Chongqing−Lichuan Railway

Chongqing-Lichuan Railway
渝利铁路
Overview
Type High-speed rail
Status Under construction
Locale People's Republic of China
Termini Chongqing North
Lichuan
Stations 9
Operation
Operator(s) China Railway High-speed
Technical
Line length 259.5 km (161 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 50Hz 25,000V
Operating speed 250 km/h (155 mph)
Maximum incline 9%
Chongqing-Lichuan Railway
Simplified Chinese 渝利铁路
Traditional Chinese 渝利鐵路
Chongqing-Lichuan Railway
Line length:259.5 km (161 mi)
Track gauge:1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Maximum speed:250 km/h (155 mph)
Legend
 To Yichang East via Yiwan Railway 
Lichuan
Liangwu
 To Wanzhou via Yiwan Railway 
Shaziguan
Shizu
Fengdu
Hanjiatuo Bridge
Fuling North
 To Wanzhou via Yuwan Railway 
Changshou North
Fusheng
 To Wanzhou via Dazhou 
Chongqing North
 To Chengdu East via Suiyu Railway 
The railway crossing the Yangtze over the Hanjiatuo Bridge.

The Chongqing-Lichuan Railway, or the Yuli Railway (simplified Chinese: 渝利铁路; traditional Chinese: 渝利鐵路; pinyin: Yú-Lì Tiělù) is a railwayin the Chinese province of Hubei and the municipality of Chongqing. The 244-km long railway, connecting Chongqing North Railway Station with the Lichuan Station on the Yiwan Railway, is a section of the Huhanrong Passenger Dedicated Line, which extends to Wuhan, Nanjing, and Shanghai.[1]

Services

Together with the Hankou-Yichang and Yichang-Lichuan sections of the Huhanrong mainline, the Chongqing-Lichuan line forms what presently (2015) is the only high-speed rail connection between the Sichuan Basin and the rest of China. It carries numerous high-speed trains running between the cities of the Sichuan Basin (Chengdu and Chongqing) and various destinations in the central and eastern China.

The trains are traveling on the Yuli line with the speed up to 200 km/h. It was said that when the Yuli Railway and the relevant sections of the Huhanrong mainline are completed, one would be able to travel from Chongqing to Shanghai in just 10 hours.[2] As of mid-2015, no service this fast seem to exist yet (there is no G-series train directly to Shanghai), but several D-series trains do make it from Chongqing to Shanghai in 13–15 hours.[3] There are also G-series trains running from Chongqing to Beijing (2078 km) in 12.5 hours (G309).[3]

Construction history

Construction work started in the late 2008; the plans were for it to be completed within four years.[1] As of August 2012, it was expected that the railway will be completed by the end of 2013.[4]

A 139-meter tall pier of the railway's Caijiagou Bridge (蔡家沟特大桥), located in Fuling District, is said to be the world's tallest railway bridge pier.[4] The railway's Hanjiatuo Bridge over the Yangtze is said to have the longest main span (432 m) among the world's double-track railway cable-stayed bridges.[4]

Two sets of CRH2A high speed train-sets commenced testing of the completed Yuli railway line on December 11, 2013, from Chengdu to Chongqing. It was expected for the line to be opened by the end of December 2013.[5]

The Chongqing-Lichuan line was opened to conventional rail traffic at the end of December 2013, and full high speed services were expected to commence by the end of June 2014.[6]

See also

References

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