| Santiago Metro station | ||||||||||||||||
![]() Santa Ana station on the Line 2. | ||||||||||||||||
| General information | ||||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 33°26′17″S 70°39′36″W / 33.43806°S 70.66000°W | |||||||||||||||
| Line(s) | ||||||||||||||||
| Platforms | 2 side platforms at each line | |||||||||||||||
| Tracks | 2 per line | |||||||||||||||
| Connections | Transantiago buses | |||||||||||||||
| Construction | ||||||||||||||||
| Accessible | Yes | |||||||||||||||
| History | ||||||||||||||||
| Opened | July 25, 1986 ( March 2, 2000 ( | |||||||||||||||
| Services | ||||||||||||||||
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Santa Ana is a transfer station between Line 2 and Line 5 of the Santiago Metro. It was initially a single-line station on Line 2, opened on 25 July 1986 as part of the extension of the line from Los Héroes to Puente Cal y Canto.[2] Subsequently in 1998, the station began to be adapted to become a transfer station, as a part of the extension of Line 5 from Baquedano metro station to Santa Ana station, in which the New Austrian Tunnelling method was used.[1] The Line 5 station was opened on 3 March 2000. The line was extended to Quinta Normal on 31 March 2004.[2]
The older portion of the station occupies part of the central reservation of the Autopista Central, which is sunken. Two street-level mezzanines at the northern and southern extremes of the station are connected with bridges traversing the highway.
The station receives its name from the nearby Santa Ana Church.
References
- 1 2 "Historia" [History]. Metro de Santiago. September 30, 2015.
- 1 2 Schwandl, Robert. "Santiago". urbanrail.

