Cercanías Murcia/Alicante

Cercanías Alicante
Cercanías train in San Vicent Centre
Cercanías train in San Vicent Centre
Overview
OwnerRenfe
LocaleAlicante, Murcia, Elche
Transit typeCommuter rail
Number of lines3
Number of stations26
Annual ridership3,730,000 (2017)[1]
Operation
Operator(s)Cercanías
Technical
System length202 km (126 mi)
System map

Cercanías Murcia/Alicante is a commuter rail service (cercanías) in the provinces of Alicante and Murcia. The line connects Alicante and Murcia with San Vicente del Raspeig, Elche, Orihuela, Totana, Lorca, and Águilas. It runs through 200 km of railways with a total of 26 stations.

Lines

The cercanías consists of three lines. Line C-1 connects Alicante and Murcia by 1 or 2 trains per hour. Line C-2 connects Murcia and Águilas. Line C-3 connects Alicante and San Vicente del Raspeig with about eight trains per day.

Line Route Distance
Alicante - Elche - Murcia del Carmen 76 km
Murcia del Carmen - Lorca - Águilas 117 km
Alicante - University of Alicante - San Vicente Centre 8 km

Line C-1

The railroad linking the cities of Alicante and Murcia was built in 1885. It passes Elche through a tunnel of 4 km in length, which was built in 1970s, eliminating over twenty level crossings in the city,[2] and includes 2 underground stops Elche-Carrús/Elx-Carrús and Elche-Parque/Elx-Parc. The average travel time between Alicante and Murcia is 1 hour and 20 minutes.

Since June 15, 2008 trains no longer stop at Beniaján, Torreagüera, and Los Ramos-Alquerías.

Line C-1     Cercanías Murcia/Alicante
Murcia del Carmen | Beniel | Orihuela | Callosa de Segura | Albatera-Catral | Crevillente/Crevillent | Elche-Carrús/Elx-Carrús | Elche-Parque/Elx-Parc | Torrellano | San Gabriel/Sant Gabriel | Alicante

Line C-2

One train per hour circulates on line C-2 between Murcia and Lorca, with only three daily trains running to Águilas. The average travel time between Murcia and Lorca is 50 minutes and 1 hour 50 minutes between Murcia and Águilas.

Line C-2     Cercanías Murcia/Alicante
Murcia del Carmen | Alcantarilla-Los Romanos | Librilla | Alhama de Murcia | Totana | La Hoya | Lorca-San Diego | Lorca-Sutullena | Puerto Lumbreras | Almendricos | Pulpí | Jaravía | Águilas-El Labradorcico | Águilas

Line C-3

The railroad between Madrid and Alicante was built in the nineteenth century, but it was not used for local traffic until 2007 when line C-3 was opened. The line is 8 km long and it takes about 12 minutes to get from Alicante to San Vicente del Raspeig.

Line C-3     Cercanías Murcia/Alicante
Alicante | University of Alicante | San Vicente Centre

Future expansion

The new terminal of Alicante–Elche Airport was built with space allocated for a railway station and an Alicante Tram stop. In 2019, the Generalitat Valenciana granted €50,000 towards a feasibility study in connecting Alicante Airport to the rail network. [3] The same year, the Ministry of Development put out to tender the contract to build the airport rail link.[4]

Tren de la Costa

The Tren de la Costa proposes a new rail line linking Valencia to Alicante via coastal towns as an extension of Cercanías Valencia's C-1, into which a study was produced in 2016.[5]

Torrevieja branch

A 27.3 km (17.0 mi) branch line from San IsidroAlbateraCatral station to Torrevieja was formerly in operation from 1884 to 1986.[6]

Since the 1990s reopening of the line has been proposed, as since the line's closure the town has become an important tourist destination.[7]

In 2020, the University of Alicante proposed a branch from a new location – Orihuela – to Torrevieja serving stations at Bigastro-Jacarilla and San Miguel de Salinas.[8] The cost of the line was estimated to be between €210 and €270 million for a single-track line capable of speeds of 200 km/h (120 mph), with ridership of 1.1 million expected annually.

Further proposals

Line C-3 is due to expand from Sant Vicente Centre using the existing line to Madrid as far as Villena, with the potential to add 2,000 daily rail passengers to the network.[9]

The existing rail line from Murcia to Cartagena is currently only served by Renfe Media Distancia services, and a Cercanías service has been proposed to enhance service frequency.[10]

Proposals exist to link the future Elche–Matola AVE station (part of the Madrid–Levante high-speed rail network) to the Cercanías network by way of a new 4 km (2.5 mi) line south of Elche, at a projected cost of €32 million.[11] This would allow services through Elche city centre to terminate at the AVE station.

Network Map

Map


References

  1. ^ "Los trenes de cercanías van casi vacíos y apenas superan la cifra de usuarios de hace diez años". 11 June 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  2. ^ "El túnel que cambió Elche". Diario Información (in Spanish). 14 October 2018. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Los accesos a El Altet, la variante de Benissa y unir la A-31 con la A-35, las inversiones de Fomento en 2019". Alicante Plaza (in Spanish). 14 January 2019. Retrieved 18 March 2019.
  4. ^ "Contract for first phase of Murcia-Alicante Airport rail link put out to tender". Murcia Today. 28 August 2019. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  5. ^ "ESTUDIO INFORMATIVO DE LA LÍNEA FERROVIARIA VALENCIA - ALICANTE (TREN DE LA COSTA) - FASE II" (PDF). Ministerio de Fomento. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  6. ^ "Spanish Railway » Blog Archive » Albatera á Torrevieja". 2016-06-17. Archived from the original on 2016-06-17.
  7. ^ "The wait goes on for the Torrevieja Railway". www.theleader.info. 15 May 2019.
  8. ^ "Así es la propuesta de unir en tren Orihuela y Torrevieja: dos paradas intermedias y frecuencia de 30 minutos". Alicante Plaza. 11 November 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  9. ^ "El nuevo Cercanías Alicante-Villena doblará el número de pasajeros". lasprovin ias.es. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
  10. ^ "IU-Verdes Cartagena exige un servicio de trenes de cercanías a Murcia "de calidad y en cantidad". Europa Press. 17 December 2013.
  11. ^ "El Gobierno aprueba el Estudio Informativo de la conexión ferroviaria de la nueva estación del AVE con el centro de Elche". www.a24.es. 5 November 2020. Retrieved 21 December 2020.