Gare do Oriente

Coordinates: 38°46′4″N 9°5′57″W / 38.76778°N 9.09917°W / 38.76778; -9.09917
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Lisboa-Oriente
Train station
General information
LocationParque das Nações
Lisbon
Portugal
Coordinates38°46′4″N 9°5′57″W / 38.76778°N 9.09917°W / 38.76778; -9.09917
Owned byInfraestruturas de Portugal
ConnectionsOriente
Construction
ArchitectSantiago Calatrava
History
Opened1998 (1998)
Services
Preceding station Comboios de Portugal Following station
Lisbon-Santa Apolónia
Terminus
Alfa Pendular Santarém
towards Braga
Lisbon-Entrecampos
towards Faro
Alfa Pendular
Coimbra-B
Intercidades Terminus
Lisbon-Santa Apolónia
Terminus
Vila Franca de Xira
towards Braga
Vila Franca de Xira
towards Guimarães
Vila Franca de Xira
towards Valença
Vila Franca de Xira
Lisbon-Entrecampos
towards Évora
Terminus
Other services
Preceding station
Lisbon CP
Following station
Braço de Prata
towards Sintra
Sintra Line Terminus
Moscavide
towards Alverca
Braço de Prata Azambuja Line Moscavide
Braço de Prata Azambuja Line
Limited service
Moscavide
towards Azambuja
Location
Lisboa-Oriente is located in Lisbon
Lisboa-Oriente
Lisboa-Oriente
Location within Lisbon

Gare do Oriente (Portuguese pronunciation:

.

History

In 1994, the station was proposed as part of the modernization of the Linha do Norte, a modification to the rail line to facilitate the future development of a new station in eastern Lisbon. Located along Avenida D. João II, over Avenida de Berlim and Rua Conselheiro Mariano de Carvalho,[1] the station was planned to occupy the lands once occupied by Apeadeiro dos Olivais, which was demolished in the 1990s in order to make way for the new station.

Bids for building the project on lands to be used for the 1998 exposition were solicited internationally.[2] The concept was originally designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava in 1995, and built by Necso.[3][4]

The station was inaugurated on 19 May 1998, as part of the celebrations marking the opening of the Expo '98 world's fair.[5] At the time of its opening it was considered the largest intermodal station in Portugal,[6] winning the Brunel Award on 7 October 1998, in the category of large new construction projects.[7]

Architecture

Interior

Oriente Station is situated in an urban area of reclaimed industrial and abandoned buildings fronting the northern margin of the Tagus River, situated 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) from the city centre.[8]

Ambitious in its conception, the modernist station includes a

commuter and regional train hub, a local, national and international bus station, a shopping centre and a police station.[8][9] The rail station was conceived with a multi-modal platform intersecting the cardinal axes for the various transport modes.[8]

With some influence from Gothic architecture, the station bears considerable resemblance to Santiago Calatrava's earlier Allen Lambert Galleria within Toronto's Brookfield Place. Calatrava's objective was to realize a new space with ample room and functionality providing multiple connections between various zones in the metropolitan area of Lisbon.[8]

One important aspect of the station is its link to the urban environment in which it was constructed. The decision to elevate the rail line, for example, eliminated a physical barrier between the city and the Tagus River margin.[9] The station, covered in a lattice structure of glass and metal, is constructed of reinforced concrete and raised 19 metres (62 ft) over the roadway.[9] By January 2011, there were eight lines that extended 510–720 metres (1,670–2,360 ft) across 309 metres (1,014 ft) platforms, between 60–70 centimetres (24–28 in) in height.[10]

In addition to the many galleries that are part of the station, it is connected to the Centro Comercial Vasco da Gama (Vasco da Gama Commercial Centre/Mall) and the Lisbon Metro through a subterranean access, as well as a first floor connection to the train platforms and a pedestrian walkway.[9]

Services

Preceding station   Comboios de Portugal   Following station
Lisboa-Santa Apolónia
Terminus
  Intercidades   Vila Franca de Xira
toward Guarda
  Intercidades   Vila Franca de Xira
toward Covilhã
Entrecampos
toward Évora
  Intercidades   Terminus
Lisboa-Santa Apolónia
Terminus
  InterRegional   Vila Franca de Xira
toward Porto-Campanhã
  InterRegional   Vila Franca de Xira
toward Tomar
Lisboa-Santa Apolónia
Terminus
  Regional   Póvoa
toward Entroncamento
  Regional   Póvoa
toward Tomar
  Regional   Vila Franca de Xira
toward Castelo Branco
Braço de Prata
toward Lisboa-Santa Apolónia
  Regional
R3400
  Moscavide
toward Porto-Campanhã
  Regional
R4401
  Moscavide
toward Entroncamento
Lisboa-Santa Apolónia
Terminus
 
Renfe Operadora[11]
 
Madrid-Chamartín
  Sud Expresso   Entroncamento

toward

Hendaye

References

Notes

  1. ^ Lisboa Oriente, Comboios de Portugal, 2014, retrieved 21 November 2014
  2. ^ Mauricio Levy (1994), p.27-28
  3. ^ Afonso, p. 224
  4. ^ Acciona website Archived February 2, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Alvaro Tarifa (1998), p.68-73
  6. ^ 100 Obras de Arquitectura Civil no Século XX, 2000:114
  7. ^ Yolanda del Val (1998), p.16-17
  8. ^ a b c d Luís Cerqueira & Miguel Gregório (2004), p.19-20
  9. ^ a b c d Diana Ferreira Peralta (2011), p.39-41
  10. ^ Directório da Rede 2012 (in Portuguese), Rede Ferroviária Nacional, 6 January 2011, p. 73
  11. ^ "Sud Expresso e Lusitânia Expresso passam a comboio único a partir de 3 de Outubro". Público (in Portuguese). 2012-09-28. Retrieved 2020-05-26.

Sources

External links