Mexico City Metro Line 1
Mexico City Metro Line 1 is one of the twelve metro lines operating in Mexico City, Mexico. Officially inaugurated in 1969, it went to become the first metro line to be built in the country. Its identifying color is pink and it runs through the city from west to east.
General information
The line is built under several avenues: Parque Lira, Pedro Antonio de los Santos, 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 Line 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. When Line 12 extension is completed, it will also connect with Line 12 at Observatorio.
History
The first section of Line 1 was opened on 4 September 1969 as part of Mexico City Metro's first construction stage, it was inaugurated by Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, President of Mexico from 1964 to 1970, and Alfonso Corona del Rosal, Regent of the Federal District Department. The inauguration ceremony took place at the Insurgentes station. The next day the line was opened to the public.To the original route Chapultepec – Zaragoza new station Juanacatlán was added to the west on 11 April 1970, and the first correspondencia transfer station became functional on 1 August 1970, when Line 2 was opened. The two westernmost stations Tacubaya and current terminal Observatorio were inaugurated on 20 November 1970 and 10 June 1972 respectively.
Station Pantitlán was opened on 22 August 1984 as eastern terminal during a fourth and final expansion. All twenty stations have operated since then, running a total track length of 18.83 km, of which 16.65 km are passenger track. The 1 is the only line in the network that is fully underground except for some surface track in Observatorio used for maintenance.
Currently, an extension of Line 12 is under construction, this stretch will connect Line 12 with Line 1 at the Observatorio station.
Chronology
- September 4, 1969: from Chapultepec to Zaragoza.
- April 11, 1970: from Chapultepec to Juanacatlán.
- November 20, 1970: from Juanacatlán to Tacubaya.
- June 10, 1972: from Tacubaya to Observatorio.
- August 22, 1984: from Zaragoza to Pantitlán.
Rolling stock
- Alstom MP-68: 1969–2018
- Concarril NM-73: 1978–present
- Alstom MP-82: 1985–1994
- Concarril NM-83: 1989–2018
- CAF NE-92: 1994–2018
- Bombardier NC-82: 2006–2007
- Concarril NM-79: 2011–2012
- CAF NM-16: 2018–present
Station list
Renamed stations
Ridership
The following table shows each of Line 1 stations total and average daily ridership during 2019.† | Transfer station |
‡ | Terminal |
†‡ | Transfer station and terminal |
Tourism
Line 1 passes near several places of interest:- Bosque de Chapultepec, city park.
- *Museo de Arte Moderno, museum of modern art.
- *Chapultepec Castle
- *Heroic Cadets Memorial, monument dedicated to the memory of the Niños Héroes.
- *Chapultepec Zoo
- Estela de Luz, monument that commemorates the bicentenary of Mexico's independence.
- Paseo de la Reforma, emblematic avenue of Mexico City.
- Diana the Huntress Fountain, monumental fountain of Diana located at Paseo de la Reforma.
- Angel of Independence, victory column on a roundabout on the major thoroughfare of Paseo de la Reforma.
- Zona Rosa, neighborhood known for its shopping, nightlife, gay community and Korean community.
- Historic center of Mexico City