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Railway Museum (Madrid)

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Director
  
Carlos Abellán Ruiz

Province
  
Community of Madrid

Phone
  
+34 902 22 88 22

Railway Museum (Madrid)

Established
  
1967 in original location; 1984 in current location

Location
  
Paseo de las Delicias, 61, Madrid

Address
  
Paseo de las Delicias, 61, 28045 Madrid, Spain

Hours
  
Closed now Thursday9:30AM–3PMFriday10AM–6PMSaturday10AM–8PMSunday10AM–8PMMonday9:30AM–3PMTuesday9:30AM–3PMWednesday9:30AM–3PMSuggest an edit

Public transit access
  
Cercanías Madrid, Delicias (railway) station, Madrid Metro

Similar
  
Museo Del Ferrocarril, Strawberry Train, Gijón Railway Museum, Museum of the Americas, Museo del Aire

Profiles

The Museo del Ferrocarril (Railway Museum) in Madrid, Spain, is one of the largest historic railroad collections in Europe. It is housed in a redundant railway station called Madrid-Delicias in the barrio of Delicias. The location is near the centre of Madrid.

Contents

The railway museum opened in the Palacio de Fernán Núñez, which is now the seat of the Fundación de los Ferrocarriles Españoles. After an agreement between RENFE and the Ministry of Culture regarding the future of Las Delicias station, the collections were transferred to Las Delicias which opened as a railway museum in 1984.

The building

The building is not to be confused with the station opened in 1996 by Cercanías Madrid called Delicias.

The station was opened in March 1880 by King Alfonso XII and Queen Maria Cristina. It was commissioned by a short-lived railway company, the Compañía de los Caminos de Hierro de Ciudad Real a Badajoz, which had recently opened a line from Ciudad Real to the capital. One reason for the choice of Delicias as the site of the terminus was the proximity of an existing line, the Ferrocarril de contorno de Madrid, which served industrial areas of Madrid.

In the year the station was opened, the railway company was absorbed by a larger rival, MZA. MZA had the use of Atocha station, and did not need Delicias station, and transferred it to a third company, the Compañía de los Ferrocarriles de Madrid a Cáceres y Portugal. An international service to Portugal was developed, but the station never achieved a high volume of passengers, and it closed to passenger traffic in 1969.

Architecture

As a terminus, the station had separate facilities for arriving and departing passengers. However, the most impressive feature is the iron-framed train shed covered by a single-span roof.

The building was designed by a French engineer, Émile Cachelièvre. It has been suggested that he was influenced by Henri de Dion´s Galerie des Machines, one of the metallic buildings erected for the Exposition Universelle (1878) in Paris. The Franco-Belgian Fives group provided metal for both projects.

Collections

The train shed of the former station now houses historic rolling stock.

Steam

Steam was used on the Spanish railways in the périod 1848-1975, although the earliest locomotive in the museum dates from the 1860s.

Diesel

Locomotives in the collection include:

  • Yorkshire Engine Company: "Taurus"
  • Train service

    The museum runs a heritage train service to Aranjuez. Known as the "strawberry train", it uses vintage rolling stock.

    Media Interest

    The station was used as a location in the film Dr Zhivago.

    References

    Railway Museum (Madrid) Wikipedia


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