Cuenca–Fernando Zóbel railway station
Cuenca-Fernando Zóbel | |
---|---|
General information | |
Coordinates | 40°2′5″N 2°8′41″W / 40.03472°N 2.14472°W |
Owned by | Adif |
Operated by | Renfe |
Line(s) | Madrid–Levante high-speed rail network |
History | |
Opened | December 2010 |
Electrified | Yes |
Passengers | |
2018 | 398,689[1] |
Cuenca – Fernando Zóbel Railway Station (IATA: CEJ) is the new railway station in Cuenca, Spain, located 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from the city centre. The station is named after painter Fernando Zóbel to commemorate his links to the city.[2] It occupies 3.950 square metres (42.52 sq ft) with 8.900 square metres (95.80 sq ft) of parking space. It is operated by RENFE and part of Adif and high-speed rail systems.
History
[edit]Cuenca has been served by the railroad since 1885, and had a station on the old Aranjuez - Valencia Railway . On 2010 December 19 a new AVE (high-speed rail) link was established on the Madrid–Levante high-speed rail line between Madrid – Atocha station and Cuenca – Fernando Zobel station, but Renfe kept a daily Media Distancia service between Madrid (Aranjuez in the weekend) and Valencia via the old line taking 3 hours to Madrid and another 3 hours to Valencia, until the section between Tarancón and Utiel was closed on 2022 July 20 and left Cuenca without a station within the city centre.[3]
Facilities
[edit]Cuenca, Spain is a popular day or weekend trip from Madrid, with frequent AVE, AVLO, Alvia, Avant and Iryo trains between Madrid and Valencia or Alicante serving the station. There is a large car park for 250 cars, ticket machines as well as a ticket counter, toilets a small commercial area. Bus line L1 connects the station to the city centre every 30' (60' in the weekends) in approx. 20-25'.[4]
Services
[edit]Preceding station | Renfe Operadora | Following station | ||
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Madrid Chamartín Terminus
|
AVE | Requena-Utiel towards Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla
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Albacete-Los Llanos towards Alicante
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Albacete-Los Llanos towards Murcia del Carmen
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Madrid Puerta de Atocha Terminus
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Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla towards Castelló de la Plana
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Ciudad Real towards Seville-Santa Justa
|
Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla Terminus
| |||
Madrid Chamartín Terminus
|
Avlo | Requena-Utiel towards Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla
| ||
Albacete-Los Llanos towards Alicante
| ||||
Albacete-Los Llanos towards Murcia del Carmen
| ||||
Madrid Puerta de Atocha towards Gijón
|
Alvia | Albacete-Los Llanos towards Alicante
| ||
Madrid Puerta de Atocha towards A Coruña
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Madrid Puerta de Atocha towards Pontevedra
| ||||
Madrid Puerta de Atocha towards Santander
| ||||
Madrid Puerta de Atocha Terminus
|
Intercity | Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla towards Vinaròs
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Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla towards Gandía
|
References
[edit]- ^ "Adif - Información de estaciones - Cuenca Fernando Zóbel". ADIF. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
- ^ "How Fernando Zobel saved a dying Spanish city by opening a museum". news.abs.cbn.com. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
- ^ https://periodicoclm.publico.es/2022/07/18/cuenca-dice-adios-tren-convencional-despues-139-anos-mientras-anuncia-judicializacion-cierre-linea/ [bare URL]
- ^ https://transviago.com/lineas-urbanas-cuenca/ [bare URL]