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Tehran Metro

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Tehran Metro
Top: Outside view of Imam Khomeini station Bottom: A train at the Ghoddoosi Metro Station
Top: Outside view of Imam Khomeini station
Bottom: A train at the Ghoddoosi Metro Station
Overview
Native nameمترو تهران
LocaleTehran, Iran
Transit typeRapid transit/metro (Lines 1-4, 6-7)
Commuter rail (Line 5)
Number of lines7 active lines
Number of stations159 (total)[1] [2]
Daily ridership2.5 million[3]
Annual ridership820 million (2018)[4]
Websitemetro.tehran.ir
Operation
Began operation7 March 1999; 25 years ago (1999-03-07)
Operator(s)Tehran Urban and Suburban Railway Company (TUSRC)
Number of vehicles1,514[5]
Technical
System length224.6 km (139.6 mi) (metro)
67.5 km (41.9 mi) (commuter)
292.1 km (181.5 mi) (total)[6]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge

The Tehran Metro (Persian: مترو تهران, romanizedMetro-ye Tehrān) is a rapid transit system serving Tehran, the capital of Iran. It is the largest metro system in the Middle East.[7][8] The system is owned and operated by Tehran Urban and Suburban Railway. It consists of six operational metro lines (and an additional commuter rail line), with construction under way on seven lines including northwestern extension of line 4, south extension line 6, northwestern and east extension line 7, east extension line 2 and Line 10, Line 8 and 9.

The Tehran Metro carries more than 3 million passengers a day.[9] In 2018, 820 million trips were made on Tehran Metro. As of December 2023, the total system is 292.1 kilometers (181.5 mi) long, 224.6 kilometers (139.6 mi) of which is metro-grade rail. It is planned to have a length of 430 kilometers (270 mi) with eleven lines once all construction is complete by 2040.[10]

On all days of the week, the Metro service runs from 04:30 to 22:00.

women-only section

The line uses standard gauge and is mostly underground. Ticket price is 5,300 Iranian Toman for each journey (about US$0.05), regardless of the distance traveled, but using prepaid tickets costs much less. Seniors may travel for free on the metro. On all Tehran metro trains the first and half of the second carriages from each end are reserved for women. Women can still ride other cars freely.[11]

History

[edit]

Initial plans for the metro system were laid in late 1960s but could not be executed until 1982 because of socio-political issues such as the Iranian Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War. In 1970, the Plan and Budget Organization and the Municipality of Tehran announced an international tender for construction of a metro in Tehran. The French company SOFRETU, affiliated with the state-owned Paris transportation authority RATP, won the tender and in the same year began to conduct preliminary studies on the project. In 1974, a final report with a so-called "street-metro" proposal was tendered. The street-metro system recommended a road network with a loop express way in the central area and two highways for new urban areas and an 8-line metro network which were complemented by bus network and taxi services. Geological surveys commenced in 1976. In 1978, construction on the line was started in northern Tehran by the French company, however this development was short-lived with the advent of the Iranian Revolution and Iran–Iraq War in 1979 and 1980 respectively. SOFRETU ceased operations in Iran in December 1980. On March 3, 1982, the Iranian Cabinet ministers formally announced the stop of Tehran Metro operations by the French company.

CRV Type DKZ2 Cars in the Tehran Metro.

In 1985, the "Tehran Metro Execution Plan" was re-approved by the Majiles, the Iranian Parliament, on the basis of legal project of "Amendment of Law of Establishment of Tehran Urban and suburban Railway Company" which had been founded on Farvardin 1364 (April 1985). This was a literal continuation of exactly the same project that had been laid out before the revolution. Work proceeded slowly because of the continuing Iran–Iraq War and often ground to a halt. By the summer of 1985, urban pressure from the rapidly urbanising population, and lack of developed public transport system prompted the work to be resumed in earnest. "Line 1" (From Blvd. Shahid Ayatollah Haghani to City of Rey) and its extension to Behesht-e-Zahra Cemetery was made a priority. "Line 2" (From Dardasht in Tehran Pars district to Sadeghiyeh Second Square) and an extending towards the City of Karaj and Mehrshahr district was also made a secondary priority. Studies were also made to establish the previously designed Lines 3 & 4. It was decided that an organisation by the name of the Metro Company should be established in order to handle the future development of the system.

The Metro Company then became managed by Asghar Ebrahimi Asl for eleven years. During that time, hundreds of millions of dollars were spent on the system and the Metro Company was given government concessions for the exploitation of iron ore mines in Bandar Abbas (Hormuzgan Province), exploitation and sale of Moghan Diotomite mine in the Iranian region of Azarbaijan,[12] export of refinery residues from Isfahan oil refinery as well as tar from Isfahan steel mill.[13] The year after Asghar Ebrahimi Asl left the management of the Metro Company and Mohsen Hashemi succeeded him, the first line of the Tehran Metro was launched between Tehran and Karaj.

On 7 March 1999, an overland Tehran-Karaj express electric train started a limited service of 31.4 km (19.5 mi) between Azadi Square (Tehran) and Malard (Karaj) that called at one intermediate station at Vardavard.

Line 5 of the Tehran metro began operating in 1999. Iran's first metro system, the line was constructed by the Chinese company NORINCO.[14]

Golshahr (Line 5) commuter rail station.

From 2000 onwards, commercial operation began on Lines 1 and 2. The wagons on these lines are provided by CRV via CNTIC. The railway tracks and points on these lines are provided by the Austrian company Voestalpine.

The Metro uses equipment manufactured by a wide range of international companies: double-deck passenger cars for the Tehran-Karaj regional line are supplied by CRV (although some trains are from SEGC) via CNTIC and assembled by the Wagon Pars factory in Arak.

As of 2010, approximately $2 billion has been spent on the Metro project. The Tehran Metro transports about 2.5 million passengers daily[15] through its 7 operational lines (Lines 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8). It also has additional one line under construction (Line 6), and an additional two lines in engineering phase. New 80 wagons have been added to the system in September 2012 to ease transportation and reduce rush-hour congestion. Iran is able to produce its need in wagons and trains independently.[16]

A 2.8-kilometre (1.7 mi) branch line of Line 4 began running to Mehrabad International Airport on 15 March 2016.[17] A 31-kilometre (19 mi) express line to Imam Khomeini International Airport was opened in August 2017.[18]

Amidst the COVID-19 cases increasing in Iran, Tehran Metro made wearing masks a requirement to enter the metro network at any station. Law enforcement located in every station were ordered to prevent passengers from entering without masks and such passengers would be led to purchase masks from mask selling desks located at every metro station.[19]

Lines

[edit]
Map of Tehran Metro, The lines and stations in operation
Line Opening[20] Length Stations[21] Type
1 2001 86.9 km (54.0 mi)[22] 32[22][23] Metro
2 2000 24.6 km (15.3 mi)[24] 22[23][24] Metro
3 2012 33.7 km (20.9 mi)[25][26] 25[23][26] Metro
4 2008 24.4 km (15.2 mi)[27] 23[27] Metro
5 1999 67.5 km (41.9 mi)[28] 13[28][29] Commuter rail
6 2019 32.5 km (20.2 mi)[30] 23 Metro
7 2017 22.5 km (14.0 mi)[31] 21 Metro
Metro Subtotal: 224.6 km (140 mi) 146
Total: 292.1 km (182 mi) 159

Line 1

[edit]

Line 1, coloured red on system maps, is 86.9 kilometers (54.0 mi) long, of which 14.9 km (9.3 mi) are underground (from Tajrish station to Shoush-Khayyam crossing) and the rest runs at surface level. There are 5 2 stations[22][23] along this line of which 23 stations are located underground and 8 above ground. As of 2018, the total capacity of line 1 is 650,000 passenger per day, with trains stopping at each station for 20 seconds. The trains are each made up of seven wagons, with a nominal capacity of 1,300 seated and standing passengers. The maximum speed of the trains is 80 km/h (50 mph) which is tempered to an average of 45 km/h (28 mph) due to stoppages at stations along the route.

Line 1 runs mostly north–south. A 4.1 kilometers (2.5 mi), three station extension of the line from Mirdamad station to Qolhak station opened on May 20, 2009.[citation needed] The 4 kilometers (2.5 mi), four stations second phase of this extension from Qolhak station to Tajrish Square was completed in 2011. Construction was to be completed by March 2007 but faced major issues due to large boulders and rock bed in part of the tunnels as well as water drainage issues. It has also faced major financing issues as the government has refused to release funds earmarked for the project to the municipality.

Since August 2017, one of Line 1's stations, Darvazeh Dowlat is open 24 hours a day, in order to accommodate passengers traveling to and from Imam Khomeini Airport via Line 1.[32]

Line 1 connects Tehran to Imam Khomeini International Airport. Its first phase, to Shahr-e-Aftab station, opened in 2016, and the airport station opened in August 2017. It is the only metro line in Tehran that is completely open 24 hours a day (even if the frequency is only 80 minutes...), in order to accommodate passengers from late night and early morning flights (Line 1's Darvazeh Dowlat station is the only other metro station outside of Line 1 with that classification).[32] A third phase, which is currently operational, will extend Line 1 to the satellite city of Parand and bring the total length of the line to 50 km (31 mi). Its 120 km (75 mi) per hour speeds classify it as an express subway line, the first of its kind on the Tehran Metro.[33]

Line 2

[edit]

This line opened between Sadeghieh and Imam Khomeini in February 2000.[34] Line 2 is 26 kilometers (16 mi) long,[24] with 19.6 km (12.2 mi) underground and 2.4 kilometers (1.5 mi) elevated.[citation needed] There are 22 stations along the line,[23][24] of which Imam Khomeini Station was shared by Line 1. Line 2 is coloured blue on system maps and runs mostly east–west through the city.

The line was extended from Imam-Khomeini to Baharestan Metro Station in 2004, and to Shahid Madani, Sarsabz and Elm-o-Sanat University in March 2006 with the intermediate stations, Darvazeh Shemiran and Sabalan, opening in July 2006.[34] It was extended further from Elm-o-Sanat University to Tehran Pars in February 2009, and to Farhangsara in June 2010.[34] The extension phase to new east terminal is under construction.

Line 3

[edit]

Line 3 travels from northeast to southwest. Line 3 is one of the most important lines as it connects southwest Tehran to northeast, crosses busy parts of the capital city, and can help to alleviate traffic problems.[35] About 7 kilometers (4.3 mi) of Line 3 became operational in December 2012, followed by 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) in April 2014,[36] and finally, the last section of the line which is 18 kilometers (11 mi) opened on September 22, 2015, increasing the length of the line to a total of 33.7 kilometers (20.9 mi),[25][26] and serving 25 stations[26] as of May 2021.

Line 4

[edit]

The line is 24.4 km (15.2 mi) long with 23 stations.[27] which connects the western part of Tehran to eastern part. This line initially runs through Ekbatan (western Tehran) to Kolahdooz (eastern Tehran). The construction of a western extension to line 4 has been started in 2012 connecting Ekbatan to Chaharbagh Sq. This extension will include 3 stations. A sub-line of this line connects Bimeh station to Mehrabad Airport. This sub-line has 3 stations at Bimeh, Terminal 1&2 and Terminal 4&6.

Section 1, from Ferdowsi Square to Darvazeh Shemiran, opened in April 2008. Section 2 from Darvazeh shemiran to Shohada Square opened in February 2009. On May 24, 2009, Section 3 from Ferdowsi Square to Enghelab Square opened. On July 23, 2012, two more stations were inaugurated, connecting line 4 with line 5.[37]

Currently there are 23 stations in operation on Line 4, coloured yellow on the system maps.[35][38]

Line 5

[edit]

Line 5 is coloured green on system maps; it is a 67.5-kilometer-long (41.9 mi)[28] commuter rail line and has 13 stations.[28][29] Entering the area of Karaj with main stations at Karaj and Golshahr and Hashtgerd. It connects with the western end of Line 2 at Tehran (Sadeghiyeh) station, and with the western end of Line 4 at Eram-e Sabz Metro Station.

Line 6

[edit]

Line 6 is pink coloured on system maps.[28] An initial 9-kilometer-long (5.6 mi) section between Shohada Square to Dowlat Abad opened on April 7, 2019.[39][40] This line is 16.5 km (10.3 mi) long with 13 stations right now. When completed, this line will be 38 km (24 mi) long with 31 stations, connecting southeast Tehran to northwest.[39] A tunnel boring machine (TBM) is used to construct the tunnel. TBM is using earth pressure balanced method to pass safely through urban areas without considerable settlement.[citation needed]

Line 7

[edit]

This line, similar to line 6, and in contrast with line 3, goes from northwest to southeast and was constructed with modern TBM machines. Its first phase, compromising of 18 km (11 mi) of line and 7 stations were opened in June 2017.[41] This line has 22 km (14 mi) with 20 stations right now.

Future plans

[edit]

There are several plans to expand Tehran's metro network to over 500 km (310 mi) in total. Some plans only concern additional inserted stations, like Vavan on line 1 in the South or Aghdasiyeh on line 3 in the North. Some extensions and completely new lines are under construction, some extensions or new lines are proposals in the moment.

Line Status[20] Length Stations[42] Type
3 Under Construction 10.5 km (6.5 mi) 5 (planned) Metro
8 Under Construction 34 (planned) Metro
9 Planned 39 (planned) Metro
10 Under Construction 35 (planned) Metro
11 Planned 17 (planned) Metro

Under construction

[edit]
Map of Tehran Metro Line's under construction plan

Line 3 (formerly named Eslamshahr line)

[edit]

In the south, line 3 will continue for 10.5 km (6.5 mi) from the terminus Azadegan with five new stations to Eslamshahr. Originally, the plan was to build a commuter rail-link like line 5 with a new interchange platform at Azadegan under the name "Eslamshahr Line". But until construction began in 2016, the plans were changed into a transfer-free extension of the existing route. The opening is scheduled for 2025.[43][44]

Line 6

[edit]

Line 6 extension is on the way in the Northwest, where three new stations are built, and at the East end, where one additional station is under construction.

Line 7

[edit]

There is an extension of one station each from each recent terminus in the North and in the Southeast under construction.

Line 10

[edit]

The completely rebuilt line 10, coloured dark blue in the system map, stretching 43 kilometres (27 mi) with 35 stations will run along a west–east corridor from Vardavard metro station of line 5 in the west of Tehran towards the area of Kosar aqueduct in the east with an interchange to the extended line 4. Construction started in September 2020.[45]

Further plans

[edit]
Future network plan (including all recent proposals as of 2023)

Line 8

[edit]

Line 8 of Tehran's Metro, coloured brown in the system map, is a planned circular line, surrounding the city center from Fadak station (line 2) in the North, over the West, and ending in the southeastern borough of Shahrak-e-Valfajr. It might have 34 stations, 21 of them newly built, while the others will be expanded existing ones becoming interchange stations to other lines.

Line 9

[edit]

The planned line 9 of the metro network, coloured golden in the system map, is another circular line, starting further west at line 5 station Chitgar, passing the city center in the North, turning south and ending at line 6 station Dowlat Abad. It might have 39 stations all together, 27 of them new constructed, while the others will be expansions of existing stations to become interchanges to other lines.

Line 11

[edit]

Line 11, coloured light green in the system map, is another planned tangent line, starting from Chitgar station at line 5, connecting the southern parts of Tehran, and ending in the Southeast in the borough of Eslam Abad. It might have 18 stations, most of them newly built, just five to be expanded existing stations to become interchanges with other lines.

LRT Lines

[edit]

3 LRT (Tram) lines are proposed along with the Metro lines.

Express Commuter Railway

[edit]

3 other commuter Rail lines are planned along with Line 5 (Tehran-Karaj-Hashtgerd Commuter Rail) bringing the total Metro Commuter Rails to 4 Lines .

Interchange stations

[edit]
  • 1- Darvazeh Shemiran; Lines 2 & 4
  • 2- Shahid Beheshti; Lines 1 & 3
  • 3- Darvazeh Dowlat; Lines 1 & 4
  • 4- Imam Khomeini; Lines 1 & 2
  • 5- Theatr-e Shahr; Lines 3 & 4
  • 6- Shademan; Lines 2 & 4
  • 7- (Tehran) Sadeghiyeh; Lines 2 & 5
  • 8- Eram-e Sabz; Lines 4 & 5
  • 9- Shahid Navvab-e Safavi; Lines 2 & 7
  • 10- Mahdiyeh; Lines 3 & 7
  • 11- Meydan-e Shohada; Lines 4 & 6
  • 12- Meydan-e Mohammadiyeh; Lines 1 & 7
  • 13- Imam Hossein; Lines 2 & 6
  • 14- Daneshgah-e Tarbiat Modares; Lines 6 & 7
  • 15- Towhid; Lines 4 & 7
  • 16- Shohada-ye Haftom-e Tir; Lines 1 & 6
  • 17- Meydan-e Vali Asr; Lines 3 & 6
  • 18- Shohada-ye Hefdah-e Shahrivar; Lines 6 & 7 (under construction on line 6, operational on line 7)
  • 19- Daneshgah-e Emam Ali; Lines 2 & 3 (operational on line 2, planned on line 3)
  • 20- Ayatollah Kashani; Lines 4 & 6 (under construction on line 4, operational on line 6)
  • 21- Shahr-e-Rey; Lines 1 & 6 (operational on line 1, under construction on line 6)

Network map

[edit]

Map


Safety

[edit]

All routes have been equipped with automatic train protection (ATP), automatic train stop (ATS), centralized traffic control (CTC), and SCADA. More and more residents use the metro due to the improvement in the peak-hour headways, the opening of more stations and overall improvement with new escalators, elevators, and air-conditioning in the trains.

On 18 July 2007, a twenty square metres area immediately adjacent to the entrance of the Toupkhaneh metro station caved in. There were no casualties, but the station had to undergo numerous repairs. On 15 April 2012, safety walls of Mianrood River broke due to heavy rain in Tehran, and consequently, 300,000 cubic meters of water entered metro tunnel of Line 4. The two nearest stations were still under construction, so Metro operators had enough time to evacuate other stations from passengers. Nobody was killed, but water depth in the Habib-o-llah station, the deepest station on Line 4, was estimated to be near 18 meters. It took nearly two weeks to reopen the flooded stations which were previously in operation.[46]

Complaints

[edit]

The Cultural Heritage Organization of Iran has complained that the vibrations caused by the Metro were having a significant and highly adverse effect on the Masoudieh Palace in the Baharestan neighbourhood of central Tehran.[47] The Cultural Heritage Organisation has also complained about vibrations near other historic sites such as the Golestan Palace and the National Museum of Iran.[citation needed]

Tickets

[edit]

Regular single table tickets[48]

You can only use the subway once with this ticket. This ticket costs 12,000 Rials. If you plan to take a round trip, you need to get two single tickets.

Suburban single table tickets[48]

This is the ticket from the 5th metro line that reaches Sadeghieh station from Karaj station. This ticket costs 12,000 Rials.

International Airport Single Ticket[48]

This ticket is used for the subway line of Imam Khomeini Airport. This ticket costs 90,000 Rials.

Electronic ticket[48]

You can use the subway as many times as you want by charging it. The cost of each of these e-cards is 30,000 Rials or 50,000 Rials and you can charge up to 500,000 Rials after purchase. You can charge your e-card using various booths and wall-mounted electronic charging devices at the bus and subway stations, either by cash or by bank credit card and with non-attendance methods such as my Tehran app

Tehran Metro Snapshot

[edit]
Tehran Metro
Stations Length (km) Annual Ridership (in millions)
159 (September 2024) 292.1 (September 2024) 820 (2018)
Ranking [49]
Iran 1 (2024) 1 (2024) 1 (2024)
Asia 17 (March 2022) 16 (March 2022) ?
World 25 (March 2022) 20 (March 2022) ?
[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "کارنامه ۲۸ ماه متروی تهران". Archived from the original on 31 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  2. ^ "بازگشایی ۵ ایستگاه جدید مترو". Retrieved 2 October 2023.
  3. ^ "روزانه ۲,۵ میلیون سفر توسط متروی تهران انجام می‌شود". Ana News Agency. 4 January 2015. Archived from the original on 12 August 2017. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  4. ^ "کارنامه ۲۸ ماه متروی تهران". Archived from the original on 12 August 2017. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  5. ^ امینی, اکرم. "هر ۳٫۴۰۰ مسافر یک واگن مترو". www.smtnews.ir. Archived from the original on 12 August 2017. Retrieved 15 July 2017.
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  40. ^ "Tehran metro line 6 partially inaugurated". Tehran Times. 7 April 2019. Archived from the original on 19 May 2022. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  41. ^ First parts of Tehran metro Line 7 inaugurated Archived 2017-06-15 at the Wayback Machine www.tehran.ir Official Tehran's website. June 2017
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  44. ^ "احداث تونل مترو اسلامشهر ۳ سال زمان و ۴۵۵میلیارد اعتبار ازم دارد (The construction of Islamshahr metro tunnel takes 3 years and 455 billion credit)". MehrNews (in Persian). 1 November 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
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  46. ^ "Tehran Successful Test in Crisis Management". tehran.ir. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  47. ^ "Masudieh Palace threatened by rumbling of Tehran Metro trains". payvand.com. Archived from the original on 13 November 2006. Retrieved 20 July 2006.
  48. ^ a b c d "راهنمای مترو تهران" [introduction tehran metro]. karnaval (in Persian). Archived from the original on 21 March 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2018.
  49. ^ "اینفوگرافیک | رتبه متروی تهران در آسیا و جهان | نکات مهمی که درباره متروی تهران باید بدانیم". 7 March 2022. Archived from the original on 11 March 2022. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
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