Fangshan Line, Beijing Subway

Fangshan Line, Beijing Subway
Fangshan Line
房山线

Fangshan Line train entering Changyang Station.
Overview
Type Rapid transit
System Beijing Subway
Status Operational
Termini Suzhuang
Guogongzhuang
Stations 11
Daily ridership 102,600 (2014 Avg.)
132,100 (2014 Peak)[1]
Operation
Operator(s) Beijing Mass Transit Railway Operation Corp., Ltd
Technical
Line length 24.79 km (15.40 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Route map
Lines 9, Fangshan Line
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Guogongzhuang
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Dabaotai
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Daotian
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Changyang
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Libafang
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Guangyangcheng
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Liangxiang University Town North
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Liangxiang University Town
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Liangxiang University Town West
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Liangxiangnanguan
[{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=edit}}    ]
Suzhuang

The Fangshan Line of the Beijing Subway (Chinese: 北京地铁房山线; pinyin: běijīng dìtiě fángshān xiàn) is a subway line in western Beijing that runs from Suzhuang in Fangshan District north and east to Guogongzhuang in Fengtai District. The line is 24.79 km (15.40 mi) long, has 11 stations (9 surface; 2 underground) and opened on December 31, 2010.

As of March 15, 2014, the Fangshan Line connects with only one other subway line, Line 9 at Guogongzhuang. The line will be extended further north to the southwest corner of the Third Ring Road, and will connect with Line 10 at Shoujingmao (Capital University of Economics) and with Line 16 at Fengyiqiao South. The southern terminus at Suzhuang will serve as the northern terminus for the Yanfang Line.

Route

Daotian Station on the Fangshan Line.

The Suzhou Dajie station is located at the intersection of Changhong Xi Lu and Suzhuang Dajie in the Liangxiang section of Fangshan. The line makes four stops in Liangxiang including at the Fangshan Campus of the Beijing Institute of Technology. The line then heads north to the towns of Guangyang and Changyang. After crossing the Yongding River, the Fangshan Line enters Fengtai District where the line makes its two most northern stops, at Dabaotai near the Beijing World Park, and at Guogongzhuang, also the southern terminus of Line 9.

From Guogongzhuang, where the line currently terminates, the Fangshan Line will be extended further to the northeast for 4.6 km to the southwest corner of the Third Ring Road.[2] The line will have four additional stations—Fanyang Lu (樊羊路), Fourth Ring Road (四环路), Shoujingmao (Capital University of Economics) and Fengyiqiao South (丰益桥南), and will connect with Line 10 at Shoujingmao and with Line 16 at Fengyiqiao South.[2] The Fangshan Line's current southern terminus, Suzhuang will serve as the northern terminus for the Yanfang Line.

Stations

Stations from the northeast to the southwest:[3]

Station Name
English
Station Name
Hanzi
Transfer
Bus Transfer
Location
Guogongzhuang 郭公庄  9  470 Fengtai
Dabaotai 大葆台 480 840 912 967 969
Daotian 稻田 391 Fangshan
Changyang 长阳 646 832 907 956 993 专93 专94
Libafang 篱笆房 646 907
Guangyangcheng 广阳城 956
Liangxiang University Town North 良乡大学城北
Liangxiang University Town 良乡大学城 896
Liangxiang University Town West 良乡大学城西 837快
Liangxiangnanguan 良乡南关 831 833 835 837快 897 956
Suzhuang 苏庄 831 833 897 907 917 971 993

History

Construction of the Fangshan Line was originally set to begin in 2012[4] but was moved up to April 1, 2009 to use stimulus funding provided by the government to counter the Financial Crisis of 2007-08.[3] On April 1, 2009 eleven station names were initially unveiled,[3] but most of the stations were subsequently renamed on March 23, 2010.[5]

On December 30, 2010, the line began operating from Suzhuang to Dabaotai, but was not connected to any other line of the subway system. One year later, on December 31, 2011, the Dabaotai to the Guogongzhuang section opened, linking the Fangshan Line with Line 9 and the rest of the subway network.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fangshan Line, Beijing Subway.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.