Belgrano Sur Line

Belgrano Sur Line
Dr. Antonio Sánez, current terminus,
pictured in 2021
Overview
Service typeCommuter rail
StatusActive
LocaleGreater Buenos Aires
Predecessor
First service1948; 76 years ago (1948)
Current operator(s)Trenes Argentinos
Former operator(s)Argentren
WebsiteBelgrano Sur
Route
TerminiDr. A. Sáenz
Lozano
M. del Belgrano
Stops29
Average journey time77'
70'
Service frequency20'
On-board services
Class(es)Unique
Technical
Track gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
Track owner(s)Government of Argentina

The Belgrano Sur line is an Argentine 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge commuter rail service in the Greater Buenos Aires area, currently operated by state-owned enterprise Trenes Argentinos. The Belgrano Sur runs over tracks and through stations built by the FrancoBelgian-owned Compañía General de Buenos Aires and British Midland companies at the beginning of the 20th century.

The termini is Dr. A. Sáenz in the Nueva Pompeya district of the autonomous city of Buenos Aires, with two branches, one to Lozano in General Las Heras Partido (departing from González Catán)[1][2] and the other one to Marinos del Crucero Gral. Belgrano in Merlo partido. The line also has a touristic service between Tomás Jofré and Mercedes.

Carrying just under 11 million passengers per year, the line is the least used of the Buenos Aires commuter rail network.[3]

The railway line was originally built and operated by two companies, British-owned Buenos Aires Midland Railway that made its inaugural trip in 1909 joining Puente Alsina and Carhue, and Franco-Belgian-owned Compañía General de Buenos Aires (Established in 1908), that built and operated a large network reaching cities in the west of Buenos Aires province and branches to cities such as La Plata and Rosario, Although most of the line was closed and only a few services are active nowadays.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference marcos was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ El tren Belgrano Sur vuelve a llegar a la estación 20 de Junio tras 26 años sin servicio, Télam, 1 Dec 2019
  3. ^ Estadísticas del transporte ferroviario - Total 2014 Archived 2015-06-12 at the Wayback Machine, CNRT website - Ministry of Transport