Mexico’s El Insurgente interurban railway has entered full operation following the opening of the 8.4 km Santa Fe–Observatorio section, completing the passenger rail link between Toluca and Mexico City, according to the Agency for Integrated Rail and Public Transport (ATTRAPI).
The opening brings the total length of the line to 57.7 km between Zinacantepec and Observatorio, with seven stations along the corridor. El Insurgente is Mexico’s first modern electrified interurban passenger railway connecting two metropolitan areas.
Passenger services are operated with 20 electric multiple units supplied by Spanish manufacturer CAF. The EMUs are 100 m long, configured for high-capacity suburban operation, and provide a nominal capacity of 719 passengers per trainset. Sixteen units are currently deployed in daily service, with two held as operational reserve and two allocated for maintenance.
Infrastructure on the Santa Fe–Observatorio section includes a 515 m cable-stayed bridge, double-cantilever viaduct structures, and two stations. Vasco de Quiroga station has a built area of 8,000 m² and a 208 m platform, while Observatorio terminal station is 242 m long with three platforms and a direct pedestrian connection to Metro Line 1.
The railway is operated under a centralised rail traffic control system supporting reduced headways and real-time monitoring. Maximum commercial speed is 120 km/h, with an average operating speed of around 80 km/h. The alignment and civil works are designed for future operation at speeds of up to 160 km/h.
El Insurgente provides interchanges with Metro Lines 1 and 12, Cablebús Line 3, the RTP bus network, the Observatorio CETRAM intermodal hub, and the Western Bus Terminal, integrating the new corridor into Mexico City’s wider public transport network.