Granada Metro
| Metro de Granada[1] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Granada Metro Alcázar Genil station. | |||
| Overview | |||
| Native name | Metro de Granada – Metropolitano de Granada | ||
| Owner | Autonomous Government of Andalusia | ||
| Locale | Granada, Andalusia, Spain | ||
| Transit type | Light rail/Tramway | ||
| Number of lines | 1[1] | ||
| Number of stations | 26[1] | ||
| Daily ridership | 35,634 (weekdays)[2] | ||
| Annual ridership | 17.3 million (2025)[3] | ||
| Website | Metro de Granada | ||
| Operation | |||
| Began operation | 21 September 2017 | ||
| Operator(s) | Metro De Granada – Junta de Andalucía | ||
| Number of vehicles | 15 CAF Urbos light rail vehicles[4] | ||
| Technical | |||
| System length | 15.920 km (9.9 mi) | ||
| Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge | ||
| |||
The Granada Metro (Metro de Granada in Spanish) is a single light rail line in the city of Granada, Andalusia, Spain and its metropolitan area. It crosses Granada and covers the towns of Albolote, Maracena and Armilla,[5] with underground sections in central Granada and overground sections elsewhere.[6] The line opened on 21 September 2017,[7] and serves 26 stations, of which 3 stations in central Granada are underground.[7] In 2025, the system had a total ridership of 17,329,112 passengers.[3]
History
Construction of the line began in 2007.[8] The first line was initially planned to open in early 2012, and by May 2011 the line was 73% completed.[8] However, funding ran out as a result of the Spanish economic crisis,[6] with only 250 million of the estimated 502 million euros total cost available. In 2012, the remaining funds were secured through a 260 million loan from the European Investment Bank.[5] and the planned date of completion was moved to early 2014.[5] However, further delays resulted in a shortfall in funding, which was only resolved on 1 July 2014. The system finally opened at noon on 21 September 2017.[9][7]
Expansion plans
Owing to the higher than expected ridership and success of the system, extensions are proposed on the existing line; westward from Armilla splitting into two branches to Cúllar Vega and another to Alhendín, and northwest from Albolote to Pinos Puente and/or Atarfe and Santa Fe.[10] New lines from Granada city centre to Peligros, Ogíjares and Federico García Lorca Granada Airport are also proposed.[11]
The southern extension to Las Gabias via Churriana de la Vega, which will eventually form the southern terminus of Line 2, is due to finish construction in April 2026. There is no confirmed opening date yet but it is expected to be late 2026 subject to line testing. [12]
Network map
References
- ^ a b c metropolitanogranada.es
- ^ Granada Hoy (23 January 2020). "El Metro de Granada crece en pasajeros pero sigue sin alcanzar el objetivo anual". Retrieved 13 January 2021.
- ^ a b "Los metros de Andalucía superan por primera vez los 60 millones de viajeros: nunca se han usado tanto". ABC (in Spanish). Retrieved 2026-02-08.
- ^ "La Junta refuerza la campaña de seguridad vial del metro para avanzar en la convivencia de la ciudad con el nuevo transporte".
- ^ a b c La puesta en marcha del metro de Granada se retrasa hasta 2014, El País, 25 May 2012
- ^ a b Spain election: Metro eyesore blights Granada, BBC News, 18 November 2011
- ^ a b c Barrow, Keith (21 September 2017). "Granada opens first light rail line". www.railjournal.com. International Railway Journal. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
- ^ a b Spain's town hall meltdown, The Independent, 30 October 2011
- ^ "El metro de Granada entrará en funcionamiento en marzo de 2017 y costará menos de un euro | Vídeo". Granada Digital (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2017-09-21.
- ^ "Posibles trazados de ampliación del metropolitano". Ideal.es (in Spanish). 23 July 2018. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Un objeto del deseo de más de 1.000 millones". Granada Hoy (in Spanish). 17 March 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Las obras de la ampliación Sur del Metro de Granada concluirán en abril". Ahora Granada (in Spanish). 30 January 2026. Retrieved 20 February 2026.
External links
Media related to Granada Metro at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- Network map on Google Maps
- First line route, Urbanrail.net
- pics of the system, public-transport.net