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Constituyentes metro station

1985 establishments in MexicoAccessible Mexico City Metro stationsMexico City Metro Line 7 stationsMexico City Metro stations in Miguel Hidalgo, Mexico CityMexico metro stubs
Railway stations opened in 1985
Andén de la estación Constituyentes del Metro de la Ciudad de México
Andén de la estación Constituyentes del Metro de la Ciudad de México

Constituyentes is a station on Line 7 of the Mexico City metro on the western outskirts of the city center. It serves Chapultepec Park and numerous attractions therein, as well as the Luis Barragán House and Studio. The station opened on 23 August 1985.The station is named after the nearby Avenida Constituyentes. The station's icon shows a quill, a pot of ink and a book, in reference to the Mexican constitutions of 1824, 1857 and 1917. Constituyentes serves the San Miguel Chapultepec and Ampliación Daniel Garza neighborhoods, in the Miguel Hidalgo borough. From 23 April to 17 June 2020, the station was temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico.

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

Constituyentes metro station
Avenida Parque Lira, Mexico City

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 19.411858 ° E -99.191265 °
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Address

Metro Constituyentes

Avenida Parque Lira
11850 Mexico City
Mexico
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Andén de la estación Constituyentes del Metro de la Ciudad de México
Andén de la estación Constituyentes del Metro de la Ciudad de México
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La Feria de Chapultepec
La Feria de Chapultepec

La Feria de Chapultepec (transl. Chapultepec Fair), simply branded as La Feria, was an amusement park in Mexico City, Mexico. Located in the middle of Chapultepec Park near the Constituyentes Metro station, it opened in 1964 as Juegos Mecánicos de Chapultepec (transl. Chapultepec Mechanical Games) and was originally operated by the Mexican government. In 1992 Grupo CIE bought it and changed the name to La Feria Chapultepec Mágico (transl. Magic Chapultepec Fair). In 2015, it was bought by Ventura Entertainment and renamed to its last name.On 28 September 2019 an accident on the Quimera roller coaster killed two people and injured two others. An investigation determined that design flaws by its designer along with a lack of maintenance by the personnel were likely to blame for the accident. On 13 October 2019, the amusement park authorities announced on their official website the definitive closure of the park after the Mexico City Government revoked their license. After Ventura Entertainment lost the license, the government sent a message to other park companies such as Six Flags, Cedar Fair, and Seaworld to take over the license of the property. After Bosque de Chapultepec reopened, most of La Feria's furniture and fences that separate the attractions are being dismantled and the property is being cleaned, and the new owner is yet to be announced, since the six companies that were interested asked for the period of selection, which was meant to be until 20 April of this year, to be extended because of the COVID-19 pandemic, so the government is yet to announce the new date.