Plaza de Maipú metro station


Plaza de Maipú is an underground metro station on the Line 5 of the Santiago Metro, in Santiago, Chile. The station is located under the Plaza de Armas of Maipú. It is the deepest station in the Santiago Metro system at deep. The station was opened on 3 February 2011 as the southwestern terminus of the extension of the line from Pudahuel to Plaza de Maipú.
The platform level of the station is built in a mined tunnel with an oval cross section. At their eastern ends, two also tunneled transepts open into a large, deep cut-and-cover box. The ticket hall is on the first level down of this volume. Multi-level escalators, elevators and stairways lead to the surface.

Shooting

Five months after its opening, the Plaza de Maipú station was the scene of one of the only two acts of violence with fatal victims in the history of the Santiago Metro. On July 17, 2011, Israel Huerta Céspedes pulled a gun from his coat and began shooting for no apparent reason to the passengers of a car that was arriving at the terminal station. The passengers activated the emergency brake and the perpetrator managed to walk out of the station and then climb to the Plaza de Armas de Maipú, walking one block and then committing suicide.
Huerta did not have a criminal record. He was born in the rural town of Las Cabras and arrived in 1980 to live in Rinconada de Maipú with his parents and ten brothers. He had no stable job and in 1994 was dismissed from his job as a cleaning assistant in a police investigation station in Chile in La Reina for misconduct. Relatives and close friends described him as a peaceful and kind person, but who had entered a strong depression after the death of his mother, two months before the attack.
The shooting left several wounded, three seriously and two who later died while being treated in hospitals. After the attack, Metro suspended the operations of Line 5 between stations Plaza de Maipú and Las Parcelas for the development of the investigation.