IBOV 175,963.54 ▼ 0.38% IPSA 10,960.27 ▼ 0.58% IPC MEX 66,529.27 ▲ 0.85% MERVAL 3,288,122 ▲ 1.82% COLCAP 2,293.65 ▼ 0.22% BVL PERÚ 57,174.37 — — USD/BRL5.08▲ 0.09% USD/MXN17.38▼ 0.28% USD/CLP924.20▼ 0.26% USD/COP3,216▼ 0.62% USD/PEN3.38▼ 0.32% USD/ARS1,476▲ 0.34% USD/UYU40.15▲ 1.04% USD/PYG6,039▲ 1.28% USD/BOB10.65▲ 5.99% USD/DOP 58.30 — 0.00% USD/CRC447.49▲ 0.88% USD/GTQ7.62▲ 2.09% USD/HNL26.73▼ 0.01% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.31% USD/VES723.93▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD157.69▲ 0.12% USD/TTD6.76▲ 1.32% EUR/BRL5.82▼ 0.53% BRENT 85.12 ▲ 0.46% WTI 79.76 ▲ 0.53% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.39 ▲ 0.90% GOLD 4,067 ▲ 0.16% SILVER 58.31 ▼ 0.79% SOY 1,202 ▼ 0.46% CORN 469.25 ▲ 8.18% WHEAT 677.75 ▲ 7.37% COFFEE 324.50 ▼ 3.77% SUGAR 14.86 ▼ 0.13% ORANGE JUICE 140.45 ▲ 0.14% COTTON 82.13 ▲ 3.18% COCOA 5,917 ▲ 4.54% BEEF 230.33 ▼ 0.48% CATTLE 344.95 ▼ 1.10% LITHIUM 70.99 ▼ 0.82% PETR4 40.64 ▼ 0.05% VALE3 74.77 ▲ 1.03% ITUB4 43.19 ▼ 1.01% BBDC4 18.64 ▲ 0.05% ABEV3 15.57 ▼ 1.52% BBAS3 20.61 ▲ 0.10% B3SA3 15.79 ▲ 3.00% WEGE3 44.33 ▲ 0.29% PRIO3 57.89 ▲ 0.56% SUZB3 41.58 ▲ 1.14% RENT3 40.43 ▼ 0.27% AZZA3 18.58 ▼ 1.43% CSAN3 3.94 ▲ 1.29% RAIZ4 0.30 ▼ 3.23% PCAR3 2.61 ▲ 6.53% GMAT3 3.96 — 0.00% PSSA3 55.21 ▲ 1.69% CVCB3 1.35 ▼ 2.17% POSI3 3.90 ▼ 2.26% SLCE3 13.46 ▼ 2.53% NATU3 8.70 ▲ 1.75% BRKM5 6.43 ▼ 5.86% RANI3 8.02 ▲ 0.12% CSNA3 5.25 ▲ 0.96% CMIN3 5.21 ▲ 2.16% USIM5 8.22 ▼ 0.12% GGBR4 24.38 ▲ 4.55% ENEV3 26.91 ▼ 0.96% CPFE3 46.98 ▼ 0.47% CMIG4 11.15 ▼ 0.45% EQTL3 40.41 ▼ 1.32% LREN3 14.02 ▼ 1.89% VIVT3 35.48 ▼ 0.11% RAIL3 14.04 ▼ 0.64% KLABIN 17.44 ▲ 0.69% RAIA DROGASIL 18.74 ▲ 0.75% RDOR3 35.91 ▼ 0.39% HAPV3 10.99 ▼ 1.79% FLRY3 16.45 ▲ 0.24% SMTO3 15.52 ▼ 3.72% UGPA3 31.01 ▲ 2.99% VBBR3 33.53 ▲ 0.69% BBSE3 40.67 ▲ 0.69% BPAC11 57.51 ▼ 0.76% CURY3 32.80 ▼ 2.35% AERI3 2.03 ▼ 1.93% VIVARA 23.35 ▼ 0.34% COMPASS 24.96 ▼ 0.95% VAMOS 3.12 ▼ 0.95% SANB11 27.13 ▼ 0.77% ASAI3 8.71 ▲ 0.58% SBSP3 29.98 ▼ 1.19% WALMEX 49.87 ▲ 1.22% GMEXICO 200.72 ▲ 0.58% FEMSA 223.85 ▼ 2.38% CEMEX 22.63 ▲ 1.94% GFNORTE 183.77 ▼ 1.30% BIMBO 57.70 ▲ 2.38% TELEVISA 9.59 ▲ 0.63% AMX 22.83 ▼ 0.09% GAP 397.56 ▲ 0.58% ASUR 282.69 ▲ 2.57% OMA 236.33 ▲ 0.56% KOF 178.84 ▼ 0.58% GRUMA 282.13 ▲ 0.98% KIMBER 38.76 ▲ 0.83% SQM-B 65,950 ▼ 2.87% COPEC 6,246 ▲ 0.58% BSANTANDER 77.92 ▼ 0.92% FALABELLA 5,883 ▲ 0.14% ENELAM 85.13 ▼ 0.72% CENCOSUD 2,009 ▼ 1.50% CMPC 1,081 ▼ 1.99% BANCO CHILE 187.83 ▼ 0.88% LATAM AIR 25.50 ▲ 2.41% YPF 78,200 ▲ 0.55% GGAL 8,185 ▲ 3.48% PAMPA 5,250 ▲ 0.38% TXAR 671.00 ▲ 1.36% ALUAR 962.00 ▲ 1.37% TGS 9,800 ▲ 0.93% CEPU 2,351 ▲ 1.03% MIRGOR 16,850 ▲ 0.60% COME 45.60 ▼ 0.33% LOMA NEGRA 3,640 ▲ 3.04% BYMA 303.75 ▲ 0.91% TELECOM ARG 4,355 ▲ 0.52% ECOPETROL 16.09 ▼ 0.46% BANCOLOMBIA 81.49 ▼ 0.74% GRUPO AVAL 5.06 ▲ 2.22% CREDICORP 397.34 ▲ 1.30% SOUTHERN COPPER 180.74 ▼ 0.90% BUENAVENTURA 31.11 ▲ 0.26% MERCADOLIBRE 1,839 ▼ 1.85% NUBANK 13.92 ▼ 0.54% XP 17.02 ▲ 0.89% PAGSEGURO 9.16 ▼ 1.35% STONE 11.20 ▼ 0.93% GLOBANT 31.66 ▲ 2.38% TECNOGLASS 45.79 ▲ 3.53% GAP AIRPORT 229.36 ▲ 1.51% ASUR 282.69 ▲ 2.57% OMA AIRPORT 108.63 ▲ 0.92% AMX ADR 26.23 ▲ 0.17% FEMSA ADR 128.78 ▼ 3.30% CEMEX ADR 13.04 ▲ 1.84% PETROBRAS ADR 17.82 ▼ 0.59% VALE ADR 14.69 ▲ 0.65% ITAU ADR 8.50 ▼ 0.58% SANTANDER BR 5.38 ▼ 0.28% AMBEV ADR 3.04 ▼ 1.62% CSN 1.03 — 0.00% GERDAU 4.83 ▲ 4.66% LATAM ADR 54.78 ▲ 2.36% BTC 64,786 ▼ 0.26% ETH 1,921 ▲ 1.65% SOL 77.32 ▼ 0.57% XRP 1.11 ▲ 0.02% BNB 578.67 ▼ 0.53% ADA 0.16 ▼ 0.86% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 0.87% AVAX 6.69 ▼ 0.11% LINK 8.48 ▲ 1.69% DOT 0.84 ▼ 0.91% LTC 44.93 ▼ 1.11% BCH 227.91 ▼ 3.63% TRX 0.32 ▼ 0.31% XLM 0.19 ▲ 0.63% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 0.20% NEAR 2.04 ▲ 1.44% ATOM 1.55 ▼ 0.51% AAVE 96.74 ▼ 2.17% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 81.80 ▼ 0.84% EMBRAER ADR 64.48 ▼ 0.66% JBS 12.14 ▲ 2.58% JBS BDR 61.50 ▲ 2.93% MBRF3 15.27 ▼ 5.10% MBRFY 3.00 ▼ 4.46% INTER 5.65 ▼ 0.96% IBOV 175,963.54 ▼ 0.38% IPSA 10,960.27 ▼ 0.58% IPC MEX 66,529.27 ▲ 0.85% MERVAL 3,288,122 ▲ 1.82% COLCAP 2,293.65 ▼ 0.22% BVL PERÚ 57,174.37 — — USD/BRL 5.08 ▲ 0.10% USD/MXN 17.38 ▼ 0.28% USD/CLP 924.20 ▼ 0.26% USD/COP 3,216 ▼ 0.62% USD/PEN 3.38 ▼ 0.32% USD/ARS 1,476 ▲ 0.34% USD/UYU 40.15 ▲ 1.04% USD/PYG 6,039 ▲ 1.28% USD/BOB 10.65 ▲ 5.99% USD/DOP 58.30 — 0.00% USD/CRC 447.49 ▲ 0.88% USD/GTQ 7.62 ▲ 2.09% USD/HNL 26.73 ▼ 0.01% USD/NIO 36.62 ▲ 0.31% USD/VES 723.93 ▼ 0.13% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 157.69 ▲ 0.12% USD/TTD 6.76 ▲ 1.32% EUR/BRL 5.82 ▼ 0.53% BRENT 85.12 ▲ 0.46% WTI 79.76 ▲ 0.53% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.39 ▲ 0.90% GOLD 4,067 ▲ 0.16% SILVER 58.31 ▼ 0.79% SOY 1,202 ▼ 0.46% CORN 469.25 ▲ 8.18% WHEAT 677.75 ▲ 7.37% COFFEE 324.50 ▼ 3.77% SUGAR 14.86 ▼ 0.13% ORANGE JUICE 140.45 ▲ 0.14% COTTON 82.13 ▲ 3.18% COCOA 5,917 ▲ 4.54% BEEF 230.33 ▼ 0.48% CATTLE 344.95 ▼ 1.10% LITHIUM 70.99 ▼ 0.82% PETR4 40.64 ▼ 0.05% VALE3 74.77 ▲ 1.03% ITUB4 43.19 ▼ 1.01% BBDC4 18.64 ▲ 0.05% ABEV3 15.57 ▼ 1.52% BBAS3 20.61 ▲ 0.10% B3SA3 15.79 ▲ 3.00% WEGE3 44.33 ▲ 0.29% PRIO3 57.89 ▲ 0.56% SUZB3 41.58 ▲ 1.14% RENT3 40.43 ▼ 0.27% AZZA3 18.58 ▼ 1.43% CSAN3 3.94 ▲ 1.29% RAIZ4 0.30 ▼ 3.23% PCAR3 2.61 ▲ 6.53% GMAT3 3.96 — 0.00% PSSA3 55.21 ▲ 1.69% CVCB3 1.35 ▼ 2.17% POSI3 3.90 ▼ 2.26% SLCE3 13.46 ▼ 2.53% NATU3 8.70 ▲ 1.75% BRKM5 6.43 ▼ 5.86% RANI3 8.02 ▲ 0.12% CSNA3 5.25 ▲ 0.96% CMIN3 5.21 ▲ 2.16% USIM5 8.22 ▼ 0.12% GGBR4 24.38 ▲ 4.55% ENEV3 26.91 ▼ 0.96% CPFE3 46.98 ▼ 0.47% CMIG4 11.15 ▼ 0.45% EQTL3 40.41 ▼ 1.32% LREN3 14.02 ▼ 1.89% VIVT3 35.48 ▼ 0.11% RAIL3 14.04 ▼ 0.64% KLABIN 17.44 ▲ 0.69% RAIA DROGASIL 18.74 ▲ 0.75% RDOR3 35.91 ▼ 0.39% HAPV3 10.99 ▼ 1.79% FLRY3 16.45 ▲ 0.24% SMTO3 15.52 ▼ 3.72% UGPA3 31.01 ▲ 2.99% VBBR3 33.53 ▲ 0.69% BBSE3 40.67 ▲ 0.69% BPAC11 57.51 ▼ 0.76% CURY3 32.80 ▼ 2.35% AERI3 2.03 ▼ 1.93% VIVARA 23.35 ▼ 0.34% COMPASS 24.96 ▼ 0.95% VAMOS 3.12 ▼ 0.95% SANB11 27.13 ▼ 0.77% ASAI3 8.71 ▲ 0.58% SBSP3 29.98 ▼ 1.19% WALMEX 49.87 ▲ 1.22% GMEXICO 200.72 ▲ 0.58% FEMSA 223.85 ▼ 2.38% CEMEX 22.63 ▲ 1.94% GFNORTE 183.77 ▼ 1.30% BIMBO 57.70 ▲ 2.38% TELEVISA 9.59 ▲ 0.63% AMX 22.83 ▼ 0.09% GAP 397.56 ▲ 0.58% ASUR 282.69 ▲ 2.57% OMA 236.33 ▲ 0.56% KOF 178.84 ▼ 0.58% GRUMA 282.13 ▲ 0.98% KIMBER 38.76 ▲ 0.83% SQM-B 65,950 ▼ 2.87% COPEC 6,246 ▲ 0.58% BSANTANDER 77.92 ▼ 0.92% FALABELLA 5,883 ▲ 0.14% ENELAM 85.13 ▼ 0.72% CENCOSUD 2,009 ▼ 1.50% CMPC 1,081 ▼ 1.99% BANCO CHILE 187.83 ▼ 0.88% LATAM AIR 25.50 ▲ 2.41% YPF 78,200 ▲ 0.55% GGAL 8,185 ▲ 3.48% PAMPA 5,250 ▲ 0.38% TXAR 671.00 ▲ 1.36% ALUAR 962.00 ▲ 1.37% TGS 9,800 ▲ 0.93% CEPU 2,351 ▲ 1.03% MIRGOR 16,850 ▲ 0.60% COME 45.60 ▼ 0.33% LOMA NEGRA 3,640 ▲ 3.04% BYMA 303.75 ▲ 0.91% TELECOM ARG 4,355 ▲ 0.52% ECOPETROL 16.09 ▼ 0.46% BANCOLOMBIA 81.49 ▼ 0.74% GRUPO AVAL 5.06 ▲ 2.22% CREDICORP 397.34 ▲ 1.30% SOUTHERN COPPER 180.74 ▼ 0.90% BUENAVENTURA 31.11 ▲ 0.26% MERCADOLIBRE 1,839 ▼ 1.85% NUBANK 13.92 ▼ 0.54% XP 17.02 ▲ 0.89% PAGSEGURO 9.16 ▼ 1.35% STONE 11.20 ▼ 0.93% GLOBANT 31.66 ▲ 2.38% TECNOGLASS 45.79 ▲ 3.53% GAP AIRPORT 229.36 ▲ 1.51% ASUR 282.69 ▲ 2.57% OMA AIRPORT 108.63 ▲ 0.92% AMX ADR 26.23 ▲ 0.17% FEMSA ADR 128.78 ▼ 3.30% CEMEX ADR 13.04 ▲ 1.84% PETROBRAS ADR 17.82 ▼ 0.59% VALE ADR 14.69 ▲ 0.65% ITAU ADR 8.50 ▼ 0.58% SANTANDER BR 5.38 ▼ 0.28% AMBEV ADR 3.04 ▼ 1.62% CSN 1.03 — 0.00% GERDAU 4.83 ▲ 4.66% LATAM ADR 54.78 ▲ 2.36% BTC 64,786 ▼ 0.26% ETH 1,921 ▲ 1.65% SOL 77.32 ▼ 0.57% XRP 1.11 ▲ 0.02% BNB 578.67 ▼ 0.53% ADA 0.16 ▼ 0.86% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 0.87% AVAX 6.69 ▼ 0.11% LINK 8.48 ▲ 1.69% DOT 0.84 ▼ 0.91% LTC 44.93 ▼ 1.11% BCH 227.91 ▼ 3.63% TRX 0.32 ▼ 0.31% XLM 0.19 ▲ 0.63% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 0.20% NEAR 2.04 ▲ 1.44% ATOM 1.55 ▼ 0.51% AAVE 96.74 ▼ 2.17% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 81.80 ▼ 0.84% EMBRAER ADR 64.48 ▼ 0.66% JBS 12.14 ▲ 2.58% JBS BDR 61.50 ▲ 2.93% MBRF3 15.27 ▼ 5.10% MBRFY 3.00 ▼ 4.46% INTER 5.65 ▼ 0.96%
since 2009
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Rio de Janeiro In-Depth - Brazil

Rio’s Rapid Transit System is in Rapid Decline. What Happens Now?

By · June 12, 2019 · 4 min read

Daily Brief

The morning intel from across Latin America. Free.

By subscribing you agree to our privacy policy. We never share your email.

Column By Scott Salmon

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – An improvement in Rio’s transportation infrastructure was perhaps the most positive legacy of the Rio 2016 Olympics. Yet, already, one of its most vital components is falling apart.

One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →
Cesarão Station 3 in Campo Grande
Cesarão Station 3 in Campo Grande.
RT
Ask Rio Times
This story and the bigger picture.
Open the full Ask Rio Times →

The transportation legacy of Rio’s Olympics can be understood as a set of ambitious goals: steadily diminished, surreptitiously corrupted, only partially realized, and in some cases simply abandoned. Nevertheless, important components were completed, and they have transformed the city’s public transit system.

The jewel of the city’s revamped transportation infrastructure is undoubtedly MetrôRio where a single line of five stations was expanded to forty-one stations on three rail lines operating both above and below ground.

Given that this network was mostly retro-fitted to a densely populated urban area with uniquely challenging geology, it’s realization represents a significant accomplishment.

Nevertheless, it’s not difficult to find fault with MetrôRio. It was poorly planned, there were critical engineering lapses, and the process was wastefully piecemeal. Construction deadlines and budgets were routinely and massively overshot, accusations of profiteering plagued the project, and it remains incomplete.

Despite all this, MetrôRio is, arguably, the most significant material legacy of the 2016 Olympics. For millions of Cariocas lucky enough to be able to use it, the experience of navigating Rio de Janeiro has been transformed.

From an urban geographer’s perspective, this relative exclusivity encapsulates the fundamental flaw of MetrôRio as a public transport system. It’s rail lines serve to reinforce the city’s traditional – already entrenched, affluent, and well served – coastal axis, centered as it is on the South Zone and Centro.

As a result, it largely neglects the cities populous and fast-growing interior, precisely those areas in greatest need of more transport alternatives. In this sense, the design of MetrôRio was not an exercise in planning for the future but of entrenching the unequal legacy of the past.

For this reason, the surface-based rapid transit (BRT) component of Rio’s revamped transport system – reaching as it does into relatively underserved parts of the city’s sprawling northern and western zones – assumed particular importance.

Utilizing dedicated lanes on existing roads, the BRT offered the potential of relatively efficient cross-city transport with a light footprint devoid of major engineering obstacles or massive construction costs.

Another Transoeste Station
A Transoeste Station.

Unfortunately, the routes chosen for the BRT don’t serve the city’s corridors of greatest need – which flow from the North and West Zones to downtown, the South Zone, and the commercial areas of the North Zone. A planned fourth line, the TransBrasil, has not yet been completed.

Already, the extant BRT network is in crisis. Transferred to City control in January, the system currently operates with two-thirds of its planned fleet and an ever-dwindling number of stations.

The Transoeste line, which connects the greatest physical expanse of Rio de Janeiro to its economic hubs, is a discouraging case in point.

The stretch between Campo Grande and Santa-Cruz – which the Transoeste connects to the Barra de Tijuca area – was inaugurated in 2014. It was intended to serve as many as 30,000 people per day with the promise that passengers would not have to wait more than 5 minutes for service.

Already 22 of the line’s stations have been closed: primarily due to persistent violent crime and repeated vandalism designed to defeat ticketing mechanisms.

The abandoned stations, each costing approximately R$1 million (US$250,000) to construct, have either been razed or more productively, “repurposed”, as in the case of the Prefeito Alim Pedro Station, which now provides makeshift accommodation for a homeless couple expecting their first child.

BRT Bus traveling Jardim Oceânico-Alvorado.

During a trip on the Transoeste, the sense of deterioration is inescapable. The original articulated BRT vehicles are in poor repair and in some cases visibly falling apart. One I recently traveled on was missing half of its rear exit door.

At those stations still-functioning, there are large gaps between the bus and the platform, making the BRT virtually inaccessible for the aged, infirm or physically impaired.

The lift for disabled passengers was itself disabled when I passed through the Jardim Oceânio station.

Inevitably this service vacuum is being filled, albeit by slower and poorer alternatives: the regular, already overcrowded buses operating outside the exclusive BRT lanes, and once prohibited private van services are making a clandestine return.

The decline of the BRT is mostly invisible to those not dependent on it for access to their livelihoods or social circulation, but the system’s decay only serves to fragment the city further and impede the economic growth and prosperity of the area as a whole.

In fundamental ways, infrastructure is a social justice issue. A properly functioning and equitably planned public transportation system affords access for the city’s poorest-served communities to education, employment, services, and opportunities for self-advancement.

It is also, crucially, an economic imperative for the city as a whole. For Rio to prosper, it must efficiently integrate these neighborhoods – and their immense human capital – into the legitimate urban economy to stimulate its economic growth.

Rio de Janeiro must find the resources and the imagination to deal with the problems facing the BRT. The quality of life for millions of the city’s residents – whether directly or indirectly – depends upon it.

Read More from The Rio Times

The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map

Rotate for Best Experience

This report is optimized for landscape viewing. Rotate your phone for the full experience.