The Washington Metro (commonly called Metro , and branded Metrorail ) is a rapid transit system serving Washington, D.C. and neighboring communities in Maryland and Virginia , both inside and outside the Capital Beltway .
With an average weekday ridership of 764,300, the Washington Metro is the second-busiest rapid transit system in the United States behind the New York City Subway .[ 1] As of 2023[update] , the system has 98 active stations on six lines with 129 miles (208 km) of tracks.
The Washington Metro system was conceived as an alternative to constructing a large freeway system throughout the Washington, D.C. area. It was partially financed with funds originally dedicated to highway construction.[ 2] Construction began in 1969, and in 1976 the first section of the Metro system opened along the Red Line between the Farragut North and Rhode Island Avenue stations in Washington, D.C. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, more stations were opened in the city and the suburban communities of Arlington County , the City of Alexandria , and Fairfax County in Virginia as well as Montgomery and Prince George's Counties in Maryland. By 1991, five rail lines were open: the Red, Orange , Yellow, Green , and Blue Lines. The system, as originally planned, was completed in 2001 with the extension of the Green Line to Branch Avenue . In 2004, three stations were opened: an extension of the Blue Line to the Morgan Boulevard and Downtown Largo stations and the first infill station , NoMa–Gallaudet U .[ 3] The Silver Line opened in two phases, adding five stations in 2014 and six in 2022.[ 4] [ 5] On the Yellow and Blue Lines, an additional infill station at Potomac Yard opened on May 19, 2023.[ 6]
Nine Metrorail stations are officially designated transfer stations, although other intermediate stations also allow passengers to transfer between lines. Four of these stations have separate, perpendicular upper and lower levels, which open at different times. Two other transfer stations, Rosslyn and Pentagon , have parallel stacked platforms . Ten stations are termini (stations at the end of lines); several other non-terminus stations are used to short turn trains in regular service.[ 7]
The busiest station in the system in 2023 was Metro Center , with more than 3.9 million passenger entries over the course of the year.[ 8] Rosslyn was the busiest station in Virginia, while Silver Spring was the busiest in Maryland. The system's 10 busiest stations are all located in Washington.
There are six Washington Metro lines, each named for a different color.[ 7] All lines except the Red Line share tracks.
Pylon by the entrance to the Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter station Passengers boarding a train at the Bethesda station Crossvault of the L'Enfant Plaza station Union Station, the busiest station in the system The longest continuous escalator in the western hemisphere, at the Wheaton station[ 5] Vaulted ceiling at Farragut West Largo Town Center station, one of the newest stations Arlington Cemetery station on a snowy day Elevated platform at National Airport Wiehle-Reston East station on the first day of Silver Line service in 2014 Station[ 7] Lines[ 7] Rail Connections[ 9] Jurisdiction[ 9] Avg. Weekday Daily Rail Entries (2023)[ 10] Opened[ 5] [ 9] Addison Road — Capitol Heights, Maryland 1285 Nov 22, 1980 Anacostia — Washington, D.C. (southeast) 2507 Dec 28, 1991 Archives — Washington, D.C. (northwest) 3852 Apr 30, 1983 Arlington Cemetery — Arlington County, Virginia 897 Jul 1, 1977 Ashburn † — Ashburn, Virginia 1152 Nov 15, 2022 Ballston–MU — Arlington County, Virginia 5289 Dec 11, 1979 Benning Road — Washington, D.C. (northeast) 1355 Nov 22, 1980 Bethesda — Bethesda, Maryland 4517 Aug 25, 1984 Braddock Road — Alexandria, Virginia 2040 Dec 17, 1983 Branch Avenue † — Suitland, Maryland 2141 Jan 13, 2001 Brookland–CUA — Washington, D.C. (northeast) 3536 Feb 6, 1978 Capitol Heights — Prince George's County, Maryland 1009 Nov 22, 1980 Capitol South — District of Columbia 4778 Jul 1, 1977 Cheverly — Prince George's County, Maryland 461 Nov 20, 1978 Clarendon — Arlington County, Virginia 2524 Dec 11, 1979 Cleveland Park — District of Columbia 2105 Dec 5, 1981 College Park–University of Maryland MARC : Camden Prince George's County, Maryland 1647 Dec 11, 1993 Columbia Heights — District of Columbia 6478 Sep 18, 1999 Congress Heights — District of Columbia 1357 Jan 13, 2001 Court House — Arlington County, Virginia 3348 Dec 11, 1979 Crystal City VRE : Fredericksburg Manassas Arlington County, Virginia 4795 Jul 1, 1977 Deanwood — District of Columbia 721 Nov 20, 1978 Downtown Largo † — Prince George's County, Maryland 1835 Dec 18, 2004 Dulles International Airport — Loudoun County, Virginia 1705 Nov 15, 2022 Dunn Loring — Fairfax County, Virginia 1349 Jun 7, 1986 Dupont Circle — District of Columbia 8986 Jan 17, 1977 East Falls Church * — Arlington County, Virginia 2225 Jun 7, 1986 Eastern Market — District of Columbia 3198 Jul 1, 1977 Eisenhower Avenue — Alexandria, Virginia 1011 Dec 17, 1983 Farragut North — District of Columbia 9820 Mar 29, 1976 Farragut West — District of Columbia 9214 Jul 1, 1977 Federal Center SW — District of Columbia 2231 Jul 1, 1977 Federal Triangle — District of Columbia 3711 Jul 1, 1977 Foggy Bottom–GWU — District of Columbia 12,007 Jul 1, 1977 Forest Glen — Montgomery County, Maryland 1104 Sep 22, 1990 Fort Totten * (lower level) [a] — District of Columbia 6376 Dec 11, 1993 Fort Totten * (upper level) [a] — Feb 6, 1978 Franconia–Springfield *† VRE : Fredericksburg Fairfax County, Virginia 2917 Jun 29, 1997 Friendship Heights — District of Columbia 3501 Aug 25, 1984 Gallery Place * (lower level) [a] — District of Columbia 10,525 Apr 30, 1983 Gallery Place * (upper level) [a] — Dec 15, 1976 Georgia Avenue–Petworth — District of Columbia 3363 Sep 18, 1999 Glenmont † — Montgomery County, Maryland 2904 Jul 25, 1998 Greensboro — Fairfax County, Virginia 852 Jul 26, 2014 Greenbelt *† MARC : Camden Prince George's County, Maryland 2254 Dec 11, 1993 Grosvenor–Strathmore — Montgomery County, Maryland 2128 Aug 25, 1984 Herndon — Fairfax County, Virginia 784 Nov 15, 2022 Huntington † — Fairfax County, Virginia 3006 Dec 17, 1983 Hyattsville Crossing — Prince George's County, Maryland 2020 Dec 11, 1993 Innovation Center — Fairfax County, Virginia 681 Nov 15, 2022 Judiciary Square — District of Columbia 3263 Mar 29, 1976 King Street–Old Town * VRE : Fredericksburg Manassas (at Alexandria Union Station ) Alexandria, Virginia 3429 Dec 17, 1983 L'Enfant Plaza * (lower level) [a] VRE : Fredericksburg Manassas (at L'Enfant ) District of Columbia 8792 Jul 1, 1977 L'Enfant Plaza * (upper level) [a] Apr 30, 1983 Landover — Prince George's County, Maryland 756 Nov 20, 1978 Loudoun Gateway — Loudoun County, Virginia 258 Nov 15, 2022 McLean — Fairfax County, Virginia 1607 Jul 26, 2014 McPherson Square — District of Columbia 6510 Jul 1, 1977 Medical Center — Montgomery County, Maryland 2834 Aug 25, 1984 Metro Center * (upper level) [a] — District of Columbia 12,644 Mar 29, 1976 Metro Center * (lower level) [a] — District of Columbia 12,644 Jul 1, 1977 Minnesota Avenue — District of Columbia 1072 Nov 20, 1978 Morgan Boulevard — Prince George's County, Maryland 818 Dec 18, 2004 Mount Vernon Square *† — District of Columbia 2908 May 11, 1991 Navy Yard–Ballpark — District of Columbia 6595 Dec 28, 1991 Naylor Road — Prince George's County, Maryland 956 Jan 13, 2001 New Carrollton *† Amtrak : Northeast Regional , Palmetto , Vermonter MARC : Penn Prince George's County, Maryland 2756 Nov 20, 1978 NoMa–Gallaudet U — District of Columbia 7576 Nov 20, 2004 North Bethesda — Montgomery County, Maryland 1756 Dec 15, 1984 Pentagon * — Arlington County, Virginia 6813 Jul 1, 1977 Pentagon City — Arlington County, Virginia 6329 Jul 1, 1977 Potomac Avenue — District of Columbia 2047 Jul 1, 1977 Potomac Yard — Alexandria, Virginia 1205 May 19, 2023 Reston Town Center — Fairfax County, Virginia 734 Nov 15, 2022 Rhode Island Avenue — District of Columbia 3422 Mar 29, 1976 Rockville Amtrak : Capitol Limited MARC : Brunswick Montgomery County, Maryland 2098 Dec 15, 1984 Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport — Arlington County, Virginia 4748 Jul 1, 1977 Rosslyn * — Arlington, Virginia 6989 Jul 1, 1977 Shady Grove † — Montgomery County, Maryland 5073 Dec 15, 1984 Shaw–Howard University — District of Columbia 2655 May 11, 1991 Silver Spring MARC : Brunswick Montgomery County, Maryland 5394 Feb 6, 1978 Smithsonian — District of Columbia 4917 Jul 1, 1977 Southern Avenue — Prince George's County, Maryland 1944 Jan 13, 2001 Spring Hill — Fairfax County, Virginia 609 Jul 26, 2014 Stadium–Armory * — District of Columbia 1469 Jul 1, 1977 Suitland — Prince George's County, Maryland 1735 Jan 13, 2001 Takoma — District of Columbia 2884 Feb 6, 1978 Tenleytown–AU — District of Columbia 3385 Aug 25, 1984 Twinbrook — Montgomery County, Maryland 2095 Dec 15, 1984 Tysons — Fairfax County, Virginia 1815 Jul 26, 2014 U Street — District of Columbia 3743 May 11, 1991 Union Station MARC : Brunswick Camden Penn VRE : Fredericksburg Manassas DC Streetcar (at Union Station ) District of Columbia 12,056 Mar 29, 1976 Van Dorn Street — Alexandria, Virginia 1280 Jun 15, 1991 Van Ness–UDC — District of Columbia 2872 Dec 5, 1981 Vienna † — Fairfax County, Virginia 3136 Jun 7, 1986 Virginia Square–GMU — Arlington County, Virginia 1952 Dec 11, 1979 Waterfront — District of Columbia 2940 Dec 28, 1991 West Falls Church — Fairfax County, Virginia 1169 Jun 7, 1986 West Hyattsville — Prince George's County, Maryland 1794 Dec 11, 1993 Wheaton — Montgomery County, Maryland 1877 Sep 22, 1990 Wiehle–Reston East — Fairfax County, Virginia 1567 Jul 26, 2014 Woodley Park — District of Columbia 3331 Dec 5, 1981
a Stations noted in this list twice with upper and lower levels are considered by WMATA as a single station. The levels are noted separately here because they opened on different dates. ^ "Transit Ridership Report: First Quarter 2015" (PDF) . American Public Transportation Association. May 27, 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2015. Retrieved August 26, 2015 . ^ Schrag, Zachary (2006). The Great Society Subway: A History of the Washington Metro . Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-8246-X . ^ "WMATA History" (PDF) . Washington Metropolitan area Transit Authority. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 15, 2012. Retrieved August 26, 2015 . ^ George, Justin (June 9, 2022). "Metro's Silver Line extension moves closer to finish line" . The Washington Post . ^ a b c "Metro Facts" (PDF) . Washington Metropolitan area Transit Authority. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2015 . ^ Laris, Michael (May 19, 2023). "Potomac Yard Metro station, decades in the making, opens in Alexandria" . Washington Post . Retrieved May 19, 2023 . ^ a b c d e f "Stations" . Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. Retrieved December 28, 2017 . ^ "Metrorail Ridership Summary" . Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. Retrieved January 10, 2024 . ^ a b c d "Metro Media Guide" (PDF) . Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2012. Retrieved July 14, 2011 . ^ "Rail Ridership Data Viewer | WMATA" . www.wmata.com . Retrieved January 8, 2024 .
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