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Bus rapid transit line in the Mexico City Metrobús From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mexico City Metrobús Line 1 is a bus rapid transit line in the Mexico City Metrobús. It operates between Indios Verdes, in the Gustavo A. Madero municipality in the northern part of the city, and El Caminero, in Tlalpan in southern Mexico City. The line was the first one to be built and opened. The first section of the line, known as Corredor Insurgentes, was inaugurated by Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Head of Government of the Federal District from 2000 to 2005, on June 19, 2005.[3] The second stretch of the line, known as Corredor Insurgentes Sur, was inaugurated on March 13, 2008, by Marcelo Ebrard, Head of Government of the Federal District from 2006 to 2012.[4]
Metrobús Line 1 | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Status | In service |
Termini |
|
Stations | 46 |
Website | Línea 1 |
Service | |
Type | Bus rapid transit |
System | Mexico City Metrobus |
Services | 5 |
Operator(s) | See Operators |
Daily ridership | 600,000 (April 2018)[1] |
History | |
Opened | June 19, 2005 |
Technical | |
Line length | 28.1 km (17.5 mi)[2] |
Character | Exclusive right-of-way |
The line has 46 stations and a total length of 28.1 kilometers.[2]
The line has five itineraries.[5]
Indios Verdes to Insurgentes
Indios Verdes to El Caminero
Indios Verdes to Dr. Gálvez
Buenavista to El Caminero
Colonia del Valle to Tepalcates (Line 2)
Line 1 services the Gustavo A. Madero, Cuauhtémoc, Benito Juárez, Álvaro Obregón, Coyoacán and Tlalpan municipalities.
Denotes a Metrobús transfer | |
Denotes a connection with the Cablebús system | |
Denotes a connection with the Centro de transferencia modal (CETRAM) system | |
Denotes a connection with the Ecobici system | |
Denotes a connection with the Metro system | |
Denotes a connection with the Mexibús system | |
Denotes a connection with the Mexicable system | |
Denotes a connection with the public bus system | |
Denotes a connection with the Red de Transporte de Pasajeros (RTP) system | |
Denotes a connection with the Tren Suburbano system | |
Denotes a connection with the Trolleybus system |
Stations[lower-alpha 2] | Connections | Neighborhood(s) | Municipality | Picture | Date opened |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Indios Verdes[lower-alpha 3] |
|
Residencial Zacatenco | Gustavo A. Madero | June 19, 2005[2] | |
Deportivo 18 de Marzo |
|
Lindavista, Tepeyac Insurgentes | |||
Euzkaro |
|
Magdalena de las Salinas, Industrial | |||
Potrero |
|
Capultitán, Guadalupe Insurgentes | |||
La Raza |
|
Vallejo | |||
Circuito |
|
Santa María Insurgentes | Cuauhtémoc | ||
San Simón |
|
Santa María Insurgentes, San Simón Tolnáhuac | |||
Manuel González |
|
Colonia Atlampa, Tlatelolco | |||
Buenavista |
|
Santa María la Ribera, Buenavista | |||
El Chopo |
|
||||
Revolución |
|
||||
Plaza de la República[lower-alpha 4] |
|
San Rafael, Tabacalera | |||
Reforma |
|
||||
Hamburgo |
|
Juárez | |||
Glorieta de los Insurgentes |
|
Juárez, Roma Norte | |||
Durango |
|
Roma Norte | |||
Álvaro Obregón |
|
||||
Sonora |
|
Hipódromo, Roma Norte | |||
Campeche |
|
Hipódromo, Roma Sur | |||
Chilpancingo |
|
||||
Nuevo León |
|
||||
La Piedad |
|
Nápoles, Del Valle Norte | Benito Juárez | ||
Poliforum |
|
||||
Nápoles |
|
Nápoles, Del Valle Centro | |||
Colonia del Valle |
|
Nápoles, Insurgentes San Borja | |||
Ciudad de los Deportes |
|
Ciudad de los Deportes, Insurgentes San Borja | |||
Parque Hundido |
|
Noche Buena, Tlacoquemécatl | |||
Félix Cuevas |
|
Extremadura Insurgentes, Tlacoquemécatl | |||
Río Churubusco |
|
Insurgentes Mixcoac, Actipán | |||
Teatro Insurgentes | San José Insurgentes, Crédito Constructor | ||||
José María Velasco |
|
Guadalupe Inn, Florida | Álvaro Obregón | ||
Francia | |||||
Olivo | |||||
Altavista |
|
||||
La Bombilla |
|
San Ángel, Chimalistac | |||
Dr. Gálvez |
|
Barrio Loreto, Chimalistac | |||
Ciudad Universitaria |
|
Ciudad Universitaria | Coyoacán | March 13, 2008[2] | |
Centro Cultural Universitario | |||||
Perisur |
|
Insurgentes Cuicuilco | |||
Villa Olímpica | Villa Olímpica, Peña Pobre | Tlalpan | |||
Corregidora | Tlalpan, La Lonja | ||||
Ayuntamiento | Tlalpan, La Fama | ||||
Fuentes Brotantes | Santa Úrsula Xitla, Tlalpan | ||||
Santa Úrsula | |||||
La Joya | |||||
El Caminero |
|
La Joya | |||
Line 1 has four operators.[15]
As of April 2018, the Metrobus Line 1 moves an average of 600,000 commuters daily. This has led to a saturation of the line, thus articulated buses are being substituted for bi-articulated buses.[1]
According to the director of CISA, there are between one and four minor accidents per week in Line 1.[17]
In February 2018, a cyclist was hit by a bus when he invaded the Metrobús' right-of-way near Perisur. The cyclist died immediately after the incident.[18]
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