Madrid Chamartín railway station


Madrid Chamartín is the name of the second major railway station in Madrid, Spain. Positioned on the north side of the city, it was built between 1970 and 1975 although subsequent work would be carried on into the early 1980s. At that time it superseded Atocha station, closer to the city centre. After Atocha itself was rebuilt in 1992, Chamartin lost much of its importance even though since 2004, it has undergone changes to accommodate the new high-speed line to León.
It hosts the railway networks connecting Madrid and north-western Spain, the AVE from Madrid to Segovia, Valladolid and León and many Cercanías lines, as well as the international line to Lisbon. There are also connections with Atocha. Under the railway station there is a Metro Station linking with lines 1 and 10 of the Madrid Metro, also for travelling to Madrid city centre.
Placed over the Chamartín Station is the Hotel Chamartín.

Renfe trains platforms and destinations

Chamartin Renfe train station has 21 platforms, numbered West to East.
Most of the trains attach to the following platforms:
1North-South long distance trains
2Commuter trains C-4 > Sol - Parla
3C-3 > Sol- Aranjuez
4C-4 > Alcobendas-San Sebastian de los Reyes / Colmenar Viejo
5C-3 > El Escorial
6-7Long distance trains / Media distancia Renfe
8-9Commuter trains via Recoletos:
C-1 > Atocha - Principe Pio
C-2 > Alcala de Henares / Guadalajara
C-7 > Alcala de Henares
C-7 > Atocha - Principe Pio -...
C-10 > Atocha - Principe Pio - Villalba
10Northbound:
C-7 > Pitis - Principe Pio -...
C-8 > El Escorial / Cercedilla
11C-1 > Airport T4
C-7 > Fuente de la Mora
C-10 > Fuente de la Mora
12-15Long distance / Media distancia Renfe
16-21Long distance and AVE high speed trains

Services

Long-distance trains

Regional trains

Cercanías Madrid

Metro Station

The Chamartín metro station serves Line 1 and Line 10, and is located directly below the railway station, accessible by a short sheltered outdoor passage. It has four levels: two mezzanines, and two track levels, with mezzanines between track levels. The upper mezzanine has a few shops and fare gates to enter the station proper, and is connected to the exit. The lower mezzanine currently serves as a way for riders to change direction on either line. The upper track level supports Line 10, while the lower track level supports Line 1, and each track level has an extra trench for two more tracks. These trenches are planned to carry Line 11 and Line 14 in the future.