- Source: Eduardo Molina metro station
Eduardo Molina metro station is a Mexico City Metro station within the limits of Gustavo A. Madero and Venustiano Carranza, in Mexico City. It is an at-grade station with one island platform, served by Line 5 (the Yellow Line), between Consulado and Aragón stations. Eduardo Molina station serves the colonias (neighborhoods) of 20 de Noviembre and Malinche. The station is named after Eduardo Molina Arévalo, an engineer who helped to solve the problem of water scarcity in the Valley of Mexico in the mid-20th century, and its pictogram represents two hands holding water, as featured on the mural El agua, origen de la vida (lit. transl. Water, Origin of Life), painted by Mexican muralist Diego Rivera in the Cárcamo de Dolores, in Chapultepec, Mexico City. Eduardo Molina metro station was opened on 19 December 1981, on the first day of the Consulado–Pantitlán service. In 2019, the station had an average daily ridership of 6,811 passengers, making it the 176th busiest station in the network and the ninth busiest of the line.
Location
Eduardo Molina is a metro station located on Río Consulado Avenue, in northeastern Mexico City. The station serves the colonias (Mexican Spanish for "neighborhoods") of 20 de Noviembre, in Venustiano Carranza, and Malinche, in Gustavo A. Madero. Within the system, the station lies between Consulado and Aragón stations.
The area is serviced by Line 5 of the Metrobús system at Río Consulado bus station, a few blocks away, as well as by Route 200 of the Red de Transporte de Pasajeros network, and by Route 20-B of the city's public bus system.
= Exits
=There are two exits:
North: Río Consulado Avenue and Norte 86 Street, Malinche, Gustavo A. Madero.
South: Río Consulado Avenue, 20 de Noviembre, Venustiano Carranza.
History and construction
Line 5 of the Mexico City Metro was built by Cometro, a subsidiary of Empresas ICA, and its first section was opened on 19 December 1981, operating from Pantitlán to Consulado stations. Eduardo Molina is an at-grade station; the Eduardo Molina–Aragón interstation is 860 meters (2,820 ft) long, while the Eduardo Molina–Consulado section measures 815 meters (2,674 ft). The station is named after Eduardo Molina Arévalo, a Mexican engineer who helped to solve the problem of water scarcity in the Valley of Mexico in the mid-20th century through the Lerma River system, and the station's pictogram features two hands holding water, a reference to a fragment of the mural El agua, origen de la vida (lit. transl. Water, Origin of Life), painted by Diego Rivera inside the main building of the Cárcamo de Dolores, a hydraulic sump structure in Chapultepec, Mexico City.
= Incidents
=After the 2015 Oceanía station train crash, Eduardo Molina metro station was temporarily closed for repairs. On 31 July 2018, three railroad cars uncoupled while a train was traveling at the Consulado–Eduardo Molina interstation, with no injuries reported. When the incident was reviewed, authorities found that the nuts that kept the cars together were damaged. From 23 April to 15 June 2020, the station was temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico.
= Ridership
=According to the data provided by the authorities since the 2000s, and before the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on public transport, commuters averaged per year between 6,800 and 8,000 daily entrances between 2013 and 2019; the station had a ridership of 2,486,165 passengers in 2019, which was a decrease of 75,730 passengers compared to 2018. Also in 2019, Eduardo Molina metro station was the 176th busiest station of the system's 195 stations and it was the line's ninth busiest.
Gallery
Notes
References
External links
Media related to Eduardo Molina (station) at Wikimedia Commons
"Metro Eduardo Molina". At the Official Guide to Mexico City.
Monzón, Jorge Arturo. "Photos 1-12 of 12: Eduardo Molina". world.nycsubway.org.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Stasiun San Lázaro
- Eduardo Molina metro station
- Eduardo Molina
- Aragón metro station
- Consulado metro station
- San Lázaro metro station
- Oceanía metro station
- Terminal Aérea metro station
- Bondojito metro station
- Deportivo Oceanía metro station
- Mexico City Metro Line 1