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Canal de San Juan metro station

1991 establishments in MexicoMexico City Metro Line A stationsMexico City Metro stations in IztacalcoRailway stations opened in 1991
MetroCanalSanJuanPlatform
MetroCanalSanJuanPlatform

Canal de San Juan is a station along Line A of the Mexico City Metro. It is located in the Iztacalco municipality. In 2019, the station had an average ridership of 13,188 passengers per day.

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

Canal de San Juan metro station
Metro Canal de San Juan, Mexico City Iztacalco

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 19.398683 ° E -99.059365 °
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Address

Metro Canal de San Juan

Metro Canal de San Juan
08500 Mexico City, Iztacalco
Mexico
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Pantitlán metro station
Pantitlán metro station

Pantitlán (Spanish: [pantiˈtlan] (listen); Nahuatl transl. "Between flags") is a Mexico City Metro transfer station in the boroughs of Iztacalco and Venustiano Carranza, in Mexico City. It is a combined underground, at-grade, and elevated station with six island platforms and two side platforms, served by Lines 1 (the Pink Line), 5 (the Yellow Line), 9 (the Brown Line), and A (the Purple Line). The only quadra-line interchange station in the system, Pantitlán station works as the terminal station of all of the lines and is located adjacent to Zaragoza (Line 1), Hangares (Line 5), Puebla (Line 9), and Agrícola Oriental (Line A). It serves the colonias (neighborhoods) of Ampliación Adolfo López Mateos, Aviación Civil, and Pantitlán; it receives its name from the last one. The station's pictogram features the silhouettes of two flagpoles. Pantitlán station opened on 19 December 1981 with service northwestward toward Consulado on Line 5; service eastward toward Observatorio on Line 1 started on 22 August 1984; service eastward toward Centro Médico on Line 9 started on 26 August 1987; and service southeastward toward La Paz on Line A started on 12 August 1991. The facilities are accessible to the disabled. Inside there is a cultural display, an Internet café, a women's defense module, a public ministry office, a health module, a mural, and a bicycle parking station. By far, Pantitlán is the busiest station in the system. In 2019, the station had a ridership of 132,845,471 passengers, whereas the second place (Cuatro Caminos) registered 39,378,128 passengers. Out of those, 45,550,938 entrances were registered on Line A, making it the busiest station when counted separately.