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Constitución railway station

Plaza Constitución
Commuter and inter-city rail
Facade of the station as seen in 2006
General information
LocationAv. Brasil 1128,
Constitución, Buenos Aires
Argentina
Owned byGovernment of Argentina
Operated byTrenes Argentinos
Line(s)Roca
Belgrano Sur (under construction)
ConnectionsUnderground
Construction
Platform levels16
History
Opened1865; 159 years ago (1865)
ElectrifiedOverhead line
Location
Plaza Constitución is located in Buenos Aires
Plaza Constitución
Plaza Constitución
Location within Buenos Aires
Plaza Constitución is located in Argentina
Plaza Constitución
Plaza Constitución
Plaza Constitución (Argentina)
Map

Constitución railway station (Spanish: Estación Constitución) is a large railway station in Constitución, a barrio in central Buenos Aires, Argentina. The full official name of the station is Estación Plaza Constitution (in English: Constitution Square Station) reflecting the fact that the station is located opposite Constitution Square, two kilometers to the south of the Obelisco landmark. The ground floor of the station has fourteen tracks and the floor below has two tracks for the Buenos Aires Underground. It serves as the South terminal for the city (with Retiro and Once stations as the North and West terminals respectively).

In 2021, the station received the heritage designation of National Historic Monument.[1][2]

History

The first Constitución railway station, opened in 1865, and the tram that connected it with the center (1867)

On 7 March 1864, in a ceremony attended by the president Bartolomé Mitre, construction began at Mercado Constitución, on the site of the present day terminus, as the British-owned Buenos Aires Great Southern railway company began building its first broad gauge line of 114 km as far as Chascomús. The first section of the line to Jeppener, Buenos Aires, was opened on 14 August 1865; during that same month a small terminal station at Mercado Constitución was opened to the public and renamed Plaza Constitución. Later that year in December the line to Chascomús was opened.

This first building, known as "Constitución I", was a simple construction whose façade was on the current Brazil Street, facing the Mercado Constitución. Public access entered from one side. This primitive terminal had only two platforms: one for arrivals and one for departure of trains.

The second terminal in the 1890s

Between 1885 and 1887 the Plaza Constitución terminus was rebuilt and enlarged and between 1906 and 1907 further building work was carried out and extra platforms were added to cope with the increasing suburban traffic. In 1912 yet more platforms were added.

On 19 September 1925 a foundation stone for the present day terminus was laid by the Prince of Wales, later Duke of Windsor, during his official visit to Argentina. The original station was then rebuilt with fourteen platforms roofed over, modern hydraulic buffer stops and an imposing concourse which formed a massive main hall, one of the largest in the world, along the entire length of the site. Of the fourteen platforms, only two or three were normally used for mainline trains, leaving the rest for suburban services. To the east of the main station a large goods and parcels section with warehouses, offices and several sidings was built. The street frontage of the original station was left untouched due to financial constraints imposed towards the end of the rebuilding.

The third terminal c. 1920s.

The station was the site of a riot on May 16, 2007, during the evening rush hour, which provoked debate and discussion in Argentina about railway privatisation. A crowded train broke down within walking distance of the station blocking the railway and the irate passengers from trains trapped at the station, after waiting for the train to be fixed and to move, walked to the platform, thus triggering the chaos. Around 25 people were injured, and a total of 16 were arrested and later released.[3]

Operation

All southbound trains on the Roca Line have their terminus at Constitución and the station is served by Trenes Argentinos, the national train operator which provides commuter services through the Roca Line to the nearby city of La Plata and to the surrounding suburbs of Buenos Aires.

Trenes Argentinos also operates long-distance services throughout much of Buenos Aires Province on the General Roca Railway, formerly operated by defunct company Ferrobaires. Major destinations include Mar del Plata, Miramar, and Bahía Blanca, with connecting services further south to Carmen de Patagones.

Constitución is accessible by the Line C of the Buenos Aires Underground and by numerous public bus services (including the colectivo 60 service), and by long-distance bus services. From 1944 to 1966, it was also served by Line E with a station there, however this was closed when the line was re-routed further towards the centre of the city. In the future, the station will also serve as the terminus for Line F which began construction in 2015.[4]

The surrounding neighbourhood - part of Neighbourhood of Constitución - is characterised by low-rent residences for people from the provinces (or from neighbouring Paraguay and Bolivia) who come to work in the city.[citation needed]

Historic operators

Operator Period
United Kingdom Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway 1865–1948
Argentina Ferrocarriles Argentinos 1948–1991
Argentina FEMESA [n 1] 1991–94
Argentina Metropolitano 1995–2007
Argentina UGOFE [n 2] 2005–2014
Argentina Argentren [n 2] 2014–2015
Argentina Trenes Argentinos Operaciones 2015–present
Notes
  1. ^ Temporary operator prior to the privatization of commuter rail services.
  2. ^ a b Temporary operator after the Government revoked concession to Metropolitano.

In media

Several films have been filmed at the station, the most important of which are There Be Dragons and On Probation. Also several novels take place in the station and its surroundings.

See also

Bibliography

  • H.R.Stones, British Railways in Argentina 1860-1948, P.E.Waters & Associates, Bromley, Kent, England, 1993.
  • D.S.Purdom, British Steam on the Pampas, Mechanical Engineering Publications Ltd, London, 1977.

References

34°37′39″S 58°22′50″W / 34.62750°S 58.38056°W / -34.62750; -58.38056