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

  • Japanese companies win ITS order for Vietnam's Expressway
    March 19, 2014
    Three Japanese companies, Toshiba Corporation, Hitachi and Itochu Corporation are to supply the Vietnam Expressway Corporation (VEC) with an intelligent transportation systems (ITS) package to be installed on the 55-kilometre Ho Chi Minh and Dau Giay section of Vietnam’s North-South Expressway. The order, worth around US$39 million, includes electronic toll collection (ETC), traffic control and equipment monitoring systems, and is the first for an integrated ITS package that Japanese companies have recei
  • Brazil draws up transport concession timetable
    March 19, 2015
    Brazil's federal government has drawn up a tender launch schedule for highway, railway, airport, waterway, and port dredging concessions. Feasibility studies for the country's upcoming concessions have already been completed and tenders are due to be launched in the fourth quarter, local paper Valor Econômico reported. To date, a total of 493 kilometres of sections of federal highway, from Paraná state's Lapa city to Santa Catarina state's Chapecó city, are waiting to be put out to tender. Additional highwa
  • Germany shifts gear on two-wheel traffic
    July 16, 2020
    National Cycling Plan 3.0 carries on from previous strategies
  • Upgrade for London’s traffic signals
    August 19, 2014
    Technology services company, telent, along with three other suppliers, has been awarded a contract worth well over US$166.5 million from Transport for London (TfL). The overall contract is an eight-year agreement that will see the capital's 6,000 traffic signals upgraded and maintained to the latest, greenest standards. telent's contract is believed to be the largest single traffic signal supply and maintenance contract ever awarded in the UK. Telent will supply, install and maintain all traffic control