List of Madrid metro stations
Encyclopedia
This is a list of the stations
Metro station
A metro station or subway station is a railway station for a rapid transit system, often known by names such as "metro", "underground" and "subway". It is often underground or elevated. At crossings of metro lines, they are multi-level....

 of the metro
Rapid transit
A rapid transit, underground, subway, elevated railway, metro or metropolitan railway system is an electric passenger railway in an urban area with a high capacity and frequency, and grade separation from other traffic. Rapid transit systems are typically located either in underground tunnels or on...

 system in Madrid
Madrid
Madrid is the capital and largest city of Spain. The population of the city is roughly 3.3 million and the entire population of the Madrid metropolitan area is calculated to be 6.271 million. It is the third largest city in the European Union, after London and Berlin, and its metropolitan...

, Spain
Spain
Spain , officially the Kingdom of Spain languages]] under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. In each of these, Spain's official name is as follows:;;;;;;), is a country and member state of the European Union located in southwestern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula...

 (see Madrid Metro
Madrid Metro
The Madrid Metro is a metro system serving the city of Madrid, capital of Spain. The system is the sixth longest metro in the world though Madrid is approximately the fiftieth most populous metropolitan area in the world...

).

Line 1
Line 1 (Madrid Metro)
Line 1 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 17 September 1919 between Cuatro Caminos and Sol. It was extended from Sol to Atocha in 1921, Atocha to Puente de Vallecas in 1923, Cuatro Caminos to Tetuán in 1929, Tetuán to Plaza De Castilla in 1961 and Puente de Vallecas to Portazgo in 1962.Between 1964...

Pinar de Chamartín - Valdecarros


Line 2
Line 2 (Madrid Metro)
Line 2 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 11 June 1924 between Sol and Ventas. It was later extended fron Sol to Quevedo on 27 December 1925 and from Quevedo to Cuatro Caminos on 1 September 1929. In 1932, a branch from Goya to Diego de León was added. This branch was transferred to Line 4 in 1958...

La Elipa - Cuatro Caminos


Line 3
Line 3 (Madrid Metro)
Line 3 of the Madrid Metro was opened in August 1936 between Sol and Embajadores, a few days before the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. In 1941 it was extended from Sol to Argüelles, in 1949 from Embajadores to Delicias, in 1951 from Delicias to Legazpi, in 1963 from Argüelles to Moncloa, and...

Villaverde Alto - Moncloa


Image:Madrid Metro Line3.svg|700px|center
  1. Villaverde Alto

poly 317 222 269 228 269 187 408 66 445 76 317 192 Villaverde Alto
  1. San Cristóbal

poly 336 185 331 238 370 234 370 194 485 90 467 68 449 76 San Cristóbal
  1. Villaverde Bajo-Cruce

poly 388 238 427 240 433 190 631 26 601 8 384 187 Villaverde Bajo-Cruce
  1. Ciudad de los Ángeles

poly 445 192 445 238 485 236 487 190 696 20 663 4 451 179 Ciudad de los Ángeles
  1. San Fermín-Orcasur

poly 502 240 542 240 544 187 722 44 716 20 696 26 506 179 San Fermín-Orcasur
  1. Doce de Octubre

poly 560 238 601 242 601 190 803 28 807 16 773 4 564 177 Hospital 12 de Octubre
  1. Almendrales

poly 615 242 655 240 663 187 769 103 746 76 621 175 Almendrales
  1. Legazpi

poly 672 226 718 226 724 187 793 127 771 103 674 181 Legazpi
  1. Legazpi Línea 6

rect 686 228 708 248 Line 6
Line 6 (Madrid Metro)
Line 6 of the Madrid Metro opened originally between Cuatro Caminos and Pacifico in 1979. This is one of two circular lines in Madrid, but unlike Line 12, it did not open as a full circle...


  1. Delicias

poly 819 109 730 187 732 234 773 236 777 187 844 139 Delicias
  1. Palos de la Frontera

poly 787 236 834 236 838 187 1028 36 991 12 793 179 Palos de la Frontera
  1. Embajadores

poly 852 224 896 226 896 185 1016 90 983 72 852 179 Embajadores
  1. Embajadores línea 5

rect 860 226 884 250 Line 5
Line 5 (Madrid Metro)
Line 5 of the Madrid Metro originally opened between Callao and Carabanchel on 5 June 1968, the latter sharing station platforms with then called Line S On 2 March 1970, the line was extended from Callao to Ciudad Lineal, however the section between Ventas and Ciudad Lineal was opened as part of...


  1. Embajadores Cercanías RENFE

rect 856 250 884 276 Cercanías Renfe
  1. Lavapiés

poly 906 230 955 228 955 192 1030 121 1004 103 910 179 Lavapiés

poly 965 190 965 226 1004 226 1010 196 1030 163 1008 149 Sol
  1. Sol line 1

rect 973 226 997 250 Line 1
Line 1 (Madrid Metro)
Line 1 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 17 September 1919 between Cuatro Caminos and Sol. It was extended from Sol to Atocha in 1921, Atocha to Puente de Vallecas in 1923, Cuatro Caminos to Tetuán in 1929, Tetuán to Plaza De Castilla in 1961 and Puente de Vallecas to Portazgo in 1962.Between 1964...


  1. Sol line 2

rect 973 250 999 276 Line 2
Line 2 (Madrid Metro)
Line 2 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 11 June 1924 between Sol and Ventas. It was later extended fron Sol to Quevedo on 27 December 1925 and from Quevedo to Cuatro Caminos on 1 September 1929. In 1932, a branch from Goya to Diego de León was added. This branch was transferred to Line 4 in 1958...


  1. Callao

poly 1022 224 1064 224 1064 187 1117 143 1101 115 1026 177 Callao
  1. Callao line 5

rect 1030 226 1054 250 Line 5
Line 5 (Madrid Metro)
Line 5 of the Madrid Metro originally opened between Callao and Carabanchel on 5 June 1968, the latter sharing station platforms with then called Line S On 2 March 1970, the line was extended from Callao to Ciudad Lineal, however the section between Ventas and Ciudad Lineal was opened as part of...


  1. Plaza de España

poly 1078 224 1125 224 1123 185 1273 62 1232 28 1103 161 1082 177 Plaza de España
  1. Plaza de España line 2

rect 1091 226 1115 252 Line 2
Line 2 (Madrid Metro)
Line 2 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 11 June 1924 between Sol and Ventas. It was later extended fron Sol to Quevedo on 27 December 1925 and from Quevedo to Cuatro Caminos on 1 September 1929. In 1932, a branch from Goya to Diego de León was added. This branch was transferred to Line 4 in 1958...


  1. Plaza de España line 10

rect 1091 250 1113 274 Line 10
Line 10 (Madrid Metro)
Line 10 of the Madrid Metro is in fact the product of two lines, the former line 8 from Fuencarral to Nuevos Ministerios and the former Suburbano from Alonso Martínez to Aluche, this section being named line 10 in the 1980s. In the 1990s, Madrid planned for these two lines to become one, but...


  1. Ventura Rodríguez

poly 1139 228 1178 228 1180 187 1340 62 1334 42 1315 36 1137 177 Ventura Rodríguez
  1. Argüelles

poly 1194 226 1238 228 1238 183 1319 117 1295 101 1200 177 Argüelles
  1. Argüelles line 4

rect 1204 228 1226 250 Line 4
Line 4 (Madrid Metro)
Line 4 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 23 March 1944 between Goya and Argüelles. In 1958, the line took up a branch of line 2 from Goya to Diego de León, which originally opened on 17 September 1932. In the 1970s, the line was extended in two stages: from Diego de León to Alfonso XII and from...


  1. Argüelles line 6

rect 1204 252 1224 274 Line 6
Line 6 (Madrid Metro)
Line 6 of the Madrid Metro opened originally between Cuatro Caminos and Pacifico in 1979. This is one of two circular lines in Madrid, but unlike Line 12, it did not open as a full circle...


  1. Moncloa

poly 1253 226 1295 226 1293 192 1372 135 1366 109 1338 109 1255 177 Moncloa
  1. Moncloa line 6

rect 1261 228 1285 252 Line 6
Line 6 (Madrid Metro)
Line 6 of the Madrid Metro opened originally between Cuatro Caminos and Pacifico in 1979. This is one of two circular lines in Madrid, but unlike Line 12, it did not open as a full circle...


  1. Picture info

desc bottom-left

Line 4
Line 4 (Madrid Metro)
Line 4 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 23 March 1944 between Goya and Argüelles. In 1958, the line took up a branch of line 2 from Goya to Diego de León, which originally opened on 17 September 1932. In the 1970s, the line was extended in two stages: from Diego de León to Alfonso XII and from...

Argüelles - Pinar de Chamartín


Line 5
Line 5 (Madrid Metro)
Line 5 of the Madrid Metro originally opened between Callao and Carabanchel on 5 June 1968, the latter sharing station platforms with then called Line S On 2 March 1970, the line was extended from Callao to Ciudad Lineal, however the section between Ventas and Ciudad Lineal was opened as part of...

Alameda de Osuna - Casa de Campo


  • Alameda de Osuna
  • El Capricho
  • Canillejas
  • Torre Arias
  • Suanzes
  • Ciudad Lineal
  • Pueblo Nuevo (7)
  • Quintana
  • El Carmen
  • Ventas (2)
  • Diego de León (4, 6)
  • Núñez de Balboa (9)
  • Rubén Darío
  • Alonso Martínez (4, 10)
  • Chueca
  • Gran Vía (1)
  • Callao (3)
  • Ópera (2, R)
  • La Latina
  • Puerta de Toledo
  • Acacias (connected with Embajadores - 3)
  • Pirámides
  • Marqués de Vadillo
  • Urgel
  • Oporto (6)
  • Vista Alegre
  • Carabanchel
  • Eugenia de Montijo
  • Aluche
  • Empalme
  • Campamento
  • Casa de Campo (10)

Line 6
Line 6 (Madrid Metro)
Line 6 of the Madrid Metro opened originally between Cuatro Caminos and Pacifico in 1979. This is one of two circular lines in Madrid, but unlike Line 12, it did not open as a full circle...

Circular


Line 7
Line 7 (Madrid Metro)
Line 7 of the Madrid Metro originally opened on 17 July 1974 between Pueblo Nuevo and Las Musas. On 17 May 1975, the line was extended from Pueblo Nuevo to Avenida de América and for many years, this remained the length of Line 7. This was a problem as line 7 was very scarcely used. This was solved...

Hospital de Henares - Pitis


Line 8
Line 8 (Madrid Metro)
Line 8 of the Madrid Metro opened between Mar de Cristal and Campo de las Naciones on 24 June 1998. An extension to Barajas via Madrid Airport was opened in 1999 and in 2002 an extension to Nuevos Ministerios and Colombia opened. Originally this line was a small-profile line, but in 2002 it became...


Image:Madrid Metro Line8.svg|701px|center
  1. Nuevos Ministerios

poly 278 225 321 225 534 42 536 9 440 13 278 178 Nuevos Ministerios
  1. Nuevos Ministerios line 6

rect 272 225 298 251 Line 6
Line 6 (Madrid Metro)
Line 6 of the Madrid Metro opened originally between Cuatro Caminos and Pacifico in 1979. This is one of two circular lines in Madrid, but unlike Line 12, it did not open as a full circle...


  1. Nuevos Ministerios line 10

rect 297 226 322 251 Line 10
  1. Nuevos Ministerios Cercanías RENFE

rect 322 225 347 249 Cercanías Renfe
  1. Nuevos Ministerios Facturación Aeropuerto

rect 272 249 322 276 Airport Check-in
  1. Picture info

desc bottom-left
  1. Colombia

poly 421 225 467 225 577 125 568 92 492 95 420 176 Colombia
  1. Pinar del Rey

poly 561 227 608 229 611 191 738 95 740 67 665 60 557 176 Pinar del Rey
  1. Mar de Cristal line 4

rect 701 229 726 251 Line 4
Line 4 (Madrid Metro)
Line 4 of the Madrid Metro was opened on 23 March 1944 between Goya and Argüelles. In 1958, the line took up a branch of line 2 from Goya to Diego de León, which originally opened on 17 September 1932. In the 1970s, the line was extended in two stages: from Diego de León to Alfonso XII and from...


  1. Campo de las Naciones

poly 868 234 869 196 1091 41 1072 14 833 180 833 234 Campo de las Naciones
  1. Aeropuerto T1-T2-T3 Aeropuerto

rect 983 227 1005 249 Madrid Barajas Airport
  1. Barajas

poly 1117 229 1165 229 1157 196 1250 153 1250 115 1176 115 1110 186 Barajas
  1. Aeropuerto T1 T2 T3

poly 970 226 1017 226 1017 196 1248 19 1212 6 1135 5 967 175" Aeropuerto T1 T2 T3
  1. Mar de Cristal

poly 690 225 735 225 735 193 878 85 879 55 802 57 691 173 Mar de Cristal
  1. Colombia Line 9

rect 429 229 451 249 Line 9
Line 9 (Madrid Metro)
Line 9 of the Madrid Metro opened on 31 January 1980 between Sainz de Baranda and Pavones. Later it was extended from Avenida de América to Herrera Oria on 3 June 1983, however this section was separate from the original section until the missing part from Avenida de América to Sainz de Baranda was...


  1. Aeropuerto T4 Aeropuerto

rect 1265 228 1289 252 Madrid Barajas Airport
  1. Aeropuerto T4

poly 1255 227 1303 225 1304 191 1415 113 1414 70 1370 71 1248 172 Aeropuerto T4
Aeropuerto T4 (Madrid Metro)
Aeropuerto T4 is a station on Line 8 of Madrid Metro on the lower level of the new terminal T4 of Madrid-Barajas Airport. The station was opened on May 3, 2007 and presents the particularity of requiring the payment of a special supplement of 1 € for users of single ticket or Metrobus, just as...



Line 9
Line 9 (Madrid Metro)
Line 9 of the Madrid Metro opened on 31 January 1980 between Sainz de Baranda and Pavones. Later it was extended from Avenida de América to Herrera Oria on 3 June 1983, however this section was separate from the original section until the missing part from Avenida de América to Sainz de Baranda was...

Herrera Oria - Arganda del Rey
Arganda del Rey
Arganda del Rey is a municipality in Madrid, Spain. It is connected to Madrid by metro line 9, underground.-History:The first definitive habitation in the area dates back to the Arabic presence in the Iberian Peninsula...




Line 10
Line 10 (Madrid Metro)
Line 10 of the Madrid Metro is in fact the product of two lines, the former line 8 from Fuencarral to Nuevos Ministerios and the former Suburbano from Alonso Martínez to Aluche, this section being named line 10 in the 1980s. In the 1990s, Madrid planned for these two lines to become one, but...

Hospital del Norte - Puerta del Sur


Line 11
Line 11 (Madrid Metro)
Line 11 of the Madrid Metro opened between Plaza Elíptica and Pan Bendito on 16 November 1998. For eight years it had only three stations. In 2006 the line was extended from Pan Bendito to La Peseta with two intermediate stations. Line 11 however is projected to become one of the longest lines in...

Plaza Elíptica - La Peseta


Line 12
Line 12 (Madrid Metro)
Line 12, also known as MetroSur, is a line of the Madrid Metro. Opened on 11 April 2003, Line 12 is a circular line that is not in fact in Madrid, but links five suburban towns and one small village south of Madrid, serving around 1 million people. The towns linked by Line 12 are Alcorcón, Leganés,...

Metrosur


Ramal
Ramal (Madrid Metro)
The Ramal, is a metro line, part of the Madrid Metro, with only two stations and a total length of 900 m. "Ramal" in Spanish means "branch". The line opened between Opera and Norte on 27 December 1925...

Ópera - Príncipe Pío


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