Line 1 of the Guadalajara urban rail system

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Logo de SITEUR T.svg Line 1
Logo de la Línea 1 del Tren Eléctrico Urbano de Guadalajara.svg
Interior of the Periférico Norte station after its 2017 relocation from south of the Periférico to directly underneath the Periférico
Interior of the Periférico Norte station after its 2017 relocation from south of the Periférico to directly underneath the Periférico
Overview
Native nameLínea 1 del Tren Eléctrico Urbano de Guadalajara
Area servedGuadalajara, Tlaquepaque and Zapopan
Locale Jalisco
Transit typeLight rail
Line number1
Number of stations20
Websitehttp://siteur.gob.mx
Operation
Began operationSeptember 1, 1989 (35 years)
Operator(s)SITEUR
Rolling stockTEG-90 (Bombardier-Siemens)
TEG-15 (Bombardier)
Train length3 during peak hours, 2 during off-peak hours[1]
Technical
System length16.5 km (10.3 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Average speed30 km/h (19 mph)
Top speed70 km/h (43 mph)
Mapa de la Línea 1 del Tren

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Line 1 of the Guadalajara light rail system, in service since 1 September 1989, is the oldest line of the Sistema de Tren Eléctrico Urbano (SITEUR). It was previously marked blue, but after the remodelling of the stations from 2014 to 2018 it is now red.

Line 1
Last extension November 22, 2018
Rolling stock TEG-90, TEG-15
Platforms 90 m
Covered municipalities Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlaquepaque

The road infrastructure of this line began to be built in 1974, and was completed in 1976, with the intention of implementing a Metropolitan and Railway Public Transportation System in Guadalajara; same that did not materialize due to the diversion of federal resources which led to the alternative implementation of electric trolleybus lines.

In 1982 an overpass was built at the intersection of Avenida Colón with the Calzada Lázaro Cárdenas and was completed in 1984 (for the extension of the Guadalajara Trolleybus) towards Avenida Miguel López de Legaspi, and its pre-construction began in 1988, extending it from peripheral to peripheral, and it was completed in February 1989, to later be inaugurated in September of that same year. The inauguration was headed by the then Governor of Jalisco, Guillermo Cosío Vidaurri, and by the then President of Mexico, Carlos Salinas de Gortari.

In August 2014, the extension of line 1 to the north began, where the current terminal is located: the Auditorio station, located 1 km from the Periférico Norte station, the new station was inaugurated on November 23, 2018.[1] Line 1 links the municipalities of Zapopan, Guadalajara and Tlaquepaque from north to south through the Calzada Federalismo/Avenida Cristóbal Colón.

Line stations

The Line 1 had 19 stations (12 on the surface in 2 sections, 6 underground and one in trench) when it was first opened, but, after the inauguration of Auditorio station, the line now has 20 stations (11 on the surface in 2 sections, 8 underground in 2 sections and one in trench). The stations are described in the following table:

Logo Name Opening Municipality Transfers Location Coordinates
SITEUR L1 Auditorio.svg Auditorio November 22, 2018  Zapopan - Underground 20°44′17.01″N 103°20′58.45″W / 20.7380583°N 103.3495694°W / 20.7380583; -103.3495694
SITEUR L1 Periférico Norte.svg Periférico Norte September 1st, 1989 Logo de Mi Macro Periférico.svg Underground/Trench 20°43′51.8″N 103°21′7.64″W / 20.731056°N 103.3521222°W / 20.731056; -103.3521222
SITEUR L1 Dermatológico.svg Dermatológico - Overground 20°43′15.33″N 103°21′11.97″W / 20.7209250°N 103.3533250°W / 20.7209250; -103.3533250
SITEUR L1 Atemajac.svg Atemajac - 20°42′57.79″N 103°21′15.75″W / 20.7160528°N 103.3543750°W / 20.7160528; -103.3543750
SITEUR L1 División del Norte.svg División del Norte  Guadalajara - Underground 20°42′27.65″N 103°21′19.66″W / 20.7076806°N 103.3554611°W / 20.7076806; -103.3554611
SITEUR L1 Ávila Camacho.svg Ávila Camacho Logo de la Línea 3 del Tren Eléctrico Urbano de Guadalajara.svg 20°41′54.98″N 103°21′17.85″W / 20.6986056°N 103.3549583°W / 20.6986056; -103.3549583
SITEUR L1 Mezquitán.svg Mezquitán - 20°41′29.32″N 103°21′14.05″W / 20.6914778°N 103.3539028°W / 20.6914778; -103.3539028
SITEUR L1 Refugio.svg Refugio - 20°40′55.98″N 103°21′14.63″W / 20.6822167°N 103.3540639°W / 20.6822167; -103.3540639
SITEUR L1 Juárez.svg Juárez Logo de la Línea 2 del Tren Eléctrico Urbano de Guadalajara.svg 20°40′29.51″N 103°21′16.99″W / 20.6748639°N 103.3547194°W / 20.6748639; -103.3547194
SITEUR L1 Mexicaltzingo.svg Mexicaltzingo - 20°40′0.92″N 103°21′19.29″W / 20.6669222°N 103.3553583°W / 20.6669222; -103.3553583
SITEUR L1 Washington.svg Washington - 20°39′39.65″N 103°21′26.79″W / 20.6610139°N 103.3574417°W / 20.6610139; -103.3574417
SITEUR L1 Santa Filomena.svg Santa Filomena - Overground 20°39′15.48″N 103°21′49.1″W / 20.6543000°N 103.363639°W / 20.6543000; -103.363639
SITEUR L1 Unidad Deportiva.svg Unidad Deportiva - 20°38′50.53″N 103°22′8.88″W / 20.6473694°N 103.3691333°W / 20.6473694; -103.3691333
SITEUR L1 Urdaneta.svg Urdaneta - 20°38′35.48″N 103°22′21.58″W / 20.6431889°N 103.3726611°W / 20.6431889; -103.3726611
SITEUR L1 18 de Marzo.svg 18 de Marzo - 20°38′17.51″N 103°22′36.8″W / 20.6381972°N 103.376889°W / 20.6381972; -103.376889
SITEUR L1 Isla Raza.svg Isla Raza - 20°37′58.15″N 103°22′49.93″W / 20.6328194°N 103.3805361°W / 20.6328194; -103.3805361
SITEUR L1 Patria.svg Patria - 20°37′36.57″N 103°23′5.74″W / 20.6268250°N 103.3849278°W / 20.6268250; -103.3849278
SITEUR L1 España.svg España - 20°37′17.17″N 103°23′21.61″W / 20.6214361°N 103.3893361°W / 20.6214361; -103.3893361
SITEUR L1 Santuario Mártires de Cristo Rey.svg Santuario Mártires de Cristo Rey - 20°36′49.55″N 103°23′44.36″W / 20.6137639°N 103.3956556°W / 20.6137639; -103.3956556
SITEUR L1 Periférico Sur.svg Periférico Sur  Tlaquepaque Logo de Mi Macro Periférico.svg 20°36′26.36″N 103°24′3.24″W / 20.6073222°N 103.4009000°W / 20.6073222; -103.4009000

Future extensions and remodelings

It is intended to extend Line 1 to Arroyo Hondo in the north and to Arroyo Seco in the south.[2] All stations are currently being extended to 90 meters to allow each train convoy to be extended to three cars instead of two. In addition, all surface stations will be remodeled, which will look like the Urdaneta station, which was previously expanded for a failed project to build a light rail line connecting Tlajomulco with Line 1.[1]

Accidents and incidents

In August 1989, a few days before the presidential inauguration of Line 1, an elderly woman was run over near the Santa Filomena station by a light rail unit that was doing route testing without passengers; After the accident, the driver abandoned the unit to flee on foot.[citation needed]

On January 26, 2015, a collision between two trains was recorded when the driver of the vehicle T-06 was driving without due caution and care, since he had the distance and time to avoid the collision and did not brake in time. It was a mishap between trains caused by a communication error between the drivers and the dispatcher.[3]

In March 2015, another elderly woman was run over next to the Santa Filomena station. Despite the fact that a security film exempted the driver of the unit involved from responsibility, he did not stop driving after the mishap.[4]

On Friday, September 7, 2017, shortly after 11 in the morning, a truck collided with the perimeter fence of the northbound section of the railway between Patria and Isla Raza stations after the driver of the delivery truck lost control claiming brake failure.[5]

On Thursday, September 9, 2021, at the Refugio station around 10:00 in the morning, a blind man fell onto the tracks due to carelessness. The people waiting for the train tried to help him, however, when they rescued his body they realized that the man was already dead.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Ampliación de la Línea 1 va a la mitad; operará en 2017". El Informador (in Spanish). 2015-12-31. Retrieved 2016-11-15.
  2. ^ "Plan Estratégico". Docks TMC Guadalajara. Retrieved 2022-05-21.
  3. ^ González, A. (2015-02-16). "Human error caused accident on Line 1 of the Guadalajara light rail system". MVS Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  4. ^ Martínez, Raúl (2015-03-04). "Woman hit by light train dies". Milenio (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  5. ^ "Light Rail Line 1 service suspended due to collision" (in Spanish). El Informador. Retrieved 2018-11-03.
  6. ^ Torres, Raúl (2021-09-09). "Man dies after falling onto the tracks of Line 1 of the Guadalajara Light Rail". El Universal. Retrieved 31 May 2022.