Skip to main content

Chile plans feasibility studies to extend three metro lines

Chile's transport ministry plans to launch feasibility studies to extend three metro lines in the capital, Santiago. The plans include expanding the north-south line 2 south towards El Bosque and San Bernardo neighbourhoods and line 3, currently under construction, north to Quilicura, according to transport minister Andrés Gómez-Lobo. The other proposal is to expand further south line 4, which connects Santiago's eastern neighbourhood of Providencia with the town of Puente Alto to the southeast of the
March 14, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Chile's transport ministry plans to launch feasibility studies to extend three metro lines in the capital, Santiago.

The plans include expanding the north-south line 2 south towards El Bosque and San Bernardo neighbourhoods and line 3, currently under construction, north to Quilicura, according to transport minister Andrés Gómez-Lobo.

The other proposal is to expand further south line 4, which connects Santiago's eastern neighbourhood of Providencia with the town of Puente Alto to the southeast of the city, he added.

Metro de Santiago is currently building the 22 kilometre-long line 3, which will have 18 stations between Ñuñoa in eastern Santiago and Huechuraba in the north of the city and is budgeted at US$1.72 billion. The line will pass through six municipalities and serve some 660,000 residents.

Metro is also building line 6, a US$1.06 billion project that will run 15.3 kilometre from Providencia to Cerrillos in the west and have 10 stations. It will pass through eight municipalities and serve 870,000 residents.

Former president Sebastián Piñera's administration launched a master plan to invest US$22.5 billion in transport infrastructure in Santiago until 2025, with emphasis on metro, rail and roads. The plan includes investments of US$10.9 billion in metro and rail projects over the next 11 years, when the number of urban residents is expected to have risen by 11 per cent to 7.3 million and the number of cars to double to 2.65 million.

Related Content

  • Paris launches ambitious new cycling plan
    May 5, 2015
    Paris has launched its 2015-2020 cycling strategy, which aims to double the length of the city's cycle network and triple the number of Parisians cycling every day. The strategy was developed with the input of almost 7,000 stakeholders in a consultation period from December 2014 to January 2015 aims to help deal with Paris's high air pollution and concentration of particulates, which caused heavy smog earlier this year and in spring 2015. A total of US$166 million has been allocated to realise the str
  • Upgrades to public transport across Regional Victoria
    March 10, 2017
    The Victorian government in Australia has released a tender for its Road and Rail Minor Works Program, which aims to deliver new car parks, more comfortable waiting areas and better passenger information at train stations across rural and regional Victoria. It also aims to improve cycling infrastructure at stations with new, secure bike cages and hoops to make it easier to ride to the station and catch the train. The US$17 million (AU$22.5 million) program will also upgrade bus stops, signage and acce
  • AECOM awarded LRT contract by Metrolinx, Canada
    April 15, 2016
    Infrastructure firm AECOM has been selected to provide technical advisory services on the Hurontario light rail transit (LRT) projects in Mississauga and Brampton and the Hamilton LRT project in Hamilton, Canada, for Government of Ontario agency Metrolinx. The Hurontario and Hamilton LRT projects are part of the largest infrastructure investment in Ontario’s history and are expected to have a notable impact on regional transit by providing crucial links between many of the existing lines, as well as on t
  • CoMotion LA Live 2020: report
    November 30, 2020
    November’s CoMotion LA Live event looked at new technology, emerging partnerships – and how Joe Biden’s ‘super-commuter’ status might just stand future mobility in good stead