Trolleybuses in Dushanbe

Dushanbe trolleybus system

A Trolza ZiU-682-016 trolleybus in Dushanbe, 2010.
Operation
Locale Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Open 1955 (1955)
Status Open
Routes 8 (as at 2006)
Operator(s) "Душанбенаклиётхадамотрасон"
Passenger Unitary Enterprise
Infrastructure
Depot(s) 2
Stock ~ 200 (2015)[1]

The Dushanbe trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of Dushanbe, the capital and largest city of Tajikistan. In operation since 1955, the system presently comprises eight routes.

History

The development of electric transport in Dushanbe (then called Stalinabad) was authorised on 6 April 1955, when, according to decision no 106 of the Stalinabad City Council executive committee, a trolleybus management agency was established.[2]

On 1 May 1955, amidst great festivities, the first city trolleybuses operated the inaugural services along the main thoroughfare of the republic - then named Lenin Avenue (now Rudaki Prospect). They were Engels MTB-82D trolleybuses, produced at the Uritskogo plant. The first route extended only 11 km (7 mi) from the city centre, and ran from via Lenin Avenue to the railway station.[2]

In 1957, line no 2 was opened, and in 1958 line no 3. By the time the second trolleybus depot was commissioned in 1967, the length of the overhead wire network had increased to 49 km (30 mi). There were nine routes, 65 trolleybuses, and 700 workers.[2]

With the collapse of the Soviet Union and disruption of oil supplies that periodically occurred in Tajikistan in the 1990s, urban transport in Dushanbe experienced significant problems. The fleet of conventional buses all but ceased to exist, and therefore the main forms of passenger transport in the streets were trolleybuses. During the oil shortage, all the existing electric rolling stock was pressed into service, including maintenance trucks and KTH-1 trolleybuses produced by the Kiev electric factory. The number of trolleybuses that were in operation in the late 1980s had reached 250 ZiU-682 vehicles; by the end of the 1990s, the fleet had declined to 45-50 units and the route network had shrunk.[2]

Since independence, Tajikistan has acquired 27 second hand trolley buses, each a minimum of 10 years old. In an effort to maintain existing rolling stock made in the mid-1990s, a batch of trolleybuses was sent to Kazakhstan for major repairs at the Alma-Ata tram and trolleybus plant, but due to a lack of funding they were never repaired, and there was no money to "return" them back to Dushanbe.[2]

In summer 2000, to solve the problem of updating the Dushanbe trolleybus fleet, Ikarus 260 and Ikarus 280 bus bodies, intended for conversion into trolleybuses, were delivered to the 1st trolleybus depot. The task of designing and installing power equipment was assigned to the leading electrician at the depot, N.H. Salahitdinovu. His crew of mechanics and electricians coped with the task - six buses were converted to trolleybuses during 2001 - giving them two extra years of service life.[2]

On 9 September 2004, the mayor of Dushanbe, Mahmadsayid Ubaydullayev, and the CEO of the Russian JSC "Trolza-Market", Paul Berlin, signed a contract for the procurement of 100 new trolley buses to meet Dushanbe's public transport needs. The first deliveries of new trolleybuses under this contract began in the summer and autumn of 2005, and the last, one hundredth, machine arrived in April 2006. With the commissioning of the new machines, older trolleybuses in the fleet were withdrawn.[2]

Services

Pushing a Dushanbe trolleybus.

As of 2006, Dushanbe had eight trolleybus lines: nos 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 12 and 14.

The Dushanbe trolleybus system has a few operational features that have become conventional in recent years.

The first concerns the method of payment for travel and loading procedures. Each serving trolleybus has a crew of 4-5 persons, with each crew member having his or her specific function. Near each of the three entrances to the trolleybus is one crew member, who collects money from travellers and signals to the driver on completion of boarding. Another "team member" often moves the rear stairs and climbs onto the roof of the trolley.

Due to the significant deterioration of the overhead wire network, the current collectors come down at almost all intersections, so the role of the person on the roof is to put the collector hastily back under the wire, to avoid having the trolleybus contribute to traffic jams in the street.

When a trolleybus is about to enter a large square, where there are many crossings and switches, the trolleybus driver increases the bus's speed to 60–70 km/h and, in violation of all possible rules of the road, crosses the area, while the crew member on the roof lowers and raises the current collector at the right time.

Fleet

Trolza ZiU-682-016 on route no 4.

As at August 2011, the current fleet of Dushanbe trolleybuses was based upon the standard ZiU-9 trolleybus design:

All Dushanbe trolleybuses are painted in the system's standard white and green livery.

Depots

The Dushanbe system has two depots.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Dushanbe trolleybus list". Urban Electric Transit'website. Urban Electric Transit. August 2011. Retrieved 15 August 2011. External link in |work= (help)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Klimov, Konstantin (February 2008). Важкі маршрути тролейбусів Душанбе [Difficult trolleybus routes in Dushanbe]. www.omnibus.ru (in Russian). ЗАО "Политроника" [JSC "Politronika"]. Retrieved 15 August 2011. External link in |work= (help)

External links

Media related to Trolleybuses in Tajikistan at Wikimedia Commons

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