Chengdu–Dujiangyan Intercity Railway

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Chengdu-Dujiangyan
Intercity Railway
ChinaRailwayHighspeed.svg
File:Pi County West Station.jpg
A CRH1A high speed train at the Pi County West Station
Overview
Native name 成灌铁路
Status Operational
Locale Chengdu
Dujiangyan
Termini Chengdu
Qingchengshan
Guanxian Ancient Town
Pengzhou
Stations 21
Services 1
Operation
Opened 12 May 2010
Operator(s) China Railway High-speed
Technical
Line length 94.2 km (59 mi)
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Chengdu–Dujiangyan High-Speed Railway
Line length: 94.2 km (58.5 mi)
Track gauge: 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Maximum speed: 220 km/h (136.7 mph)
Stations and structures
Chengdu–Chongqing Railway
Dazhou–Chengdu Railway
Chengdu–Kunming Railway
Chengdu
Baoji–Chengdu Railway
Anjing
Chengdu West Ring Railway
Xipu East
Line 2, Chengdu Metro
Xipu
Line 2, Chengdu Metro
Hongguangzhen
Pi County East
Pengzhou (building)
Buxingjie (building)
Pi County
Pengzhou South (building)
Gucheng (building)
Pi County West
Sandaoyan (building)
Xinmin (building)
Pengzhou Branch Line
Ande
Chongyi (planned)
Juyuan
Lidui Branch Line
Dujiangyan
Yingbin Road (building)
Zhongxing (planned)
Libing Square (building)
Qingchengshan
Guanxian Ancient Town (building)

The Chengdu–Dujiangyan Intercity Railway is a dual-track, electrified, passenger-dedicated, high-speed rail line in Sichuan Province, China. It connects the provincial capital, Chengdu with the satellite city of Dujiangyan in Guan County. The line is 65 kilometres (40 mi) in length with 15 stations. China Railways CRH1 train sets on the line reach a maximum speed of 220 kilometres per hour (140 mph) and make the full-trip in 30 minutes. The line was built in 18 months and entered into operation on May 12, 2010. The railway is built to withstand an 8.0-magnitude earthquake. The Chengdu–Dujiangyan Intercity Railway have two branch lines : Pengzhou Branch line is 21.2 kilometres (13.2 mi) in length with 6 stations,[1] and Lidui Branch line is 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) in length with 3 stations,[2] they are being built.

Route

The railway runs from the Chengdu Railway Station to Dujiangyan’s Qingchengshan Station and passes through Pi County. Bridges and tunnels account for 67.8% of the line's total length. The longest viaduct is some 21 kilometres (13 mi). The line is built to withstand future earthquakes. Sound insulation panels were installed alongside the railway to reduce train noise near the tracks.[3] Clear panels allow passengers to enjoy rural scenery along this route.[3] The line shortened rail travel time from Chengdu to Dujiangyan by half, and will bring more tourist traffic to Dujiangyan’s World Heritage Sites, the city's ancient irrigation system and Mount Qingcheng, a sacred Daoist mountain.

Trains

Cross-platform interchanges between different train categories between different train categories in Xipu Railway Station, Chengdu. The double track of the urban railway (Line 2 of Chengdu Metro) is in the middle, while the double track of National rail transport system (Chengdu–Dujiangyan Intercity Railway) is on both sides, respectively. It is the first implementation of It is the first implementation of Cross-platform interchanges between different train categories in China.[4]

The route uses CRH1 trains in eight-car train sets, which can carry 661 passengers.[5] Each day, 14 pairs of trains are scheduled daily between Chengdu and Qingchengshan Station, and 1 pair of trains are scheduled daily between Chengdu and Dujiangyan Station.

Stations

Prices

Prices(¥) Chengdu Xipu Hongguangzhen Pi County West Dujiangyan Qingchengshan
Chengdu - 5 5 10 15 15
Xipu 5 - 5 5 10 10
Hongguangzhen 5 5 - 5 10 10
Pi County West 10 5 5 - 10 10
Dujiangyan 15 10 10 10 - 5
Qingchengshan 15 10 10 10 5 -

History

On May 28, 2008, 16 days after the Wenchuan earthquake devastated Dujiangyan and the western suburbs of Chengdu, the Chengdu city government and the Ministry of Railways agreed to build a high-speed railway line as part of the reconstruction of the disaster zone.[6] Construction began on November 4, 2008 and involved 20,000 workers at the cost of ¥13 billion.[3] The line entered trial operation on April 1, 2010 and full commercial operation began on May 12, 2010, the second anniversary of the large earthquake that killed some 70,000 people in the region.[3]

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons

References