Pantitlán (Spanish:[pantiˈtlan](listen); Nahuatl transl."Between flags") is a Mexico City Metro transfer station in the boroughs of Iztacalco and Venustiano Carranza, in Mexico City. It is a combined underground, at-grade, and elevated station with six island platforms and two side platforms, served by Lines1 (the Pink Line), 5 (the Yellow Line), 9 (the Brown Line), and A (the Purple Line). The only quadra-line interchange station in the system, Pantitlán station works as the terminal station of all of the lines and is located adjacent to Zaragoza (Line1), Hangares (Line5), Puebla (Line9), and Agrícola Oriental (LineA). It serves the colonias (neighborhoods) of Ampliación Adolfo López Mateos, Aviación Civil, and Pantitlán; it receives its name from the last one. The station's pictogram features the silhouettes of two flagpoles.
Mexico City Metro station
"Pantitlán" redirects here. For the BRT stations, see Pantitlán (Mexibús) and Pantitlán (Mexico City Metrobús).
Pantitlán station opened on 19December 1981 with service northwestward toward Consulado on Line5; service eastward toward Observatorio on Line1 started on 22August 1984; service eastward toward Centro Médico on Line9 started on 26August 1987; and service southeastward toward LaPaz on LineA started on 12August 1991. The facilities are accessible to the disabled. Inside there is a cultural display, an Internet café, a women's defense module, a public ministry office, a health module, a mural, and a bicycle parking station.
By far, Pantitlán is the busiest station in the system. In 2019, the station had a ridership of 132,845,471 passengers, whereas the second place (Cuatro Caminos) registered 39,378,128 passengers. Out of those, 45,550,938 entrances were registered on LineA, making it the busiest station when counted separately. Starting 11 July 2022, the Line 1 station will remain closed for at least eight months for modernization work on the tunnel and the line's technical equipment.[2]
Location
Line 9's station is found next to Río Churubusco Avenue (pictured)
Pantitlán is a metro transfer station in the boroughs of Iztacalco and Venustiano Carranza, in eastern Mexico City. The station lies mostly along Río Churubusco Avenue and serves colonias (Mexican Spanish for "neighborhoods") of Ampliación Adolfo López Mateos, Aviación Civil, and Pantitlán. Pantitlán station functions as the terminal station of Lines1, 5, 9, and A, and it is adjacent to Zaragoza (Line1), Hangares (Line5), Puebla (Line9), and Agrícola Oriental (LineA) stations.[3]
The area is serviced by stations of the Metrobús (Line4), Mexibús (LineIII) and trolleybus (Line2) systems[4][5] Additional service is provided by Routes11-B, 11-C, 19-F, and 19-G of the city's public bus system[6] and by Route168 of the Red de Transporte de Pasajeros network.[7] The station is served by a Centro de transferencia modal (CETRAM), a type of transport hub.[8] As of 2010, over 3,600 transport units, locally known as peseros, were operating in the hub.[9] By 2016, the system estimated that the CETRAM was the most used in the country.[10] Pantitlán is also the closest metro station to the Terminal2 of the Mexico City International Airport.[11]
East: Miguel Lebrija Avenue and 2ª Cerrada de Río Churubusco, Pantitlán, Iztacalco (Line9).
North: Río Churubusco Avenue and Talleres Gráficos Street, Ampliación Adolfo López Mateos, Venustiano Carranza (LineA).
Northwest: Río Churubusco Avenue and Guadalupe Victoria Street, Ampliación Adolfo López Mateos, Venustiano Carranza (LineA).
South: Río Churubusco Avenue, Pantitlán, Iztacalco (LineA).
History and construction
Station layout
The architects were Aurelio Nuño Morales and Isaac Broid.[12] Originally, Line8 (which runs from downtown Mexico City to Constitución de1917 station in Iztapalapa) was planned to run from Pantitlán to Indios Verdes station, in Gustavo A. Madero, northern Mexico City. The project was canceled due to potential structural issues it would have caused near the Zócalo zone as it was planned to interchange with Line2 at Zócalo station.[13]
The station was named after Colonia Pantitlán, whose name means "between flags" in Nahuatl. During the Aztec era, the zone, formerly part of Lake Texcoco, was marked with flagpoles to announce to canoeists that it was dangerous to navigate there due to harsh currents.[3] The station's pictogram features a silhouette of two flagpoles with blank flags.[3] Pantitlán station has an accessible service with elevators (Lines1 and A), access ramps, escalators (Line9) and tactile pavings and braille signage plates (Lines9 and A).[3]
Line 1
The line was built by Ingeniería de Sistemas de Transportes Metropolitano, Electrometro, and Cometro, the last one a subsidiary of Empresas ICA.[14] The Line1 station opened on 22August 1984, operating towards Observatorio and connecting Lines1 and 5.[15] Before it was opened, Zaragoza served as the terminal of Line1, thus the workshops are found between both stations.[16][17] The location of the workshop indirectly benefited the operations on the line as it allows the trains to depart every 90 seconds.[14] It is an underground station[18] whose interstation tunnel to Zaragoza measures 1,320 meters (4,330ft).[19] The passenger transfer tunnel that connects Line1 with LineA has an approximate length of 600m (2,000ft), and is the third-longest in the system after those of Atlalilco and LaRaza stations.[20]
In 2016, the station received renovation works.[21] The station will be closed in 2022 for modernization work on the tunnel and technical equipment of the line.[22]
Line 5
The line was built by Cometro[23] and its first section was opened on 19December 1981, operating toward Consulado station.[24] It is an at-grade station whose interstation with Hangares goes from the street level to the underground one;[25] the section is 1,644 meters (5,394ft) long.[19]
Line 9
The line was built by Cometro[26] and its first section was opened on 26August 1987, operating toward Centro Médico station.[27] It is an elevated station[26] whose interstation with Puebla measures 1,380 meters (4,530ft).[19] Additionally, there is a train shed after the station.[26] During the station's construction, a tusk and a molar of a mammoth were found at a depth of 13.5 meters (44ft).[28]
Line A
The line was built by Empresas ICA[29] and it was opened on 12August 1991, operating towards LaPaz station, located in the municipality of the same name of the State of Mexico.[30] Unlike the other 11 lines, LineA is described as a light metro system[29][31] whose first interstation with Agrícola Oriental is 1,409 meters (4,623ft) long.[19] It is the line's only underground station as the trains pass below the Line5 tracks.[29] As it incorporates Calzada Ignacio Zaragoza Avenue, the line emerges to the street level.[25]
To build the station, ICA constructed a false rectangular-shaped tunnel using the Milan method. They added floor slabs and the ceiling is made up of prefabricated slabs. Above the ceiling, they added pavement wherever it was required.[29]
From its opening until 12December 2013, users coming from LineA had to make a double payment to access the other lines and vice versa.[32]
Landmarks
Alegoría a la Ciudad de México y el Sistema de Transporte Colectivo at Line 5's lobby
Inside the station, there is a cultural display, an Internet café, a women's defense module, and a health module.[3] Outside the station, a public ministry office was installed in 2002 to reduce criminal offenses inside the station.[33] On 1 May 2007, the system inaugurated the mural Alegoría a la Ciudad de México y el Sistema de Transporte Colectivo (lit.transl.Allegory to Mexico City and the Collective Transport System), painted by José Luis Elías Jáuregui. According to him, he was inspired by the history of the country and decided to include multiple elements that represent it, including the Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl volcanoes, an eagle devouring a snake (a reference to the country's coat of arms), a pyramid, and a Mestiza holding a white dove. The acrylic-on-canvas artwork is 9m (30ft) wide and it honors the STC workers and it features four train models used by the system.[34][35] In 2014, the Government of Mexico City built a bicycle parking station near the CETRAM.[36]
Incidents
Sinking reports exists since at least 1998.[37] By 2016, the system informed about the existence of cracks and subsidence that would take about five years to be resolved.[38] After the collapse of the elevated railway near Olivos station on Line12 in May2021, users reported the structural damage to other elevated stations, including Pantitlán station.[39][40] Mayor of Mexico City, Claudia Sheinbaum, said that the reports would be examined accordingly.[41]
From 1 to 16March 2020, Pantitlán, Hangares and Terminal Aérea stations on Line 5 were closed due to a leak of gasoline in a surface petrol station.[42] The Line9 station was closed from 27 March to 7 April 2021 due to repairs on the section between Velódromo and Ciudad Deportiva.[43][44] Platforms M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, and T at the CETRAM were closed on 11October 2021 due to structural failures detected in the station's basement, which is used to house out-of-service trains.[45]
On 26 January 2022, a man threatened to jump from one of the station's line-connecting bridges. A policeman rappeled down and caught him, but the weight of both broke the rope and both fell approximately 8 meters (26ft). The fall caused the officer to suffer severe head trauma, while the other man resulted unhurt.[46][47]
Ridership
Users accessing on LineA during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic
According to the data provided by the authorities, all the stations have been among the busiest stations of the system's 195 stations. In 2019, before the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on public transport, the station's ridership totaled 132,845,471 passengers (363,960 passengers per day), whereas the second place (Cuatro Caminos) registered 39,378,128 passengers.[48]
For Line1, the ridership was 17,860,457 passengers (48,932 per day), which was an increase of 1,874,257 passengers compared to 2018. For Line5, the station had a ridership of 36,594,748 passengers (100,259 per day), which was a decrease of 716,435 passengers compared to the previous year. For Line9, the ridership was 32,839,328 passengers (89,970 per day), which was an increase of 1,060,592 passengers compared to 2018. For LineA, the station had a ridership of 45,550,938 passengers (124,797 per day), which was an increase of 4,700,613 passengers compared to the previous year.[48][49]
In 2019, when counted separately, the Line1 station was the 17thbusiest of the system and the line's 5th busiest. The Line5 station was the 4thbusiest in the system and the line's most used. The Line9 station was the 5thbusiest in the system and it was also the line's busiest. And the LineA station was the busiest in the network, a feat that has occurred since 2017.[48]
As of 2010, around 789,000 commuters transited through the station daily.[9] In the same year, it was estimated that 65 percent of the users came from the State of Mexico.[50] By 2019, user traffic was approaching 100,000 passengers per hour (between 6 and 10a.m.).[51] In 2019, the system announced measures to distribute passengers to reduce accidents and that there are plans to conclude the construction of a ring connecting the four stations.[52]
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