Eduardo Molina metro station

The pictogram for the station represents two hands holding water, as featured on the mural El agua, origen de la vida, painted by Mexican muralist Diego Rivera.

Eduardo Molina is an at-grade metro station situated on the median strip of Avenida Río Consulado, in the limits of Gustavo A. Madero and Venustiano Carranza, Mexico City.

[6] The station is named after Eduardo Molina Arévalo [es],[2] a Mexican engineer who helped address the problem of water scarcity in the Valley of Mexico in the mid-20th century through the Lerma River system.

[7][8] The station's pictogram features two hands holding water, referencing a fragment of the mural El agua, origen de la vida (lit. transl.

Water, Origin of Life),[2] painted by Diego Rivera inside the main building of the Cárcamo de Dolores, a hydraulic sump structure in Chapultepec, Mexico City.

Picture of the station in the middle of Río Consolado Avenue. Several automobiles surround the station.
Eduardo Molina station lies next to the Río Consolado Avenue
The mural features two hands holding water, which flows to other painted scenes. To the right, a man holding a pickaxe and another man giving water to a girl; to the left, a man offering water to an elderly woman and another operating construction equipment. On the floor, several aquatic species, including mollusks and plants, are painted
Eduardo Molina station's pictogram features a fragment of Diego Rivera's mural El agua, origen de la vida ( detail pictured )