Atlántico railway station explained

Atlántico railway station
Native Name:Estación de Ferrocarril al Atlántico
Native Name Lang:es
Address:Avenida Jenaro Cardona, Carmen, San José
Country:Costa Rica
Coordinates:9.9346°N -84.0689°W
Operator:Incofer
Line:Interurbano
Opened:1908, 2011
Closed:1996-2011

Atlántico railway station (Spanish; Castilian: Estación del Ferrocarril al Atlántico) is a railway station and historic building located in San José, Costa Rica, declared as Architectural Patrimony of Costa Rica by decree 11664-C of 29 July 1980. [1]

Built in 1908 and open until 1996, it was the main railway station between San José and Limón, where the main freight port is located.

The emblematic building combines victorian, neoclassical, and baroque architectures, with some modernist details.

In 2011, a restoration effort by the Ministry of Culture and Youth took place to reopen the station as a railway station for the urban train between the cantons of San José, Alajuela, Cartago, and Heredia.

Shapes, Spaces, and Sounds Museum

Between 2002 and 2008, the station was the location of the Shapes, Spaces, and Sounds Museum (Spanish; Castilian: Museo de Formas Espacios y Sonidos).[2] The museum closed in October 2007.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fernández . Andrés . Los muros cuentan: Crónicas de arquitectura histórica josefin . 2013 . Editorial Costa Rica . 978-9968-684-31-6 . 57-62.
  2. Book: Baker, C.P.. Costa Rica. Dorling Kindersley Eye Witness Travel Guides. 2005. 71.
  3. News: Fonseca Q.. Pablo. Museo de Formas, Espacios y Sonidos dejará de existir. 10 July 2015. Nacion. 18 February 2008.