Central Station Estación Central | |||||||
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Commuter rail | |||||||
General information | |||||||
Location | Av. Paseo de Julio and Piedad, Buenos Aires, Argentina | ||||||
Owned by | BA & Ensenada | ||||||
Line(s) | |||||||
Construction | |||||||
Platform levels | 3 | ||||||
History | |||||||
Opened | 12 Aug 1872 | ||||||
Closed | 1897 | ||||||
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The Central Station (in Spanish: Estación Central) was a railway station in the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina, which operated from 1872 to 1897.
The station was a union station of Buenos Aires shared by most of the separate railway companies existing by then, and functioned as terminus of most of the railway lines thus allowing passengers to connect conveniently between them. It was built in 1872 and located by what was then the shores of the Rio de la Plata next to the current Casa Rosada. The station building was a wood structure built in Great Britain, that had a slate mansard roof and a little tower with a clock and a dome on the top. When the Puerto Madero was inaugurated in 1897, the railway tracks of the Central Station blocked the access from the city to the port, and after a fire in 1897 use of the station was abandoned.