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Ñuñoa metro station

Railway stations opened in 2017Railway stations opened in 2019Santiago Metro stations
L6 Ñuñoa Andén hacia Los Leones
L6 Ñuñoa Andén hacia Los Leones

Ñuñoa is a transfer station between the Line 3 and Line 6 of the Santiago Metro. The Line 6 station was opened on 2 November 2017 as part of the inaugural section of the line, between Cerrillos and Los Leones. The Line 3 station was opened on 22 January 2019 as part of the inaugural section of the line, from Los Libertadores to Fernando Castillo Velasco.It differs from the other stations of the line 6 because some walls are colored yellow or blue, compared to the other stations of the line 6. In its environment you can find shops, banks, restaurants and supermarkets, thus forming the center of the commune, which gives it its name.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ñuñoa metro station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ñuñoa metro station
Avenida Pedro de Valdivia, Ñuñoa Ñuñoa

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Ñuñoa metro stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -33.454333333333 ° E -70.605166666667 °
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Address

Estación de Metro L3/L6

Avenida Pedro de Valdivia
7750000 Ñuñoa, Ñuñoa
Santiago Metropolitan Region, Chile
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L6 Ñuñoa Andén hacia Los Leones
L6 Ñuñoa Andén hacia Los Leones
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Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos
Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos

Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos (originally known as Estadio Nacional) is the national stadium of Chile, and is located in the Ñuñoa district of Santiago. It is the largest stadium in Chile with an official capacity of 48,665. It is part of a 62 hectare sporting complex which also features tennis courts, an aquatics center, a modern gymnasium, a velodrome, a BMX circuit, and an assistant ground/warmup athletics track. Construction began in February 1937 and the stadium was inaugurated on December 3, 1938. The architecture was based on the Olympiastadion in Berlin, Germany. The stadium was one of the venues for the FIFA World Cup in 1962, and hosted the final where Brazil defeated Czechoslovakia 3–1. In 1948, the stadium hosted the matches of the South American Championship of Champions, the competition that inspired the creation of the UEFA Champions League and of the Copa Libertadores. The stadium was notoriously used as a mass imprisonment, torture, and extrajudicial execution facility by the Pinochet dictatorship following the 1973 military coup. In 2009, a complete modernization plan was unveiled for the stadium and surrounding facilities. President Michelle Bachelet said it would become the most modern stadium in South America. The stadium will be the opening and closing ceremonies, athletics, and football venue for the 2014 South American Games and the 2023 Pan American Games.