Barcelona França railway station

Estació de França (Catalan pronunciation: [əstəsiˈo ðə ˈfɾansə]; Spanish: Estación de Francia; "France Station") is a major railway station in the city of Barcelona in Catalonia, Spain.

Barcelona Estació de França
Aerial view
General information
LocationAvinguda del Marquès de l'Argentera, Barcelona, Catalonia
Spain
Owned byAdif
Operated byRenfe Operadora
Line(s)
Tracks13
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
AccessibleYes
History
Opened1848
Passengers
20182,339,367 ()[1]
Services
Preceding station Renfe Operadora Following station
Barcelona Sants Talgo
Torre del Oro
Terminus
Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia Media Distancia
34
Preceding station Rodalies de Catalunya Following station
Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia
towards Sant Vicenç de Calders
R2 Sud Terminus
Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia R13
R14
Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia
towards Riba-roja d'Ebre
R15
Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia
towards Ulldecona-Alcanar-La Sénia or Tortosa
R16
Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia
towards Port Aventura
R17

Estació de França is the second busiest railway station of the city after Barcelona-Sants in terms of regional and long-distance ridership. It may lose this status, however, with the arrival of the AVE high-speed train in Sants and the construction of Estació de la Sagrera, planned for completion at the end of 2023, that will concentrate most of the traffic.

History

Some of the platforms

A railway station was first built here in the 19th century as the main terminus for trains arriving from France (as its name still suggests) but also for services to North East Catalonia and the Costa Brava.

Rebuilt and reopened for the 1929 International Exhibition, the two monumental buildings that make up the station were designed by the architect Pedro Muguruza and inaugurated by King Alfonso XIII. They surround the railway tracks in the shape of a 'U'. In total, the station's structure is 29 m tall and 195 m long. The station was closed for renovation between from 1988 and 1992, reopening for the Olympic Games of 1992.[2]

Architecture

It is generally seen as the city's most beautiful station. It is worth seeing in its own right for the restrained mix of classical and more modern style that is complete with decoration in marble, bronze and crystal and its modernista and art déco motifs. Over the last three decades it has been eclipsed as Barcelona's main station by the underground sprawl of Sants. Indeed, most other stations of Barcelona are at least partly underground.

The station's status as the terminus for international trains from and through France ended with the discontinuation of the overnight 'trenhotels' in 2013, which coincided with the introduction of the new high-speed daytime TGV services to Paris, Toulouse, Lyons and Marseilles, all of which call at or terminate at Sants.

Part of the original building now belongs to Pompeu Fabra University, serving as its "França building".[3]

Lines

Façade

The station accommodates twelve tracks and seven platforms. It is the terminus for a number of RENFE services:

The station is often also used as backup terminal when parts of the railway network are undergoing maintenance; the station received a wide variety of services during upgrades to the Aragó tunnel during winter of 2008.

Location

The station is located in the east of the city, down between the docks and the zoo. Although it does not have its own metro station, it is easily accessible: directly on the R10 line through central Barcelona (Sants and Passeig de Gràcia), as well as a good five-minute walk from Barceloneta station on line 4 of the Barcelona Metro.

Accidents and incidents

On 28 July 2017, a train crashed into metal barriers at the station.

See also

References

41°23′02″N 2°11′10″E

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