The present station opened on 24 April 1919. It was designed to echo the historic architecture of the city. The central section is flanked by two side naves, one of which is adjacent to the clock tower, which imitates the style of Toledo church towers.
The station has been declared a Property of Cultural Interest and classified as a monument.
It was restored in the twenty-first century in connection with the inauguration of the Madrid–Toledo high-speed rail line in 2005.[5] The old line along the Tagus valley in the direction of Aranjuez has been dismantled, and Toledo no longer has a conventional line.
Gallery
The tower
View from platforms
Hall
The station at Aranjuez is slightly later in date but presents similarities to Toledo station
^"Foreign and Colonial Epitome". Wolverhampton Chronicle and Staffordshire Advertiser. England. 30 June 1858. Retrieved 5 April 2022 – via British Newspaper Archive.