Suzhou Rail Transit
Overview | |
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Locale | Suzhou, China |
Transit type | Rapid transit |
Number of lines | 2 (in operation), 5 (by 2020) |
Number of stations | 46 |
Daily ridership |
344,000 (2014 Avg.)[1] 638,800 (2014 Peak) |
Website | http://www.sz-mtr.com/ (Chinese) |
Operation | |
Number of vehicles | 47 |
Technical | |
System length | 52.296 kilometres (32.495 mi) |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) |
Electrification | (?) |
Suzhou Rail Transit | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | 蘇州軌道交通 | ||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 苏州轨道交通 | ||||||
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The Suzhou Rail Transit (SRT) is a metro system serving the city of Suzhou, in Jiangsu province, China. Line 1 began operation on April 28, 2012.[2] Line 2 opened on December 28, 2013. Another five lines are also planned to be completed before 2020. Upon completion, the system will be about 140 kilometers long and have 109 stations.[3][4][5]
Lines
Map of Suzhou Rail Transit
|
Line | Terminals (District) |
Opened | Newest Extension |
Length km |
Stations | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line 1 | Mudu (Wuzhong) |
Zhongnan Jie (Gusu) |
2012 | — | 25.739 | 24 |
Line 2 | Suzhou North Railway Station (Xiangcheng) |
Baodaiqiao South (Wuzhong) |
2013 | — | 26.557 | 22 |
Total | 52.296 | 46 |
Line 1
Line 1 opened on April 28, 2012.[2] It is a line running generally east-west, from Mudu Station in western Suzhou to Zhongnan Jie Station in Suzhou Industrial Park.[3][6] It is 25 km long with 24 stations.
Construction on Line 1 began on December 26, 2007 and was completed by 2012. On December 30th, 2011 the first 21 cars for Line 1 have been delivered.[7]
Line 2
Line 2 opened on December 28, 2013. It is a line running generally north-south, from Suzhou North Railway Station in north Xiangcheng District to Baodaiqiao South Station close to Precious Belt Bridge located in Wuzhong District.
Construction on Line 2 began on December 25, 2009 and was completed by early 2013. On December 28th, 2013, line 2 started service and became a part of Suzhou Rail Transit system.
Lines under construction
Line | Number of stations | Terminals | Scheduled Opening | Construction began/will begin at | Planning status | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line 3 | 31 | Suzhouxinquzhan (Suzhou New District Railway Station) | Weiting (Weiting) | 2015–2016 | under construction | |
Line 4 (main) |
30 | Sulilu (Suli Road) | Pangjinlu (Pangjin Road) | 2015–2016 | under construction | |
Line 4 (south west branch) |
23 | Sulilu (Suli Road) | Youxianglu (Youxiang Road) | 2015–2016 | not yet started (under construction from Suli Road to Hongzhuang) | subject to change |
Line 3
Line 3 is planned to run from Suzhou New District Railway Station in the northwest, via Wuzhong District in south Suzhou to Weiting in the east, with a total of 31 stations.[8] At the planned interchange stations with Line 1 and Line 2 platforms for Line 3 are already prepared.
Line 4
Line 4 will start in the north of Suzhou, west of Line 2. Its main line will lead from Suli Road to Pangjin Road in the south/south east of Suzhou. After reaching Suzhou railway station, it will almost exactly follow Renmin road and Dongwubei road reaching further south until after a smooth arc to the west it turns sharp east leading towards its planned terminus Pangjin Road in Wujiang District. In this setup, Line 4 will have 30 stations. Construction is in progress, while opening is scheduled for late 2015 or 2016.[3] At the planned interchange stations with Line 1 and Line 2 platforms for Line 4 are already prepared. Recent maps show a branch line of Line 4 (formerly referred to as future Line 8). This branch is supposed to follow the same path as the main line until Hongzhuang, then turning into south western direction leading to Youxiang Road.
Lines under planning
Line 4
Plans for line 4 have been revised. Initially planned for a later date, construction of line 4 has been started with the main line now leading from Suli Road in the north to Pangjin Road at Wujiang district (former Wujiang City). The originally planned section leading to the south-west appears in actual maps as "under planning" in shape of a branch line of line 4.
Other Lines
Besides others, short video spots shown on screens in Suzhou's subway trains where Suzhou Rail Transit company introduces itself and its plans. These plans contain a line 5 and 6
Planned Layout (2016)
Rolling Stock
All rolling stocks of Suzhou Rail Transit use Nanjing Puzhen Rolling Stock Works trains.[9]
Line | Manufacturer | Number | Specifications | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|
Line 1 | Nanjing Puzhen Rolling Stock Works | 24 | 4B | Expandable to 6B |
Line 2 | Nanjing Puzhen Rolling Stock Works | 23 | 5B | Expandable to 6B |
Fares and tickets
The base fare of Suzhou Rail Transit is 2 yuan (US$0.33) for journeys under 6 km, then 1 yuan for each 5 km between 6–16 km, 1 yuan for each 7 km between 16–30 km, 1 yuan for 9 km more than 30 km. As December 28, 2013, the highest fare is 7 yuan (US$1.17).
Users of the Suzhou Tong get a 5% discount for every journey.
References
- ↑ "12月我省城市及城际轨道交通运行情况统计表" (in Chinese). Jiangsu Province Development and Reform Commission. 15 January 2015. Retrieved 2014-01-29.
- 1 2 "Suzhou subway starts service". Retrieved April 28, 2012.
- 1 2 3 (Website of Suzhou City ( Rail Transit information from 2007))
- ↑ (Line 2 in the news of March 14th, 2009)
- ↑ (Suzhou Rail Transit at urbanrail.com)
- ↑ 苏州交通图,2009年4月第一版,湖南地图出版社 (广告许可证号:3200005950154) / Suzhou traffic map. Edition from April 2009 - 1. edition of year 2009, Publisher: Hunan Map Publishing Office (Publishing-Permission-Number: 3200005950154)
- ↑ [News of the Operator]
- ↑ (Website of the subway operator "SZ-Transit" (苏州轨道交通/Suzhou Guidao Jiaotong) (information retrieved on Oct. 16th, 2010))
- ↑ 2号线首列车明年5月交付 今年力争洞通轨通.搜狐.2012-03-01
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Suzhou Rail Transit. |
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