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Santiago Metro

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Santiago Metro
NS 93 train on an elevated portion of the line 5.
NS 93 train on an elevated portion of the line 5.
AS-2014 train on the line 6 side of Los Leones.
AS-2014 train on the line 6 side of Los Leones.
Overview
Native nameMetro de Santiago
LocaleSantiago, Chile
Transit typeRapid transit
Number of lines7[1]
Number of stations143[1]
Daily ridership2.03 million (avg. weekday, 2023)[2]
Annual ridership599 million (2023)[2]
WebsiteMetro de Santiago
Operation
Began operation15 September 1975[3]
Operator(s)es:Metro S.A.
Technical
System length149 km (93 mi)[4]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification
System map
Current Metro map, including the Nos railway.

The Santiago Metro (Spanish: Metro de Santiago) is a rapid transit system serving the city of Santiago, the capital of Chile. It currently consists of seven lines (numbered 1-6 and 4A), 143 stations, and 149 kilometres (92.6 mi) of revenue route.[5] The system is managed by the state-owned Metro S.A. and is the first and only rapid transit system in the country.

The Santiago Metro carries around 2.5 million passengers daily. This figure represents an increase of more than a million passengers per day compared to 2007, when the ambitious Transantiago project was launched, in which the metro plays an important role in the public transport system serving the city. Its highest passenger peak was reached on 2 May 2019, reaching 2,951,962 passengers.[6]

In June 2017 the government announced plans for the construction of Line 7, connecting Renca in the northwest of Santiago with Vitacura in the northeast. The new line will add 26 kilometres (16 mi) and 19 new stations to the Metro network, running along the municipalities of Renca, Cerro Navia, Quinta Normal, Santiago, Providencia, Las Condes and Vitacura. Its cost has been initially estimated at US$2.53 bn, and it is projected to open in 2027.[7][8]

In March 2012, the Santiago Metro was chosen as the best underground system in the Americas, after being honoured at the annual reception held by Metro Rail in London.[9]

History and development

[edit]

Early projections and construction of Line 1

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Metro network projection in 1944.

The idea of constructing an underground railway network in Santiago dates back to 1944 when efforts to improve the chaotic transport system were initiated due to the rapid population growth the city had been experiencing since the early 1930s.[10]

However, concrete plans began to materialize in the 1960s when Juan Parrochia was appointed as Chief Architect of the Intercommunal Plan of Santiago and began working on an urban master plan featuring a Metro network.[11]

Consequently, the government issued an international tender for the development of an urban transport system. On 24 October 1968, the government of Eduardo Frei Montalva approved the draft submitted by the Franco-Chilean consortium BCEOM SOFRETU CADE, in which the construction of five lines with an extension of approximately 60 kilometres (37 mi) by 1990 was proposed.

On 29 May 1969, works finally began for the construction of the first line, which would link the Civil District and the area of Barrancas (current-day Lo Prado).[12]

On 15 September 1975, the first line of the metro was opened by Augusto Pinochet during the military dictatorship. Line 1, during its opening stage, was mostly underground from San Pablo to La Moneda, running below the Alameda. In 1977, the line was extended towards Providencia and by 1980, the line reached as far as Escuela Militar in Las Condes.[13]

In March 1978, Line 2 was opened. Its initial section ran at ground level from Los Héroes to Franklin. By December, the second segment of the line was opened, running underground towards the south along the Gran Avenida up to Lo Ovalle.[13]

Project changes

[edit]
Projected metro network for 1987 according to the original plans.

Despite the fast growth of the network, the severe economic crisis that affected the country in 1982 halted the original plans. Furthermore, studies showed that southeast Santiago was becoming more populated than the north end of the capital, area that was then covered by the planned extensions of the service.

In order to supply future demand, the layout for Line 2 was changed and the extension would start at Los Héroes and go around the Civic District, crossing Line 1 again at Baquedano to head south through Vicuña Mackenna. Meanwhile, Line 3 was projected through Independencia and Irarrázaval to supply the northern area that Line 2 was supposed to run.[12]

However, these plans were affected once again when an earthquake struck the Chilean Central Valley on 3 March 1985. Most of the funds destined for the construction of the Line 2 extension and Line 3 were used to rebuild the city. The opening of two new stations towards the north in 1986 (Santa Ana) and 1987 (Puente Cal y Canto) were the only finalised works from these plans: Santa Ana and Mapocho stations on Line 2. The latter would change its name later, as remains of the old Calicanto Bridge –emblem of the city for over a century– were discovered during the excavation process. That same year, the Metrobús service was launched with services operating from Escuela Militar, Lo Ovalle and Las Rejas.

Institutionally, the management of Metro de Santiago was changed at the end of the decade. The former General Directorate of Metro, a branch of the Ministry of Public Works, became a state-funded public company, Metro S.A., with the provisions of Law 18,772 published on 28 January 1989.

Following the economic recovery after the second miracle, the metro's expansion plans resurged. Population growth in the southeastern area of the capital became unstoppable during the 1980s, and La Florida became the most populous commune in the country, thus the construction of a new line to supply that area was paramount. The first plans were drawn in 1989 and it was officially announced in 1991 by President Patricio Aylwin. This new line would start from Baquedano and head southwards to Américo Vespucio Avenue, crossing through Vicuña Mackenna.

NS-74 train on Line 5, opened in 1997.

Line 5 was opened on 5 April 1997 by President Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle. This new line would have a length of 10.3 kilometres (6.4 mi) initially running underground from Baquedano to Irarrázaval, emerging as a viaduct on Vicuña Mackenna and going underground before reaching its southeastern terminus, Bellavista de la Florida.

In March 2000, a new section of Line 5 crossing the historic centre of the capital was opened to the public. The new connection between Baquedano and Santa Ana through Plaza de Armas and Bellas Artes meant that all three at-the-time existing lines would be connected.

New lines 4 and 4A and line 2 extension

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With the election of Ricardo Lagos as President of Chile in 2000, one of his main objectives was an overhaul of the transport system serving the capital. To achieve this, a new extension for Line 5 was designed, heading westwards to Quinta Normal, following Catedral street, and an extension for Line 2 from both ends of the line to reach the northern and southern ends of the Américo Vespucio ring road.

Despite this, the biggest announcement was made in 2002 when Lagos disclosed the construction of a fourth line for the metro, serving the southeastern communes of Santiago to reach the heart of Puente Alto, which had taken over La Florida as the most populous commune of the country. With these new projects, the Metro network would double its extension by 2010, year in which the country would celebrate its bicentennial.

These new projects were designed to make Metro the key element of the new transport reform plan for the city, Transantiago. Along with the new extensions, exchange stations were designed to allow for a better interaction between the urban railways and other means of transport, mainly buses. The first exchange station would open in Quinta Normal after the Line 5 extension was finalised on 31 March 2004. However, the original plan to host a railway station would be discarded following the failure of the Melitrén construction.

On September 8, 2004, the Metro would make another breakthrough when the Mapocho river was crossed underground, with the opening of Patronato and Cerro Blanco stations on Line 2. On 22 December 2004, the southern extension of the same line opened its new stations, El Parrón and La Cisterna. A second stretch of Line 2 towards the north would open on 25 November 2005, and the last in the series of extensions opened on 22 December 2005, with a total cost of US$170 million and a 27-million passenger increase annually.

On November 30, 2005, the first underground leg of Line 4 from Tobalaba to Grecia, and the viaduct between Vicente Valdés and Plaza de Puente Alto opened to the public. The unfinished track from Grecia and Vicente Valdés was covered by a rail replacement bus service operated by Transantiago until March 2, 2006, when the remaining stations and track were finished. Line 4 at this time was the longest of the network, with an extension of 24.7 kilometres (15.3 mi) and 22 stations serving Providencia, Las Condes, Ñuñoa, La Reina, Peñalolén, Macul, La Florida and Puente Alto. This new line also saw the introduction of new rolling stock, the AS-2002, manufactured by Alstom in Brazil, featuring more interior space than those running other lines. Finally, Line 4 would be complemented with the opening of a branch service on August 16, 2006, Line 4A, which connected Line 2 from La Cisterna with Line 4 at Vicuña Mackenna, running through the Américo Vespucio ring road.

Extensions to Las Condes and Maipú

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Inauguration of Line 5 extension to Maipú in 2010

On November 15, 2005, President Ricardo Lagos announced the extension of Line 1 to the east, from Escuela Militar to Los Dominicos station, in the commune of Las Condes. To achieve this, three new stations were built, adding 4 kilometers to the railway network, which were inaugurated on January 7, 2010 during the presidency of Michelle Bachelet.

Along with the extension to Las Condes, one of the most important projects of the service was announced: the extension of the metro to the west, connecting the communes of Maipú, Pudahuel, Lo Prado and Quinta Normal to the Metro Network. In this way, the Metro approached the western sector of the city for the first time, reaching Maipú, the most populated commune in the country after surpassing Puente Alto in 2008.

On October 31, 2009, the final layout of the extension of Line 5 was approved, starting from the Quinta Normal station along Avenida San Pablo underground, turning south to come to the surface and travel along Avenida Teniente Cruz and later Avenida Pajaritos before becoming underground again and reaching the terminal station, in the Plaza de Armas of Maipú. The first section to the Pudahuel station was delivered on January 12, 2010, while the remaining section Until Maipú was opened to the public on February 3, 2011.

Along with the construction of the new extensions, important works were carried out that allowed the Pajaritos station on Line 1 to be renovated to convert it into the terminal of a loop, allowing greater efficiency to the most loaded section of said line and the postponed San José de la Estrella station was inaugurated on Line 4. The Del Sol station was also built in the extension to Maipú, which serves as a transfer to intercity buses.

In March 2012, the Santiago Metro was chosen as the best metro system in America, a distinction received at the annual Metro Rail dinner held in London, United Kingdom.[14]

Line 2 and 3 extensions

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Plaza Quilicura station mezzanine level in 2023

On May 26, 2016, Metro announced the extension of Lines 2 and 3, adding 8.9 kilometers and 7 new stations to the Metro network. Both extensions are expected to begin operations during the second half of 2021. The extension of Line 2 to the south will add 5.1 kilometers and 4 new stations connecting the current terminal station in La Cisterna with San Bernardo locality. The new terminal station will be located next to a hospital called Hospital El Pino in San Bernardo. Meanwhile, the extension of Line 3 to the west will add 3.8 kilometers and 3 new stations to the Metro network, connecting future station Los Libertadores with Quilicura.[15]

On November 2, 2017, Line 6 was inaugurated from Cerrillos to Los Leones adding 10 new stations. This new line does not have staffed ticket offices; instead there are automatic machines for ticket sales and loading money onto bip! cards. It has platform-edge doors to protect passengers, and traction power is supplied by overhead line equipment, not by conductor rails as on the other lines. It has new entrance and exit turnstiles at stations.[16] The trains on Line 6 only have steel wheels, and are driverless.

On January 22, 2019, Line 3 was inaugurated, after 9 years of prospecting and construction [17] and being delayed since the 1980s after the 1985 Algarrobo earthquake and the changing demographics of the city during the '80s and '90s. Its rolling stock material is identical to the Line 6 and were built simultaneously, so they're considered "twin lines".

On September 25, 2023, Line 3 was extended 3.8 km west from its northern terminus to Plaza Quilicura.[18] On November 27, 2023, Line 2 was extended 5.2 km south from its southern terminus to Hospital El Pino.[19]

2019 protests

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During the month of October 2019, the Santiago metro network was affected by social protests due to the increase in the fare of the entire Metropolitan Mobility Network. Initially, secondary students staged massive acts of evasion between 6 and 11 October. The protests quickly escalated to several metro stations, resulting in train service being repeatedly interrupted.

On Friday the 18th, the situation escalated and the entire network had to be closed due to attacks on stations and workers. At night, after the declaration of a state of emergency by President Sebastián Piñera, several stations of the Metro were destroyed and burned, some of which were attacked again the next day, even though a curfew had been established. Meanwhile, the Instituto Nacional de Derechos Humanos investigated accusations that the Baquedano station was used as a detention and torture center by police and military. On the morning of the same day, the site was reviewed by staff from the INDH, PDI and guarantee judges. The judges found no evidence of torture or illegal detentions at the site, but an investigation was launched to rule out any irregular situation. However, investigations conducted by the National Institute of Human Rights and the Public Prosecutor's Office found no evidence in this regard; in 2020, the allegations were dismissed, and the case was closed[20].

The Metro network had been partially reactivated as of Monday, October 21; however, due to the damage of some stations, the network will only be available in its entirety within a period of up to 7 months. Damage costs are estimated at more than $300 million. Metro de Santiago indicated that it does not have insurance contracted for the infrastructure of the stations and trains. Lines 3 and 6, meanwhile, opened on 23 October, Lines 2 and 5 on the 25th, Line 4 on the 28th, and line 4A on November 25, in all cases partially and on a shortened schedule.

On October 23, it was reported that 79 stations had been damaged in all, with lines 4, 4A, and 5 having the highest number of stations destroyed or vandalized. There were also damage to 6 trains, 5 on line 4 and one on line 1 - the latter set on fire at the San Pablo station. Upon the reopening of the last two stations (Trinidad and Protectora de la Infancia) on September 25, 2020, the metro system was back to 100% operation.

Lines 7, 8 and 9

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Projected lines and extensions for year 2033

On June 1, 2017, President Michelle Bachelet announced in her last public account the construction of Metro Line 7.[21] The plan initially included 21 stations along a 25 km extension, between the commune of Renca in the northwestern sector, and Vitacura in the northeastern sector. The route, estimated to open around 2027, was designed with a line parallel to the Mapocho River and Line 1 in mind, which would allow it to be decongested by approximately 10 000 daily passengers. Line 7 would allow the incorporation of the communes of Renca, Cerro Navia and Vitacura into the Network, also connecting popular neighborhoods with part of the financial and commercial district of the city.[22]

At the end of 2017, the newspaper El Mercurio published a report that indicated that the route of the line was modified, so that in the Providencia sector it would not circulate under Andrés Bello Avenue (as originally thought), but would go parallel to Line 1 along Providencia Avenue, eliminating the combination in Salvador and moving it to Pedro de Valdivia. In addition, Metro announced that it would extend Line 6 to Isidora Goyenechea of the future Line 7.

One year after the announcement of Line 7, President Sebastián Piñera announced in his 2018 annual account that studies would begin for the construction of two new metro lines in a north-south direction: Line 8, which will connect the communes of La Florida and Puente Alto with Providencia, while Line 9 would reach from the center to the commune of La Pintana, one of the last in the city to receive the Metro. In addition, he announced that Line 4 would be extended by three stations in the southern sector to reach Bajos de Mena in Puente Alto. It was projected at that time that lines 8 and 9 would be inaugurated in 2028.

The impact of the social outbreak of 2019 delayed the planning work for the extension of the three lines, being resumed in September 2021, so it is estimated that lines 7, 8 and 9 would be inaugurated from 2030. In August 2023, a modification to the layout of Line 9 was announced, expanding it in the north to the Puente Cal y Canto station — which will become the first station with four concurrent lines — and in the south to Plaza de Puente Alto, combining with Line 4 and absorbing the proposed extension to Bajos de Mena.

Future plans

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Various proposals have been presented to expand the Santiago Metro once lines 7, 8 and 9 are built.

Two communes in Greater Santiago will not have a direct connection to the Metro Network: Lo Espejo and Lo Barnechea, while other three only have in theirs limits; San Bernardo, Peñalolén and Huechuraba. In the case of Lo Espejo, the municipality has proposed expanding Line 4A through Américo Vespucio towards the west, in order to connect the commune to the network, while Lo Barnechea has expressed its interest in building two additional stations on Line 7 to reach La Dehesa. Meanwhile, the municipality of Maipú —one of the most populated in the city— launched a campaign to request the government to extend Line 6 to the western sector. Other proposals include reach the International Airport, for example, through a branch of Line 7.

During the inauguration of Line 3 in 2019, President Sebastián Piñera declared that Line 10 was going to be built. Although Metro indicated that a tenth line was not officially in its project portfolio, the government indicated that the initiative attempted to connect the Avenida Mapocho sector with Avenida Tobalaba, following the so-called "central ring" along Las Rejas, Suiza and Departamental avenues.

Other alternatives for new lines have been analyzed in the media in recent years and have been momentarily discarded; a line in the eastern sector through Tobalaba-Vespucio or Manquehue, another parallel to Line 1 through 5 de Abril-Blanco Encalada-Santa Isabel-Bilbao and Manquehue, and the northern section of "Line 10" through Dorsal, Lo Espinoza and Radal.[23][24][25][26]

Timeline

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Line Length Stations Opening Date Type
San PabloLa Moneda 8.2 km 12 15 Sep 1975 Trench/Underground
La MonedaSalvador 3.2 km 5 31 Mar 1977 Underground
Los HéroesFranklin 4.9 km 5 31 Mar 1978 Ground Level
FranklinLo Ovalle 4.8 km 6 21 Dec 1978 Underground
SalvadorEscuela Militar 4.5 km 7 22 Aug 1980 Underground
Los HéroesSanta Ana 0.7 km 1 25 Jul 1986 Ground level
Santa AnaPuente Cal y Canto 1 km 1 15 Sep 1987 Ground/Underground
BaquedanoBellavista de La Florida 10.3 km 12 5 Apr 1997 Viaduct/Underground
BaquedanoSanta Ana 2.7 km 3 4 Mar 2000 Underground
Santa AnaQuinta Normal 1.9 km 2 31 Mar 2004 Underground
Puente Cal y CantoCerro Blanco 1.6 km 2 8 Sept 2004 Underground
Lo OvalleLa Cisterna 2.1 km 2 22 Dec 2004 Underground
Cerro BlancoEinstein 1.9 km 2 25 Nov 2005 Underground
Bellavista de La FloridaVicente Valdés 0.6 km 1 30 Nov 2005 Underground
Vicente ValdésPlaza de Puente Alto 10.9 km 9 30 Nov 2005 Viaduct/Underground
TobalabaGrecia 7.7 km 8 30 Nov 2005 Underground
GreciaVicente Valdés 6.1 km 5 2 Mar 2006 Ground level
Vicuña MackennaLa Cisterna 7.7 km 6 16 Aug 2006 Ground level
EinsteinVespucio Norte 3.6 km 3 21 Dec 2006 Underground
San José de la Estrella 0 km 1 5 Nov 2009 Viaduct
Escuela MilitarLos Dominicos 4 km 3 7 Jan 2010 Underground
Quinta NormalPudahuel 5.8 km 5 12 Jan 2010 Underground
PudahuelPlaza de Maipú 8 km 7 3 Feb 2011 Viaduct
CerrillosLos Leones 15.3 km 10 2 Nov 2017 Underground
Los LibertadoresFernando Castillo Velasco 21.7 km 18 22 Jan 2019 Underground
Los LibertadoresPlaza Quilicura 3.8 km 3 25 Sept 2023 Underground
La CisternaHospital El Pino 5.2 km 4 27 Nov 2023 Underground
CerrillosLo Errázuriz 3 km 1 2027 Underground
Los LeonesIsidora Goyenechea 1.4 km 1 2028 Underground
BrasilEstoril 26 km 19 2028 Underground
Bío BíoPlaza de La Pintana 12.2 km 10 2030 Underground
Chile España – Mall Plaza Tobalaba 14.7 km 11 2032 Underground
Puente Cal y CantoBío Bío 5.4 km 4 2032 Underground
Plaza de La PintanaPlaza de Puente Alto 9.8 km 5 2033 Underground
Los LeonesChile España 4.3 km 3 2033 Underground

Rolling stock

[edit]
The NS 93 rubber-tyred stock, based on the MP 89 from the Paris Metro

The Santiago Metro currently[when?] operates 9 models of rolling stock: two models (the AS-2002 and the AS-2014) are steel-wheeled, while the others are all rubber-tyred. The NS 74 and NS 93 stock are based on the MP 73 and MP 89 stock of the Paris Metro respectively,[27] while the NS-88 and NS-2007 stock are based on the FM-86 and NM-02 stock of the Mexico City Metro respectively.[28] All rubber-tyred stock is preceded with the acronym NS (for Neumático Santiago); likewise, all steel-wheeled stock is preceded with the acronym AS (for Acero Santiago). The number representing each type of rubber-tyred and steel-wheeled rolling stock is the year of design of a particular rolling stock, not year of first use, similar to the practice in the Mexico City Metro and Paris Métro.

Currently, all the NS-2007 stock and a number of the NS-93 stock units are retrofitted with air conditioning, whereas the NS-2012, AS-2014 and NS-2016 were all built with air conditioning.

In September 2012, the NS 2012 trains went into service on Line 1. These trains are the first to be built with air conditioning.[29]

On November 2, 2017, the line 6 entered revenue service. This line utilizes the AS-2014 (Acero Santiago 2014) which are the most modern stock of the system [citation needed], being the first model in the system that are driverless. However, in the first and last car there is a control panel meant to control the train when necessary. It is also the first with security cameras, energy obtainment via overhead rigid catenary, and evacuation doors at the front of the first and last car (with an evacuation ramp for people on wheelchairs) as well as on the sides of each convoy. They are also the second to be built with air conditioning, and the third with LED lights. The line that they operate in is also the first in revenue service with platform safety barriers, followed by Line 3 opened in January 2019.

Model Manufacturer Year Built Type of train Operating Lines
NS-74 Alstom 1973–1981 Rubber-tyred
NS-88 Concarril 1987 Rubber-tyred
NS 93 Alstom 1996–2003 Rubber-tyred
AS-2002 Alstom 2004–2010 Steel-wheeled
NS -2004 Alstom 2006–2007 Rubber-tyred
NS-2007 CAF 2009–2010 Rubber-tyred
NS-2012 CAF 2012–2014 Rubber-tyred
AS-2014 CAF 2015–2017 Steel-wheeled
NS-2016 Alstom 2017–2021 Rubber-tyred

Stations

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In bold are transfer stations. In grey are stations projected or currently under construction.


Line 1
West to East

Line 2
North to South

Line 3
Northwest to East

Line 4
Northeast to Southeast

Line 4A
South to Southeast

Line 5
Southwest to Southeast

Line 6
Southwest to Northeast

Line 7
Northwest to Northeast

Line 8
East to Southeast

Line 9
North to South

MetroArte

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The Santiago Metro incorporates 73 public artworks in its stations through the MetroArte fundation. Universidad de Chile features Memoria visual de una nación ("Visual Memory of a Nation"), a 1,200 square-meters mural created by Chilean painter Mario Toral and represents the history of the country. Other pieces of art are in Baquedano (featuring modern art and a concert space), Bellas Artes (multimedia art), Santa Lucía (Portuguese azulejos, a gift made by the Lisbon Metro), La Moneda (with realistic painting representing typical landscape), and various other stations.

Station amenities

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A diverse array of services are provided within each Metro station. Ticket offices, public telephones and metro-network information panels exist in every station; Redbanc, Cirrus and Plus-enabled ATMs, typically provided by either the Banco de Chile company or the BancoEstado national bank, are common. Automatic recharge machines are also common, with all such machines charging a customer's Bip! card with either cash deposits or a Redbanc-enabled card. In higher-traffic stations, there are screens that display MetroTV, featuring additional system information as well as music videos and short news segments.

Some 21 of the busiest stations contain a branch of Bibliometro, a system of lending libraries supported by the national Department of Libraries, Archives and Museums (Dibam). A Chilean ID or foreign passport allows any Metro customer to freely borrow from a reserve of books and other literature, but a registration is needed first.

Customers may rent a parking space for their bicycles through the Bicimetro network, which opened in 2008 at six stations and is slowly expanding, for a starting cost of $300 (approximately US$0.50) a day. There are weekly and monthly rental services too, that guarantee a fixed space for the bike (contrary to the daily rent which relies on random free-space).

Most underground Metro stations contain at least one shop or convenience store, with large line-transfer stations such as Baquedano featuring several food vendors and retailers, and even a small underground "shopping center" in Universidad de Chile.

Security and safety

[edit]

Various private security agencies have day-to-day responsibility for maintaining order in the metro and deterring petty crime or attempts to board without paying. The largest transfer stations, such as Tobalaba, also feature depots of the Carabineros de Chile, the national military police force. Metro staff man the ticket counters in closed box offices and distribute tickets and money through small transaction windows.

Signage to advise customers of safety hazards is extensive, and each platform has a painted yellow line which customers are advised to not cross except to board a train. During rush hour, Metro staff line the platform edge to keep people from being crowded off the platform and to support disabled customers. There is no physical barrier between the edge and the tracks (with the exception of recently opened Lines 3 and 6), including the hazardous, electrified third rail. However, lines 3 and 6 use overhead lines as the powersource of the trains.

Metro travelers are advised to keep a close guard on their belongings, as petty or opportunistic theft is somewhat of a problem in lines that connect some districts to the center of Santiago.[30] This is most apparent with passengers who reverse their backpacks so that the bag is across the stomach, to ensure that no one can pilfer the pockets out of sight.

Pricing and working hours

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Metro is part of Red Metropolitana de Movilidad, the integrated public transport system that serves the capital using also feeder and main bus routes. Red works with an integrated fare system, which allows passengers to make bus-bus or bus-metro transfers on a two-hour time limit from the first trip (maximum of two changes) using a contactless smart card called "Bip! card". Bus-to-bus, metro-to-bus and metro-to-train transfers do not cost extra. Bus-to-metro transfers costs $20 (approx. US$0.03) during Horario Valle (low-use hours) and $80 (approx. US$0.12) during Horario Punta (rush hour).

Bip! cards are available in all the ticketing offices in every station at a cost of $1,550 (approx. US$2.23), with a minimum first charge of $1000 worth of credit (approx. US$1.41). Tickets are sold from 6:00 to 23:00 Monday to Friday, 6:30 to 23:00 on Saturdays, and 8:00 to 22:30 on Sundays and holidays. Cards can be topped up to $20000, and the credit only expires if the card it is not used in two years.

Metro also used to sell single-trip, Metro-use only tickets, but they went out of circulation in early 2017. Fares depended on the time of the use of the system. The cost of a ticket in the Horario Punta (rush hour, 7:00–8:59 and 18:00–19:59) was $700 (approx. US$1.01); in the Horario Valle (off-peak hours, 6:30–6:59, 9:00–18:00, 20:00–20:44, and all day on weekends and holidays) was $640 (approximately US$0.90); and in the Horario Bajo (low-use hours, 6:00–6:29 and 20:45–23:00) was $590 (approximately US0.85).

Senior citizens (65 and older) and students holding concession cards pay $200 (US$0.28). Senior concession fare does not apply during rush hours.[31]

On weekdays, the metro operates from 5.35 am until 12.08 am, while on Saturdays it operates from 6.30 am until 12.08 am and on Sundays and public holidays the metro operates from 8 am (Line 1 from 9 am) until 11.48 pm. However, due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, operating hours have varied in accordance with national curfew.
(warning: stations close earlier - see timetable)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Conoce la "estación fantasma" de la Línea 3: fue construida hace 30 años y no será utilizada" [Meet Line 3's "Ghost Station": Built 30 years ago and not used] (in Spanish). Bio Bio. 21 January 2019. Retrieved 2019-01-22.
  2. ^ a b "Memoria Integrada 2023" [Integrated Report 2023] (PDF) (in Spanish). Metro de Santiago. p. 10. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  3. ^ "Corporativa – Historia – Historia de Metro" [Corporate – History – History of Metro] (in Spanish). Metro de Santiago. July 1, 2013. Retrieved 2013-09-18.
  4. ^ "La Tercera" (in Spanish). La Tercera. 25 September 2023.
  5. ^ Barra, Andrés (2023-09-25). "Extensión Línea 3: cómo queda el mapa del Metro de Santiago con las nuevas estaciones". La Tercera. Retrieved 2023-09-25.
  6. ^ "T13 | Tele 13". www.t13.cl. Retrieved 2021-02-25.
  7. ^ "Así será la nueva Línea 7 del Metro de Santiago". La Tercera (in Spanish). 2 June 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  8. ^ "Futura Línea 7 – Línea 3 y 6". www.metro.cl. Archived from the original on 2019-02-09. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
  9. ^ "Metro de Santiago es elegido como el mejor tren subterráneo de América". La Tercera (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 28 March 2012. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  10. ^ Morales, Sergio (1988). "Metro de Santiago" [Santiago Metro]. Revista EURE (in Spanish). 14 (42): 19–41.
  11. ^ "A los 86 años falleció Juan Parrochia, impulsor del Metro de Santiago". Colegio de Arquitectos de Chile (in Spanish). 2016-02-08. Retrieved 2024-05-09.
  12. ^ a b Chastain, Andra (2018-06-05). "Chile, France, and the Construction of the Santiago Metro". Global Urban History. Retrieved 2023-10-12.
  13. ^ a b Chastain, Andra. "The Santiago Metro as a Microcosm of Chile". NACLA. Retrieved 2023-10-12.
  14. ^ "Metro de Santiago es elegido como el mejor tren subterráneo de América | Santiago | LA TERCERA". 2012-03-28. Archived from the original on 2012-03-28. Retrieved 2023-10-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ "Metro de Santiago anuncia extensiones en dos líneas para el 2021". 24 Horas (in Spanish). 27 May 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  16. ^ "Así quedó el mapa de estaciones en el Metro de Santiago con la nueva Línea 6". 24 Horas (in Spanish). 2 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  17. ^ "Piñera anuncia construcción de dos nuevas Líneas del Metro para 2014". 5 October 2010.
  18. ^ Barra, Andrés (2023-09-25). "Extensión Línea 3: cómo queda el mapa del Metro de Santiago con las nuevas estaciones". La Tercera. Retrieved 2023-09-25.
  19. ^ Miranda, Mariana (2023-11-27). "Inauguración Línea 2 de Metro de Santiago: todo lo que necesitas saber". La Hora (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-11-27.
  20. ^ "INDH y sobreseimiento definitivo del caso estación Metro Baquedano". 15 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ "President Bachelet to include Santiago's metro line 7 in annual address". Santiago Times. Retrieved 2023-10-12.
  22. ^ Metro de Santiago (2 June 2017). "Nueva Linea 7". YouTube (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  23. ^ Chekh, Aldo Vidal y Eva Luna (2018-02-15). "Estudio del gobierno prioriza nuevas líneas de Metro por Vespucio, Santa Rosa y Tobalaba". La Tercera. Retrieved 2023-10-02.
  24. ^ Cooperativa.cl. "Ricardo Lagos propone ampliar el Metro de Santiago hasta 16 líneas". Cooperativa.cl (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-10-02.
  25. ^ Vidal, Aldo (2016-11-22). "¿Cómo sería la ruta de una nueva línea circular del Metro en Santiago?". La Tercera. Retrieved 2023-10-02.
  26. ^ "Transportes proyecta ampliar todas las líneas de Metro y un tren de cercanía al aeropuerto, Plataforma Urbana". www.plataformaurbana.cl. Retrieved 2023-10-02.
  27. ^ es:Metro de Santiago
  28. ^ es:NS 2007
  29. ^ "Global Mass Transit: Metro de Santiago: Momentum continues to grow".
  30. ^ "39 Tips on Santiago Warnings or Dangers - Stay Safe! - Page 2". Archived from the original on 2013-12-16.
  31. ^ "Metro de Santiago Price List". Retrieved 10 October 2014.

Further reading

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  • Chastain, Andra B. (2024). Chile Underground: The Santiago Metro and the Struggle for a Rational City. Yale University Press.
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