blue. It starts at the border of the Federal District and the State of Mexico and ends in the city south.
It commutes with line 7 at Tacuba, line 3 at Hidalgo, line 8 at Bellas Artes, line 1 at Pino Suárez and lines 8 and 9 at Chabacano. At Tasqueña it links with the Mexico City Light Rail to Xochimilco. It used to be served by NC-82 and some NM-83 trains.
Line 2 was the scene of the worst accident in the Mexico City Metro's history on October 20, 1975, when a crash occurred between two trains at the Viaducto Station. One train was parked at the station picking up passengers when it was hit by another train that did not stop in time. Twenty people were killed and several wounded. After that accident, automatic traffic lights were installed in all the lines.
Thirteen stations run underground while the remaining ten are surface stations. The line is currently served by NM-02 trains built in Mexico in 2004.
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cuatro Caminos | The "Toreo de 4 caminos" silhouette | August 22, 1984 | Underground | |
Panteones | Grave | |||
Tacuba | Flowers | September 14, 1970 | ||
Cuitláhuac | An Aztec shield | |||
Popotla | The "Night of Sorrows" tree | |||
Colegio Militar | the "Colegio Militar" coat of arms | |||
Normal | The "Casco de Santo Tomas" bldg. | |||
San Cosme | The "Casa de los Mascarones" facade | |||
Revolución | Revolution Memorial | |||
Hidalgo | Miguel Hidalgo | |||
Bellas Artes | Bellas Artes building | |||
Allende | Ignacio Allende | |||
Zócalo | Mexican coat of arms | |||
Pino Suárez | An Aztec Shrine | August 1, 1970 | ||
San Antonio Abad | San Antonio Abad | Surface | ||
Chabacano | Apricot | |||
Viaducto | Road intersection | |||
Xola | Palm tree | |||
Villa de Cortés | Conquistador helmet | |||
Nativitas | Chinampa | |||
Portales | Three arches | |||
Ermita | Church | |||
General Anaya | A cannon and Pedro María Anaya | |||
Tasqueña | Quarter moon |
Line 3: Indios Verdes – Universidad
The first section of line 3 was opened in 1970. It has been expanded five times to comprise 21 stations over a total track length of 23.609 km, of which 21.278 are passenger track, making it the second longest of the system. The line has a general north-south direction passing through the western end of downtown Mexico City and its color is olive green.
It is built under Insurgentes, Guerrero, Zarco, Balderas, Cuauhtémoc, Universidad, Copilco and Delfín Madrigal avenues. It commutes with line 6 at Deportivo 18 de Marzo, line 5 at La Raza, line B at Guerrero, line 2 at Hidalgo, line 1 at Balderas and line 9 at Centro Médico.
Most of the stations (17) run underground with the remaining four, including both terminals, being surface stations.
Line color | olive green |
Passenger railway length | 21.278 km |
Total railway length | 23.609 km |
Rolling stock | NM-79 trains made in Mexico in 1979 |
Stations | 21 |
Type of line | Universidad is a superficial terminal. From Copilco to La Raza, underground. From Potrero to Indios Verdes, combines superficial platforms with underground passenger passages. |
Direction | North-South, though the city center |
Started operations | November 20, 1970: from Tlatelolco to Hospital General August 25, 1978: from Tlatelolco to La Raza December 1, 1979: from La Raza to Indios Verdes June 7, 1980: from Hospital General to Centro Médico August 25, 1980: from Centro Médico to Zapata August 30, 1983: from Zapata to Universidad |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Indios Verdes | "Green Indians" monument | December 1, 1979 | Surface | |
Deportivo 18 de Marzo | Aztec ball game player | |||
Potrero | Horse | |||
La Raza | Pyramid | August 25, 1978 | Underground | |
Tlatelolco | The "Banobras" building silhouette | November 20, 1970 | ||
Guerrero | Vicente Guerrero silhouette | |||
Hidalgo | Miguel Hidalgo | |||
Juárez | Benito Juárez | |||
Balderas | Cannon | |||
Niños Héroes | a Kepi (military hat) | |||
Hospital General | Cross | |||
Centro Médico | a caduceus | June 7, 1980 | ||
Etiopía/Plaza de la Transparencia | Lion | August 25, 1980 | ||
Eugenia | A Stork | |||
División del Norte | Francisco Villa and horse | |||
Zapata | Emiliano Zapata | |||
Coyoacán | Coyote | August 30, 1983 | ||
Viveros/Derechos Humanos | the silhouette of a plant | |||
Miguel Ángel de Quevedo | Tree | |||
Copilco | Sun | |||
Universidad | UNAM coat of arms | Surface |
Line 4: Santa Anita – Martín Carrera
The first section of line 4 was opened in 1981, and it was expanded once to bring the total extension of this line to ten stations over 10.747 km of track, of which 9.363 km are passenger track. The line has a general north-south direction and is located east of the city center and its color is aqua. It is also the line with the lowest passenger flow, which is why the STC introduced modified 6-wagon trains. In the original blueprint, this line was planned to extend to the north all the way to Ecatepec, Mexico State.
Line 4 is the only one in the system that does not have underground sections. Eight of the ten stations are built on an elevated viaduct and the remaining two are surface stations.
Line 4 connects with line 1 at Candelaria, line 6 at Martín Carrera, line 5 at Consulado, line 8 at Santa Anita, line 9 at Jamaica and line B at Morelos.
Line color | aqua |
Passenger railway length | 9.363 km |
Total railway length | 10.747 km |
Rolling stock | Six-wagon trains built in Spain by C.A.F. |
Stations | 10 |
Type of line | 8 elevated viaduct stations and 2 surface stations |
Direction | North-South, on the east side of the city |
Started operations | August 29, 1981: from Martín Carrera to Candelaria May 26, 1982: from Candelaria to Santa Anita |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Martín Carrera | Martín Carrera | August 29, 1981 | Surface | |
Talismán | Mammoth | Elevated | ||
Bondojito | Nopal | |||
Consulado | A transversal section of a water duct | |||
Canal del Norte | A transversal section af a waterway | |||
Morelos | José María Morelos | |||
Candelaria | Duck | Surface | ||
Fray Servando | Servando Teresa de Mier | May 26, 1982 | Elevated | |
Jamaica | An ear of corn | |||
Santa Anita | A man sailing in a canoe |
Line 5: Politécnico – Pantitlán
The first section of line 5 was opened in 1981, and it has been expanded twice to bring the total extension of this line to 13 stations over 15.675 km of track, of which 14.435 km are passenger track. The line has a general north-west to south-east direction relative to the city center and its color is yellow. This line previously had the NM73 trains but due to the introduction of the NM02 trains in Line 2 now it is served by NC82 Canadian trains made by Bombardier. Line 5 runs to Mexico City International Airport (Terminal Aérea station).
Line 5 has four underground and nine surface stations. Five stations connect with other metro lines.
Line color | yellow |
Rolling stock | NC-82 trains made in Canada in 1982 |
Passenger railway length | 14.435 km |
Total railway length | 15.675 km |
Stations | 13 |
Type of line | From Politécnico to La Raza, superficial with underground access. Misterios and Valle Gómez, underground From Consulado to Oceanía, superficial with underground access Terminal Aérea and Hangares, underground and Pantitlán is superficial. |
Direction | North-East |
Started operations | December 19, 1981: from Pantitlán to Consulado July 1, 1982: from Consulado to La Raza August 30, 1982: from La Raza to Politécnico |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Politécnico | IPN coat of arms | August 30, 1982 | Surface | |
Instituto del Petróleo | A petroleum tower | |||
Autobuses del Norte | Motor coach | |||
La Raza | Pyramid | July 1, 1982 | ||
Misterios | a "Misterios" Monument | Underground | ||
Valle Gómez | Agave plant | |||
Consulado | Transversal section of a water duct | December 19, 1981 | Surface | |
Eduardo Molina | Hands holding water | |||
Aragón | Squirrel | |||
Oceanía | Kangaroo | |||
Terminal Aérea | Aerial control tower and a plane | Underground | ||
Hangares | Biplane | |||
Pantitlán | Two flags | Surface |
Line 6: El Rosario – Martín Carrera
Line 6 had its first section inaugurated in 1983. It has been expanded once to bring the total extension of the line to 11 stations over 13.947 km of track, of which 11.434 are passenger track. This line has a west-east direction running north of the city center and its color is scarlet red.
The line has only one surface station, the El Rosario terminal, while the rest of the line runs under ground. Four stations connect with other metro lines. Line 6, like line 4, is also served by customized six-car trains.
Line color | red |
Passenger railway length | 11.434 km |
Total railway length | 13.947 km |
Rolling stock | due to the low volume of persons in the line, the STC introduced six-wagon trains |
Stations | 11 |
Type of line | El Rosario is a superficial terminal. From Tezozomoc to Martín Carrera, underground. |
Direction | West-East, in the city north |
Started operations | December 21, 1983: from El Rosario to Instituto del Petróleo July 8, 1986: from Instituto del Petróleo to Martín Carrera |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
El Rosario | A Rosary | December 21, 1983 | Surface | |
Tezozómoc | Tezozomoc | Underground | ||
Azcapotzalco | An ant | |||
Ferrería/Arena Ciudad de México | The Arena Ciudad de México building | |||
Norte 45 | A windrose | |||
Vallejo | A factory | |||
Instituto del Petróleo | A petroleum tower | |||
Lindavista | San Cayetano church | July 8, 1986 | ||
Deportivo 18 de Marzo | Aztec ball game player | |||
La Villa-Basílica | Basílica de Guadalupe and Guadalupe virgin | |||
Martín Carrera | Martín Carrera |
Line 7: El Rosario – Barranca del Muerto
The first section of line 7 was opened to the public in 1984. It has been expanded three times to bring the total length of the line to 14 stations over 18.784 km of track, of which 17.011 km are passenger track. Line 7 has a north-south direction running west of the city center and its color is orange.
The line has its only surface station in the El Rosario terminal. The rest of the line runs underground, with some sections being located more than 20 m below street level, making it the deepest line in the system at a maximum of 36 meters. Three stations connect with other metro lines.
This line used MP68 trains and a small number of NM73, after the rehabilitation of some MP68. They kept circulating on this line although there is a slightly bigger number of NM79 and NM83 in this line. Today there are only retroadapted NM73 and NM83 models and some trains from the first model due to the introduction of the NM02 in the Line 2. Currently the MP68 Trains from Line 9 are being reintroduced.
Line color | orange |
Passenger railway length | 17.011 km |
Total railway length | 18.784 km |
Stations | 14 |
Type of line | El Rosario is a surface terminal. From Aquiles Serdán to Barranca del Muerto, stations are underground. |
Direction | North-South, at the city west |
Started operations | December 20, 1984: from Tacuba to Auditorio August 22, 1985: from Auditorio to Tacubaya December 19, 1985: from Tacubaya to Barranca December 29, 1988: from Tacuba to El Rosario |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
El Rosario | A Rosary | December 29, 1988 | Surface | |
Aquiles Serdán | Aquiles Serdán | Underground | ||
Camarones | A shrimp | |||
Refinería | A PEMEX refinery container | |||
Tacuba | Flowers | December 20, 1984 | ||
San Joaquín | Bridge | |||
Polanco | A Clock Tower | |||
Auditorio | Auditorio building | |||
Constituyentes | A book, ink and a Feather | August 22, 1985 | ||
Tacubaya | A Water bowl | |||
San Pedro de los Pinos | Two Pines | December 19, 1985 | ||
San Antonio | San Antonio and a kid | |||
Mixcoac | A snake | |||
Barranca del Muerto | Two Eagles |
Line 8: Garibaldi / Lagunilla – Constitución de 1917
Line 8 was the next to last route of the network to be opened, on July 20, 1994 by then President Carlos Salinas de Gortari and then regent of the city, Manuel Aguilera Gómez. Construction plans for the line date back to much earlier, but they were put on hold due to significant redevelopment. It has 19 stations over a total track length of 20.078 km, of which 16.679 are passenger track. Line 8 runs in a general south-east direction, beginning near the city center, and its color is bright green. The line has 14 underground stations and five surface stations, including the southern terminal Constitución de 1917. Five stations connect line 8 with other metro lines. According to the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo, the volume of people moved in this line was 117,386,342 persons in 2006.
Line color | green |
Passenger railway length | 16.679 km |
Total railway length: | 20.078 km |
Rolling stock | MP82 trains made in France between 1982 and 1984 |
Stations | 19 |
Direction | Center-Southeast |
Started operations | July 20, 1994 |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Garibaldi / Lagunilla | A guitar and a sarape | July 20, 1994 | Underground | |
Bellas Artes | Bellas Artes building | |||
San Juan de Letrán | Latinoamerican Tower | |||
Salto del Agua | Fountain | |||
Doctores | Two doctors | |||
Obrera | A helmet and two gears | |||
Chabacano | Apricot | |||
La Viga | Two fish | |||
Santa Anita | A man sailing in a canoe | |||
Coyuya | A foot | Surface | ||
Iztacalco | San Matias Church | |||
Apatlaco | An Aztec temple with boiling water | |||
Aculco | A wave | |||
Escuadrón 201 | Escuadrón 201 logo | Underground | ||
Atlalilco | A water well | |||
Iztapalapa | A sun | |||
Cerro de la Estrella | A hill with three crosses and a star | |||
UAM-I | UAM coat of arms | |||
Constitución de 1917 | Pergamin with a quill pen writing "1917" | Surface |
Line 9: Tacubaya – Pantitlán
The first section of line 9 was opened to the public in 1987. It has been expanded once to a length of 12 stations over 15.375 km of track, of which 13.033 are passenger track. The line was opened to relieve passenger traffic from line 1, to which it runs parallel south of the city center. The color of the line is dark brown.
Line 9 has eight underground stations with the remaining being elevated stations similar to those in line 4, including the terminal Pantitlán. It is the only line in the system in which no section of the track runs at street-level. Additionally, five stations connect with other metro lines. The trains of this line are made up from MP68 trains rehabilitated with fans and intelligent control systems and some NM79 rolling stock.
Line color | brown |
Passenger railway length | 13.033 km |
Total railway length | 15.375 km |
Station | 12 |
Direction | West-East, through the city center |
Started operations | August 26, 1987: from Pantitlán to Centro Médico August 29, 1988: from Centro Médico to Tacubaya |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tacubaya | A Water bowl | August 29, 1988 | Underground | |
Patriotismo | The Mexican flag | |||
Chilpancingo | A wasp | |||
Centro Médico | A caduceus | August 26, 1987 | ||
Lázaro Cárdenas | Lázaro Cárdenas | |||
Chabacano | Apricot | |||
Jamaica | An ear of corn | |||
Mixiuhca | A woman with a baby | |||
Velódromo | A bicyclist | Elevated | ||
Ciudad Deportiva | Another version of the Aztec ball game player | |||
Puebla | Two angles carrying Puebla coat of arms | |||
Pantitlán | Two flags |
Line A (10): Pantitlán – La Paz
Line A was the second metro line that extended into the suburbs of Mexico City outside the Mexican Federal District. Opened in its entirety in 1991, it comprises ten stations over 17.192 kilometres (10.683 mi) of track, of which 14.893 kilometres (9.254 mi) are passenger track. Line A runs in a general south-east direction, east of the city center, and its color is purple.
Line A has only one underground station, the terminal Pantitlán, while the rest of the line runs at street-level. Only one station makes connections with other metro lines.
Until Line 12's opening, 21 years later (in 2012), line A was unique within the system in its use of traditional rail traction (steel-wheeled rolling stock) as opposed to pneumatic traction (rubber-tyred rolling stock). Because it was the first line of this type in the metro system, it was called the Metro Férreo and sometimes continues to be referred to by that name. The line is served by FM-86 trains, built in Mexico by Concarril in 1986, and FM-95A trains, also built in Mexico (by Bombardier) between 1998 and 1999, which draw electricity through a pantograph.
Line color | purple |
Passenger railway length | 14.893 km |
Total railway length | 23.722 km |
Rolling stock | FM86 trains, made in Mexico in 1986; FM95A, made in Mexico in 1998 and 1999; FE07, made in Spain in 2009 |
Stations | 10 |
Direction | East-Far East |
Started operations | August 12, 1991: From Pantitlán to La Paz |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pantitlán | Two flags | August 12, 1991 | Underground | |
Agrícola Oriental | Two ears of wheat | Surface | ||
Canal de San Juan | An Aztec canoe in a canal | |||
Tepalcates | A clay pot | |||
Guelatao | The head of Benito Juárez | |||
Peñón Viejo | The Aztec representation of a promontory | |||
Acatitla | A sugarcane | |||
Santa Marta | Santa Marta with a jar | |||
Los Reyes | Three crowns | |||
La Paz | A dove |
Line B (11): Buenavista – Ciudad Azteca
Line B became the third line to extend into the suburbs of Mexico City. The first section of the line was opened in 1999 and was expanded once to comprise a total of 21 stations over 23.722 km of track, of which 20.278 are passenger track. Line B starts north of the city center and runs in a general north-east direction relative to it. Its color is green on silver.
Six stations of line B run under ground, four are elevated and 11 run at street-level. Five stations connect with other metro lines.
All the trains are MP68 modified and equipped with GPS and intelligent control system, the trains in this line were the leftovers from Line 1 that were rehabilitated by Bombardier-Concarril.
Line color | green over silver. |
Passenger railway length | 20.278 km |
Total railway length | 23.722 km |
Stations | 21 |
Direction | City Center-Far Northeast |
Started operations | December 15, 1999: from Buenavista to Villa de Aragón November 30, 2000: from Villa de Aragón to Ciudad Azteca |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ciudad Azteca | Aztec symbol of Tenochtitlan | November 30, 2000 | Surface | |
Plaza Aragón | A stand | |||
Olímpica | The Olympic rings | |||
Ecatepec | The Ecatepec symbol | |||
Múzquiz | Melchor Muzquiz | |||
Río de los Remedios | A ship with a crown | |||
Impulsora | A cart | |||
Nezahualcóyotl | The Nezahualcoyotl symbol | |||
Villa de Aragón | Some houses | December 15, 1999 | ||
Bosque de Aragón | Three trees | |||
Deportivo Oceanía | A koala hugging a soccer ball | |||
Oceanía | Kangaroo | Elevated | ||
Romero Rubio | Romero Rubio | |||
Ricardo Flores Magón | Ricardo Flores Magón | |||
San Lázaro | A steam locomotive | |||
Morelos | José María Morelos | Underground | ||
Tepito | A boxing glove | |||
Lagunilla | A swan | |||
Garibaldi | A guitar and a sarape | |||
Guerrero | Vicente Guerrero | |||
Buenavista | The front of a diesel locomotive | |||
Line 12; línea del Bicentenario: Mixcoac – Tláhuac
Construction of line 12 began after a public consultation, on August 8, 2007, and inaugurated on October 30, 2012. Although the line offered full service during the first 16 months of operation (Mixcoac - Tláhuac), the service over the eleven easternmost stations was suspended indefinitely due to structural failures,[1][2][3] with provisional terminal being Atlalilco as of October 2014. Line 12 currently runs from Mixcoac to Atlalilco, (9 stations),[4] 4 of them linking with other lines, as well as with the Mexico City Metrobús.
According to the Mexico City Metro website, line 12 trains use traditional rail traction (as line A).[5] This means it would be the second metro férreo, this could have been called line C but the reasons for numerical naming (which also implies lines A and B are 10 and 11 respectively) does not allow it, because the parameters of this series, imply that the lines designated with letters instead of numbers are because those lines intersect areas of Mexico State (another entity of the country, adjacent to Mexico City). Government nicknamed it the línea del Bicentenario, commemorating the 200th anniversary of the beginning of Mexican War of Independence on September 16, 1810 and promising to deliver all twenty stations by April 30, 2012. However, delays on train deliveries and construction caused full operation was delayed to October 30, 2012. At that date, President Calderón and Mayor Marcelo Ebrard opened the line to service.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Line 12 of Mexico City Metro. |
Line color | Gold |
Passenger railway length | 24 km |
Rolling stock | FE-10 made in 2011 by CAF |
Stations | 20[4] |
Direction | South-East |
Started operations | October 30, 2012 |
Station | Logo | Date opened | Station type[6] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mixcoac | A snake | October 30, 2012[7] | Underground deep | |
Insurgentes Sur | Miguel Hidalgo and Jose Maria Morelos | |||
20 de Noviembre | The structure of the cover of Medical Center 20 de Noviembre | |||
Zapata | Emiliano Zapata | |||
Parque de los Venados | The silhouette of two deer | |||
Eje Central | A trolleybus | |||
Ermita | A church | |||
Mexicaltzingo | The Mexicaltzingo symbol | Underground shallow | ||
Atlalilco | A water well | |||
Culhuacán | A mountain with a curved top | October 30, 2012 (Suspended on March 12, 2014 and as of October 2014) | Elevated | |
San Andrés Tomatlán | The San Andres Church | |||
Lomas Estrella | A mountain system with a star on top | |||
Calle 11 | A mountain with a fire symbol over a vase with water | |||
Periférico Oriente | A vigilance tower | |||
Tezonco | Candy skull traditional of the Day of the Dead | |||
Olivos | An olive plant | |||
Nopalera | A flower from nopal | |||
Zapotitlán | A sapote tree | |||
Tlaltenco | A stone arc | Surface | ||
Tláhuac | A seaweed from the region |
See also
References
- ↑ http://noticias.terra.com.mx/mexico/df/tramo-de-linea-12-del-metro-sera-suspendida-por-fallas,c7d06cf2222b4410VgnVCM10000098cceb0aRCRD.html
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/23/world/americas/golden-line-brings-tarnish-to-mexicos-subway-system.html
- ↑ http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2014/03/11/suspenden-servicio-en-tramo-elevado-de-linea-12-del-metro-5599.html
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Linea 12; Linea Dorado; la Linea del Bicentenario" (in Spanish). Mexico City Metro. p. b. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
- ↑ "Linea 12; Linea Dorado; la Linea del Bicentenario" (in Spanish). Mexico City Metro. p. c. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
- ↑ "Proyecto Metro GDF". Retrieved 14 August 2011.
- ↑ "Ebrard y Calderón inaugurarán Línea 12 del Metro". El Economista (in Spanish). Periódico El Economista S.A. de C.V. October 30, 2012. Retrieved October 30, 2012.
- Government of the Mexican Federal District (2005). Metrobús-Proyecto. Last retrieved February 22, 2006.
- Monroy F., Marco A. (2004) PDF map showing station type (Internet Archive link). Last retrieved February 25, 2006.
- Red de Transporte de Pasajeros del Distrito Federal (2005). Red de Rutas por Zona.-RTP. Last retrieved February 23, 2006.
- Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos del Distrito Federal (2003). Servicios.- Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos del D.F. Last retrieved February 22, 2006.
- Sistema de Transporte Colectivo (2005). Página del Sistema de Transporte Colectivo. Last retrieved February 22, 2006.
External links
- Map of the metro network in Google Earth - Google Earth is required to open this file.
- UrbanRail.Net page on the Mexico City Metro - Contains a general description of the system as well as a table showing the chronological order in which all sections of the system have been opened.
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