Bilbao-Concordia | |
---|---|
Terminal station | |
General information | |
Location | 2, Bailén street 48003 Bilbao Spain |
Coordinates | 43°15′37″N2°55′36″W / 43.26028°N 2.92667°W |
Owned by | Adif |
Line(s) | Renfe Feve regional services Renfe Feve suburban: C1f Bilbao-Balmaseda, R3b Bilbao-Karrantza |
Platforms | 2 side platforms |
Tracks | 2 |
Connections | Bus |
Construction | |
Structure type | Elevated station |
Platform levels | 1 |
Parking | No |
Accessible | Yes |
History | |
Opened | 1902 |
Rebuilt | 2007 |
The Bilbao-Concordia railway station, also known as La Concordia Station, and formerly and colloquially known as Santander Station, is a terminal railway station in Bilbao, Basque Country (Spain). The station was opened in 1902 and currently serves as the terminus station for several narrow-gauge regional and metropolitan railway services operated by Renfe Feve, a division of the state-owned Spanish railway company Renfe. The Bilbao-Abando railway station, also operated by Renfe and that offers medium and long-distance services is located in close proximity.
It is a singular building of modernist style, considered an outstanding example of Belle Époque architecture in Bilbao. [1]
During the 19th century several narrow-gauge railways were opened across northern Spain as a viable solution to the region's difficult topography and unlike other southern regions, where Iberian-gauge was predominant. The station was opened in 1898 as the terminus for the Bilbao-Santander railway and finished in 1902. The station was placed at the fringe of the then developing ensanche of the city, bordered by the Bilbao river.
The station was promoted by the engineer Valentín Gorbeña, who was also behind the construction of the Cadagua railway, and designed by the architect Severino Achúcarro, who had already aided with the urban plan for the ensanche in 1876. The station acted as the Biscayan head for the Company of the Bilbao-Santander Railway, a railway company established by the merge of three former railway lines. At the time of its opening, it was conceived to be a mixed-used passenger and freight railway station. In 1965 the company was nationalised and transformed into FEVE, after which the station building moved to public hands.
In the year 2007 it was completely renovated with the goal of adapting it to the modern requirements of a railway terminal, improving its accessibility.
After the construction of the high speed line Basque Y is finished, the neighbouring Bilbao-Abando station will be renovated to accommodate all railway services starting in Abando, which will include the narrow-gauge services currently starting at this station. [2] [3] Bilbao-Concordia will expectedly cease to serve as a railway station after then, and its future use is still undefined.
The station's name has traditionally been La Concordia (Spanish for The Concord), and it has its origins in the grounds where the station would be finally constructed. In the year 1857 the opening of the Bilbao-Tudela railway in the nearby Bilbao-Abando railway station involved a great volume of capital coming from local Bilbao families. When the railway company became close to bankruptcy a years later, a meeting between investors took place in a railway pavilion located in close proximity to Bilbao-Abando. Due to the positive outcome of the meeting, the pavilion became known as La Concordia, and the station inherited the name.
The station is distributed along two stories, the ground floor containing the main hall, cafeteria, ticket vending machines, as well as the railway offices. The main entrance of the building looks towards Bailén street and the Bilbao river, whereas a rear entrance connects with Bilbao-Abando railway station via José María Olavarri street. The second floor contains two parallel platforms and the railway tracks.
Since its opening the station has been the terminus of the lines belonging to the former Bilbao-Santander railway, which connects the city of Bilbao with others in Biscay and northern Spain, such as Santander and León.
Bilbao-Concordia also serves as terminus station for two narrow-gauge commuter railway lines connecting Bilbao with the Enkarterri region of Biscay, reaching Balmaseda and Karrantza after traversing the Kadagua valley.
Bilbao-Concordia is located in close proximity of the main Bilbao-Abando railway station, which is part of the Renfe network with local services and long-distance trains to Madrid and Barcelona, as well as a metro station. Bilbao-Concordia is connected directly to Bilbao-Abando by a pedestrian access. The Zazpikaleak/Casco Viejo station is located at around 500 metres from Bilbao-Concordia. This station is operated by Euskotren Trena and from there trains run to Durango, Elgoibar and San Sebastián.
The Abando stop of the Bilbao tram, operated by Euskotren Tranbia is located on Navarra street at about 300 metres from the Bilbao-Abando station. The tram connects the district of Abando with Ibaiondo and Basurto-Zorroza.
The station is served by the following regional Bizkaibus services, running to other municipalities within the Bilbao metropolitan area or elsewhere in Biscay.
Bilbao is a city in northern Spain, the largest city in the province of Biscay and in the Basque Country as a whole. It is also the largest city proper in northern Spain. Bilbao is the tenth largest city in Spain, with a population of more than 347,000 as of 2023. The Bilbao metropolitan area has 1,037,847 inhabitants, making it the most populous metropolitan area in northern Spain; with a population of 875,552, the comarca of Greater Bilbao is the fifth-largest urban area in Spain. Bilbao is also the main urban area in what is defined as the Greater Basque region.
Renfe Cercanías AM, formerly known as Renfe Feve, is a division of state-owned Spanish railway company Renfe Operadora. It operates most of Spain's 1,250 km (777 mi) of metre-gauge railway. This division of Renfe was previously a stand-alone company named FEVE. On 31 December 2012, the Spanish government simplified the organization of state-owned railway companies by merging FEVE into Renfe and Adif. The rolling stock and the brand FEVE were transferred to Renfe, while the infrastructure was transferred to Adif.
Euskotren Trena, formerly known just as Euskotren is a commuter, inter-city and urban transit train-operating company that operates local and inter-city passenger services in the provinces of Biscay and Gipuzkoa, in the Basque Country, Spain. It is one of the four commercial brands under which Euskotren operates, as a public company managed by the Basque government. The entire 181.1-kilometre (112.5 mi) network uses 1,000 mm narrow gauge rail tracks which have been owned by the Basque Government since their transferral from the Spanish government; the rail tracks and stations were part of the FEVE network until its transferral. Euskotren Trena also operates the Donostia/San Sebastián metro under the brand Metro Donostialdea.
The Bilbao metro is a rapid transit system serving the city of Bilbao and the region of Greater Bilbao. Lines 1 and 2 have a "Y" shape, as they transit both banks of the river Ibaizabal and then combine to form one line that ends in the south of Bilbao. Line 3 has a "V" shape connecting the municipality of Etxebarri with the Bilbao neighbourhood of Matiko; the apex of the "V" is Zazpikaleak/Casco Viejo station, where all three current lines meet. The metro is connected with the Bilbao tram, Bilboko Aldiriak, Euskotren Trena, Feve, Renfe long-distance trains, and Bilbao's bus station. All three lines use metre gauge.
Abando, formerly known as San Vicente de Abando, is one of the eight districts of Bilbao, Basque Country (Spain). It covers most of the city's centre, located on the left bank of the estuary of Bilbao. It is the only district of Bilbao with all of its land completely urbanised. Abando was originally an elizate and also a municipality until 1876, when part of it was annexed to Bilbao, the rest of the elizate's municipal land was integrated into Bilbao in 1890. In 2016 the population was 50,903. Abando is the wealthiest district in Bilbao, with personal and family incomes being well above the citywide average.
The Abando Indalecio Prieto railway station, usually known simply as Bilbao-Abando and previously known as Estación del Norte is a terminal railway station in Bilbao, Basque Country (Spain). The name comes from Abando, the district in which the station is located, and Indalecio Prieto, who was Minister of Public Works during the Second Spanish Republic. The station serves as the terminus station for several long and medium distance services operated by Renfe as well as commuter rail services within the Bilbao metropolitan area operated by Cercanías. The station has direct access to Metro Bilbao and to the tram, as well as many local and regional bus lines. The railway station Bilbao-Concordia, operated by Renfe Feve is located in close proximity. After the construction of the high-speed line Basque Y is finished, Bilbao-Abando will serve as the western terminus, which will involve the creation of a completely new station replacing the current one.
Euskotren, formally known as Basque Railways, is a public railway company controlled by the Basque Government and officially established in 1982 to operate several 1,000 mm narrow gauge railways inside the autonomous community of the Basque Country, under the terms of the Statute of Autonomy of the Basque Country. Originally operating under the commercial brand ET/FV, it took control of the management and operations of the narrow gauge lines formerly operated by the railway company FEVE. The commercial brand eventually changed to Euskotren, as it remains today. Since 2006, the infrastructure on which the company runs its trains has been owned by Euskal Trenbide Sarea.
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Zazpikaleak/Casco Viejo – Zazpikaleak and Casco Viejo – is a railway station in Bilbao, Basque Country, Spain. It is located in the historical neighborhood of Casco Viejo, in the district of Ibaiondo. It links the Bilbao metro rapid transit services with the Euskotren Trena commuter rail network. It is the main railway hub for trips between the metropolitan underground network and the railway services to Eibar, Gernika, Bermeo and San Sebastián as well as the Txorierri valley. The original metro station opened on 11 November 1995, and on 8 April 2017 in its current form.
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