Alstom Metropolis 9000 on the Line 1 (2013)
|
|||
Overview | |||
---|---|---|---|
Native name | Metro de Lima | ||
Locale | Lima, Peru | ||
Transit type | Metro | ||
Number of lines | 1 | ||
Number of stations | 26 | ||
Daily ridership | 320,000 | ||
Annual ridership | 116,000,000 | ||
Operation | |||
Began operation | April 28, 1990 (completion) July 11, 2011 (revenue service) |
||
Operator(s) | Ferrovías (Grupo Emepa) | ||
Technical | |||
System length | 34.6 km (21.5 mi) | ||
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) standard gauge | ||
Electrification | overhead lines | ||
|
The Lima Metro (Spanish: Metro de Lima), is a metropolitan railway operated by Argentine company Ferrovías and Peruvian company Graña y Montero, currently linking the district of Villa El Salvador in the south of Lima with San Juan de Lurigancho in the east of the capital of Peru.
Despite the line having obtained 32 cars and completed construction of 7 stations for over many years, it did not operate a commercial service in 1990 during the first presidency of Alan García (1985–1990) because the constructed section didn't have the distance or demand required to make it commercially viable. The construction of the Lima Metro remained paralyzed since that time under accusations of bribes, after an investment of 226 million dollars co-financed by the Italian government.
Thus, the Peruvian Government under the second presidency of Alan García (2006–2011) put the Ministry of Transport and Communications in charge of completing Line 1, extending its current tracks up to Av. Grau in the city center, making a total of 34.6 kilometers (21.5 mi) of elevated viaduct with 26 stations and crossing several districts: Villa El Salvador, Villa María del Triunfo, San Juan de Miraflores, Santiago de Surco, Surquillo, San Borja, San Luis, La Victoria, Lima District and San Juan de Lurigancho. Line 1 finally opened for revenue service on July 11, 2011. At 35 km (22 mi) long, Metro Line 1 is the longest in the Americas, and the elevated viaduct of Metro railway the longest in the world.