Barcelona Metro line 9 explained

Line 9 (Línia 9 in Catalan) is a completely automated line of the Barcelona Metro network that is currently under construction, with 24 stations open in Barcelona and El Prat de Llobregat, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Badalona and Santa Coloma de Gramenet suburbs, since December 2009. The line is currently disconnected in two branches, with a connecting part between the two yet to be built. The Aeroport T1Zona Universitària section is called L9 South (L9 Sud in Catalan), and the La SagreraCan Zam portion L9 North (L9 Nord in Catalan). Upon completion, it will be the longest underground metro line in Europe.[1]

Lines 9 and 10

The complete project encompasses an underground line with two branches spanning a large portion of the metropolitan area of Barcelona, crossing Barcelona, Santa Coloma de Gramenet, Badalona, l'Hospitalet de Llobregat and El Prat de Llobregat. Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona is the company operating the line.[2]

The name line 9 (L9) can refer either to the whole project of L9/L10 or to the common trunk plus the L9 branches. The total system will have a length of, of which will be underground and will be on viaducts.[3] L9/L10 will be the deepest line in the Barcelona network, with tunnels up to 80m (260feet) below the surface, and some stations with platforms up to 60m (200feet) below.[4]

Line 9 shares its route with L10 for a large part. Its commercial speed is .[5]

Construction

Autoritat del Transport Metropolità approved the plan for metro and light rail lines in the Barcelona metropolitan area that included line 9 in 1999. The next year ATM began planning and design with construction starting in 2002.[6] [7]

Originally expected to be ready by 2008, ongoing problems with its construction delayed its expected completion until as late as 2013–2014. It was subsequently further delayed to 2016.[8]

On 13 December 2009,[9] the section between Can Peixauet and Can Zam, with the exception of Santa Rosa station, opened to the public. A further station, Bon Pastor, opened on 18 April 2010; as the first section of L10 was opened. The section from La Sagrera to Bon Pastor (except Sagrera | TAV station) opened on 26 June 2010.

On February 12, 2016[10] the El Prat branch opened from Aeroport T1 to Zona Universitària stations. This is a section with 15 stations, however three stations – Aeroport Terminal de Càrrega, La Ribera and Camp Nou – did not open, as they were built to serve future developments or for technical reasons. Line 9 is being bored by a single 11.95m (39.21feet) tunnel boring machine (TBM) – where other metros bore a pair of tunnels, one for each direction, Line 9's wider tunnel is broad enough to stack two lines of tracks and for the route's stations.

Because the route passes through different geological conditions, the TBM is designed to replace the cutterheads with heads suited for the current conditions. In June 2010 the TBM's hard rock cutterhead was replaced with its original cutterhead, designed to bore through clay.

List of stations

(Stations under construction in italics)

El Prat area
Provisional L9S Start

Central branch, shared with L10

Provisional L9S End

Provisional L9N Start

Besòs area

Provisional L9N End

Extra cost

Entering or exiting the metro line from the airport stations in Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 requires a valid ticket. A Single Ticket (Bitllet Senzill), a T-casual (formerly T-10), or a T-familiar are not considered valid, and will not allow exiting the line through these stations. An Airport Ticket at a charge of 5.15 euros can be purchased before exiting the metro. All time-based tickets with unlimited journeys (daily, monthly, quarterly or Hola BCN! tickets) are considered valid, and passengers travelling with them do not need to purchase any additional tickets to access these stations.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Què és la L9? . 18 September 2015 . L9 . Generalitat de Catalunya . https://web.archive.org/web/20150726144058/http://linia9.ifercat.cat/queEsL9.html . 26 July 2015 . dead . ca . What is the L9 / L10?.
  2. Book: Institut d'Estudis Catalans . Anuari territorial de Catalunya 2005 . 2006 . Societat Catalana d'Ordenació del Territori . 84-7283-881-1 . Barcelona . ca.
  3. Web site: Què és l'L9? . https://web.archive.org/web/20100217054109/http://www.gencat.cat/L9/queEsL9.html . February 17, 2010 . www.gencat.cat . ca. .
  4. Web site: Truini . William . 30 December 2009 . The Big Dig: Barcelona's Metro Line 9 . Barcelona Metropolitan . en.
  5. News: Metro, subway, underground Metro line 9 to Barcelona Airport . 7 May 2022 . www.aeropuertobarcelona-elprat.com . en.
  6. Web site: Barcelona Metro Line 9 . 20 April 2018 . Sener . en . 21 April 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180421030938/http://www.infrastructuresandtransport.sener/project/barcelona-metro-line-9 . dead .
  7. Web site: Barcelona Metro Line 9 . 20 April 2018 . Railway Technology . en.
  8. Web site: Puente . Fernando . June 12, 2014 . Barcelona Metro Airport Link Set for 2016 Launch . 18 April 2018 . International Railway Journal.
  9. News: Placer . David . 2009-12-05 . La L-9 arribarà el 13 de desembre a cinc estacions de Santa Coloma . ca . .
  10. El metro hacia El Prat comenzará a funcionar el día 12 de febrero . 20 January 2016 . . es . 20 January 2016 . The metro to el Prat will start service on 12 February.
  11. Web site: From the airport by metro . 11 March 2023 . Visit Barcelona . Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona.