Brooklin Paulista (São Paulo Metro)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brooklin Paulista
LocationAv. Jornalista Roberto Marinho × R. Vicente Leporace
Campo Belo
Brazil
Coordinates23°37′46″S 46°40′25″W / 23.629444°S 46.673611°W / -23.629444; -46.673611Coordinates: 23°37′46″S 46°40′25″W / 23.629444°S 46.673611°W / -23.629444; -46.673611
Owned byBandeira do estado de São Paulo.svg Government of the State of São Paulo
Operated byViaMobilidade logo.png ViaMobilidade (2023-2043)
PlatformsIsland platforms
Construction
Structure typeElevated
Disabled accessYes
Other information
Station codeBPA
History
Opening30 April 2023 (estimated)[1]
Services
Preceding station   São Paulo Metro   Following station
toward Morumbi
Line 17
Terminus
Track layout
Legend

Brooklin Paulista will be a monorail station of Line 17-Gold of ViaMobilidade, which is currently under construction, and will connect Line 9-Emerald to Congonhas Airport.

Brooklin Paulista station will be placed in the crossing of Avenida Jornalista Roberto Marinho with Rua Vicente Leporace.

Initially, in the São Paulo Metro expansion plans, Line 17-Gold should be open until 2014, connecting with São Paulo–Morumbi station of Line 4-Yellow, at the time that Morumbi Stadium was considered one of the hosts for 2014 FIFA World Cup.

After that, the promise of opening of the line was delayed to 2016, end of 2017, 2018, December 2020, mid of 2021, and, currently, to 2nd semester of 2022.[2]

Station layout[]

P
Platform level
Westbound L17 C.png toward Morumbi
Island platform, doors open on the left
Eastbound L17 C.png toward Congonhas/Jardim Aeroporto
M Mezzanine Fare control, ticket office, customer service, Bilhete Único/BOM recharge machines
G Street level Exit/entrance

References[]

  1. ^ Meier, Ricardo (28 March 2021). "Relatório anual do Metrô prevê início da operação da Linha 17-Ouro em abril de 2023". Metrô CPTM (in Portuguese). Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  2. ^ "SP assina convênio para construção da Linha 17-Ouro do Metrô" (in Portuguese). Governo do Estado de São Paulo. June 30, 2010. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
Retrieved from ""