Shanghai–Kunming Railway

Shanghai-Kunming
Railway
China Railways logo

The Erdaoyan Station on the Guikun Section of the Shanghai-Kunming Railway in Guizhou
Overview
Type Heavy rail
Status Active
Termini Shanghai
Kunming
Operation
Operator(s) China Railways
Technical
Line length 2,690 km (1,670 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Route map
Legend
0  Shanghai South
26 km Songjiang
80 km Jiaxing
108 km Haining
167 km Hangzhou East
312 km Yiwu
360 km Jinhua
446 km Quzhou
557 km Shangrao
673 km Yingtan
1125 km Zhuzhou
1151 km Xiangtan
1250 km Loudi
1565 km Huaihua
1652 km Xinhuang
1685 km Yuping
1746 km Zhenyuan
1834 km Kaili
2022 km Guiyang
2119 km Anshun
2175 km Liuzhi
2271 km Liupanshui
2402 km Xuanwei
2503 km Qujing
2660 km Kunming

The Shanghai–Kunming Railway or Hukun Railway (simplified Chinese: 沪昆铁路; traditional Chinese: 滬昆鐵路; pinyin: hùkūn tiělù), also known as the Hukun Line, is a major arterial railroad across eastern, south central and southwest China. It connects Shanghai, whose shorthand name is Hu, and Kunming. The line has a total length of 2,690 km and passes through Shanghai Municipality, Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Hunan, Guizhou and Yunnan Province. Major cities along route include Shanghai, Jiaxing, Hangzhou, Yiwu, Jinhua, Shangrao, Yingtan, Pingxiang, Zhuzhou, Huaihua, Kaili, Guiyang, Anshun, Qujing, and Kunming.

Line Description

The Hukun Line is double track from Shanghai's South Station to Liupanshui and single-track railway for about 400 km from Liupanshui to Kunming. The speed limit for Hukun Line is 200 km/h from Shanghai to Zhuzhou and it is 120 km/h from Zhuzhou to Huaihua. The entire line is electrified.

The Shanghai–Kunming High-Speed Railway, presently under construction, runs generally parallel to the Shanghai–Kunming Railway.

History

The Shanghai–Kunming Railway has four major segments, which were built over a span of 70 years. In 2006, after the Ministry of Railways rebuilt sections along route and increased train travel speed, the four lines were collectively referred to as one.

Accidents

On May 23, 2010 (UTC+8), passenger train derailed after heavy rains caused mudslides on the Hukun Line in Jiangxi Province, killing 19 passengers and injuring 71.[1]

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.