In turn, the name honors Ignacio Zaragoza, the Secretary of War and Navy during the Battle of Puebla (internationally known as Cinco de Mayo).
The station facilities are accessible to people with disabilities featuring elevators, tactile pavings, wheelchair ramps, and braille signage plates.
The station was closed from July 2022 to October 2023 due to modernization works on the tunnel and the line's technical equipment.
[2] The station's pictogram features a silhouette of the equestrian statue of Zaragoza located in the zone.
[2] The station offers a disabled-accessible service with elevators, wheelchair ramps, tactile pavings and braille signage plates.
[10] The workshop's location indirectly benefited the line's operations, allowing trains to depart to either station every 90 seconds.
[15] The Instituto de Capacitacion y Desarrollo Zaragoza, located near the station, trains system personnel using full-sized replicas and props of the facilities and equipment.