This station is located on the central median of Manuel Ávila Camacho avenue in front of the park of the same name, near the municipal limit with Zapopan and the Plaza Patria shopping centre, from which it takes its name.
On 25 July 2015, due to the works on Viaduct 1 of Line 3, the Puerta de Ingreso a Zapopan pedestrian bridge was dismantled piece by piece, the work of sculptor Fernando González Gortázar. The bridge was previously located at the intersection of Ávila Camacho and Patria avenues.[2]
After its dismantling, in October of the same year, the municipal president of Zapopan, Pablo Lemus, stated that the government was unaware of the location of its pieces.[3][4] Yet still, El Informador announced that this, along with other monuments retired by line 3 works, were located stored in a property in the El Vigía neighborhood, in Zapopan. Likewise, the former director of Citizen Participation, Emilio Laso, stated that the directorates of Heritage, Citizen Participation and the Private Secretariat were aware of the whereabouts of the bridge.[5]
It was planned to erect the monument on Prolongación Américas in front of a shopping center with which the matter would be consulted.[5] However, the bridge has not been reinstalled.[6]
The station logo is three pine trees, representing the pine trees that were before Plaza Patria, in addition to the current proximity of the Plaza Patria shopping centre to the Los Colomos forest.
Points of interest
Plaza Patria shopping centre
Pan-American volleyball complex
Ávila Camacho park
Science Institute (Instituto de Ciencias) [Jesuit College of Guadalajara]
Gallery
The station during its construction in April 2017.
The station during its construction in December 2017.
^"En el olvido, obras emblemáticas" [In oblivion, emblematic works]. El Informador :: Noticias de Jalisco, México, Deportes & Entretenimiento (in Mexican Spanish). 2015-08-08. Archived from the original on 2023-10-24. Retrieved 2023-10-23.
^"Desconocen el paradero de La Puerta de Zapopan" [The whereabouts of La Puerta de Zapopan are unknown]. El Informador :: Noticias de Jalisco, México, Deportes & Entretenimiento (in Mexican Spanish). 2015-10-18. Archived from the original on 2023-10-24. Retrieved 2023-10-23.
^Ramírez, Pablo Miranda (2020-09-10). "La Puerta a Zapopan, el puente que ya no está" [The Puerta a Zapopan, the bridge that is no longer]. Ciudad Olinka (in Mexican Spanish). Archived from the original on 2023-10-23. Retrieved 2023-10-23.