Barcelona Metro | |
Imagesize2: | 80px |
Native Name: | Catalan; Valencian: Metro de Barcelona |
Owner: | TMB (Lines 1-5, 9-11), FGC (Lines 6-8, 12) |
Locale: | Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain |
Transit Type: | Rapid transit |
Lines: | 12 lines (Total) |
Stations: | 189 (Total)
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Ridership: | 645,000 [1] |
Annual Ridership: | 355,560,000 (2018)[2] |
Website: |
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Began Operation: | (Partial) (Full) |
Operator: | TMB (Lines 1-5, 9-11), FGC (Lines 6-8, 12) |
System Length: | |
Track Gauge: |
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Area Served: | Barcelona metropolitan area |
The Barcelona Metro (Catalan and Spanish: Catalan; Valencian: Metro de Barcelona) is a network of rapid transit electrified railway lines that run mostly underground in central Barcelona and into the city's suburbs. It is part of the larger public transport system of Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia, Spain, with unified fares under the Catalan; Valencian: [[Autoritat del Transport Metropolità]]|italic=no (ATM) scheme. As of 2024, the network is operated by two separate companies: Catalan; Valencian: [[Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona]]|italic=no (TMB) and Catalan; Valencian: [[Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya]]|italic=no (FGC). It is made up of 12 lines, combining the lines owned by the two companies. Two lines, L9 and L10, are being built at present, with both lines having different sections of each opened between 2009 and 2018. They are due to be fully completed in 2030.[3] Three lines on the network have opened as automatic train operation/driverless vehicle systems since 2009: Line 11 being converted to driverless first, and then Lines 9 and 10, opening up driverless.
It is one of only two metros worldwide to operate on three different track gauges, being on line 8, older Iberian gauge on line 1, and and the remaining lines; the other metro with three gauges being the Toei Subway in Tokyo, which uses two narrow gauges and standard gauge. It is the only metro worldwide to operate on both narrow and broad gauge tracks.
The network length is 170km (110miles), with 183 stations, as of November 2021.
The first rapid transit railway service in Barcelona was founded in 1863 by the private company Ferrocarril de Barcelona a Sarrià ("Railway from Barcelona to Sarrià", after 1916 Sarrià joined the municipality of Barcelona). Later this line evolved in what now is basically the current L6 metro service. This railway system, now part of the Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya company, was later inspired by the London Underground naming style having long names for the lines ("Sarrià line", "Balmes line"...).
Much later, in the 1920s, a second and a third rapid transit railway systems were founded with the construction of the Gran Metro between Lesseps and the Plaça de Catalunya (part of the modern L3) and, two years later, the Metro Transversal (now part of L1). This third one was built between the Plaça de Catalunya and la Bordeta to link the city centre with the Plaça d'Espanya and Montjuïc, the site of the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition. These two later rapid transit companies contrasted with the first one in being inspired by the Métropolitain de Paris (from where the word "metro" comes).
As of 2022, the network consists of 12 lines managed by 2 different operators: Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona (TMB) and Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya (FGC, or Catalan Government Railways). Fares and nomenclature are controlled by the Autoritat del Transport Metropolità, a citywide system that also includes local and regional buses, tramways and some commuter and regional train services.
Since early 2020, the total length of the network is long and 189 stations, including the TMB+FGC+Montjuïc funicular.
The major network, operated by TMB, consists of eight lines, numbered L1 to L5 and L9 to L11 (which are distinguished on network maps by different colours), covering 102.6km (63.8miles) of route and 141 stations.[4]
FGC lines are numbered L6, L7, L8 and L12. These lines, except all of L12 and part of L7, share tracks with commuter rail lines.
The Barcelona Metro lines do not have a name of their own but are generally referred to by their colour or by the number and the names of their termini.
The lines run as follows:
Line Number | Termini | Operator | Current length | Approved length | Current stations | Approved stations | Year of opening | Gauge | Electrification | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 1desc none | Hospital de Bellvitge-Fondo | TMB | 20.7km (12.9miles) | 29.758km (18.491miles) | 30 | 38 | 1926 | rigid overhead line | ||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 2desc none | Paral·lel–Badalona Pompeu Fabra | 13.7km (08.5miles) | 18.466km (11.474miles) | 18 | 34 | 1995 | 1,200–1,500 V DC rigid overhead line | |||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 3desc none | Zona Universitària-Trinitat Nova | 18.4km (11.4miles) | 20.024km (12.442miles) | 26 | 36 | 1924 | rigid overhead line | |||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 4desc none | Trinitat Nova-La Pau | 17.3km (10.7miles) | 18.916km (11.754miles) | 22 | 26 | 1973 (1926) | ||||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 5desc none | Cornellà Centre-Vall d'Hebron | 19.168km (11.91miles) | 27 | 1959 | ||||||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 6desc none | Pl. Catalunya-Sarrià | FGC | 4.884km (03.035miles) | 8 (2 shared with L7) | 1929 (1863) | 1,500 V DC overhead line | ||||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 7desc none | Pl. Catalunya-Av. Tibidabo | 4.634km (02.879miles) | 7 (2 shared with L6) | 1953 (1863) | ||||||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 8desc none | Pl. Espanya-Molí Nou-Ciutat Cooperativa | 11.266km (07miles) | 11 | 21 | 2000 (1912) | |||||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 9desc none | Aeroport T1-Zona Universitària | TMB | 19.6km (12.2miles) | 47.8km (29.7miles) | 15 | 39 | 2009 | 1,500 V DC rigid overhead line | ||
La Sagrera-Can Zam | 7.867km (04.888miles) | 9 (3 shared with L10) | ||||||||
25x25pxrect 0 0 500 500 Barcelona Metro line 10desc none | La Sagrera–Gorg | 5.57km (03.46miles) | 47.8km (29.7miles) |
In addition to those, Renfe and FGC trains and the increasingly important tram routes and stations are displayed on most recent maps, including the info maps in the metro stations, all in a single variety of dark green.
Construction work is taking place currently on L9/L10, which when finished will run from Badalona and Santa Coloma de Gramenet to the Zona Franca district and El Prat International Airport. The lines, which share a central section between Bon Pastor and Can Tries | Gornal, will be the longest automated metro line in Europe, at 47.8km (29.7miles), and combined will have 52 stations. The project was approved in 2000[5] but has been challenged by some technical difficulties and some of their sections are pending further geological analysis. The first section of Line 9 that runs between La Sagrera and Can Zam opened in 2009, and by June 2010 eleven new stations on the new Lines L9 and L10 had opened. As of February 2016, the 15-station, 19.6km (12.2miles) south section of Line L9 between Zona Universitària and the airport (Aeroport T1 station) opened.[6]
In addition to the one-way ticket there are a number of other tickets and cards. All of the Autoritat del Transport Metropolità (ATM) transport cards are valid and can be used in the Barcelona Metro. These are:
All of the metro stations are within fare zone 1.
See main article: List of Barcelona metro stations. At the end of 2018, there are 187 operational stations in the Barcelona Metro, served by the 12 lines in current use. The average distance between 2 stations is 807.50 metres.
An overwhelming majority of stations in the network lack related buildings or structures aboveground, mostly consisting of an access with stairs, escalators or elevators. The official TMB metro indicator, a red rhombus with a M inside, remains unused by FGC lines, which use their company logo and a different rhombus-shaped logo (actually rather similar to the one used inside the Madrid Metro) inside stations. Below ground their decoration is remarkably sober, with the exception of the new stations.
See main article: Disused Barcelona metro stations. A number of stations in the network have been closed, were never inaugurated, or have been moved to a nearby location. See the main article for more details.
Accessibility for passengers with reduced mobility is nearing completion., 8 out of 192 stations are not fully accessible.
The non accessible stations are:
Lines L2, L6, L7, L8, L9 Nord, L9 Sud, L10 Nord, L10 Sud, L11 and L12 are fully accessible.
Non accessible connections (in both directions):
For up to date info check the official sites of TMB and FGC
The Barcelona Metro is part of a larger transportation network, regulated and fare-integrated by Autoritat del Transport Metropolità.
Among these services, there are two large systems which operate both inside and outside the city limits of Barcelona: the commuter train lines operated by Renfe, amalgamated in the Rodalies Barcelona, or Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya lines which start in the metro lines the company operates (L6, L7 and L8) and which become a fully-fledged railway system which serves most of the metropolitan area: list of FGC lines. FGC is developing metros for Sabadell and Terrassa - see Barcelona–Vallès Line.
The Barcelona subway appears in the Spanish psychological horror film Estación de Rocafort. In the film, the Rocafort subway station becomes a main scenario where part of the plot develops. The film is inspired by the black legend of the Rocafort Station. It is directed by Luis Prieto and stars Natalia Azahara alongside Javier Gutiérrez, Valèria Sorolla and Albert Baró.