Cartagena Railway Station
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Cartagena railway station is a railway terminal station located in the Spanish municipality of Cartagena, in the region of Murcia. It has medium- and long-distance services operated by
Renfe Renfe (, ), officially Renfe-Operadora, is Spain's national state-owned railway company. It was created in 2005 upon the split of the former Spanish National Railway Network (RENFE) into the Administrador de Infraestructuras Ferroviarias ( ...
. The Art Nouveau building was built between 1903, when the foundation work began, and 1908, when the central or main building was finished. The design of the building was the joint work of architect Emilio Antón Hernández along with engineers José Cebada Ruiz and José Moreno Rodríguez, all of them being directed and supervised by the engineer Ramón Peironcely.


Network

The facilities are located at kilometre point 524.6 of the
Iberian gauge Iberian gauge (, ) is a track gauge of , most extensively used by the railways of Spain and Portugal. A broad gauge, it is the second-widest gauge in regular use anywhere in the world, with only Indian gauge railways, , being wider (by ). As ...
Chinchilla–Cartagena line, at 5 m. above sea level. The high mileage is due to the fact that Madrid, rather than Chinchilla, is read as the start point of the line.


Services

Cartagena is served by
Media Distancia Media may refer to: Communication * Means of communication, tools and channels used to deliver information or data ** Advertising media, various media, content, buying and placement for advertising ** Interactive media, media that is inte ...
trains to Valencia-Nord and Altaria services to Madrid, all via Murcia del Carmen. There is a daily direct train to Barcelona via Murcia, Alicante and Valencia.


History

The railway arrived in Cartagena courtesy of the Railway Company from Madrid to Zaragoza and Alicante Railway Company (M.Z.A.) on 24 October 1862, when Queen Elizabeth II made a maiden voyage between Cartagena and Murcia. Nevertheless, the railway did not commence operation until 1 February 1863, inaugurating a route that was intended to link Albacete with the Madrid-Alicante line. The construction of the station was delayed due to problems related to the then Ministry of War, which considered the construction a threat to the defensive walls. The Cartagena Expansion and Sanitation Project of 1897 included in its development the final location of the station, which facilitated the start of its construction; this did not take place until the War Ministry disarmed the wall as a defensive element of the city. From 1896 began the Levelling and filling work in the site began in 1896 and the building foundations were dug in 1903. First the side pavilions were built, allowing passenger traffic to move to the new station in July, 1906, using the northern side pavilion. During the period 1907–08 the central building was erected. The design of the building was the joint work of architect Emilio Antón Hernández along with engineers José Cebada Ruiz and José Moreno Rodríguez, all of them directed and supervised by the engineer Ramón Peironcely Elosegui. The ceramicist Daniel Zuloaga stands out among the most important suppliers who worked at the station; he, under the supervision of engineer José Cebada, was responsible for the design and construction of the modernist tiling of the main façade. Since 1941, when the entire Spanish railway network was nationalised, the station has been managed by RENFE. Since 31 December 2004 Renfe Operadora has operated the line while
Adif ADIF (, an acronym of ) is a Spanish state-owned railway infrastructure manager. This state owned company reports to the Ministry of Transport and Sustainable Mobility. ADIF is charged with the management of most of Spain's railway infrastru ...
is the operator of the railway facilities. In 2018, the Alvia 730 service began, enabling travel times between Cartagena to
Madrid Madrid ( ; ) is the capital and List of largest cities in Spain, most populous municipality of Spain. It has almost 3.5 million inhabitants and a Madrid metropolitan area, metropolitan area population of approximately 7 million. It i ...
of three hours and thirty-two minutes. Approximately southwest of the station is the terminus of the Cartagena–Los Nietos commuter rail line.


Future

Work began in 2018 to prepare Cartagena station as the future terminus of the
Madrid–Levante high-speed rail network The Madrid–Levante high-speed network is a network of high-speed rail lines that connects Madrid with the Mediterranean coast of the Levante Region, specifically with Castilla-La Mancha, the Valencian Community and the Murcia Region autonomou ...
, due to reach the station in 2023.


References

Railway stations in the Region of Murcia Railway stations in Spain opened in 1903 {{Spain-railstation-stub