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RandstadRail

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Light rail network in South Holland

RandstadRail
RandstadRail tram at Van Tuyllpark stationRandstadRail tram at Van Tuyllpark station
Overview
LocaleRotterdam–The Hague metropolitan area, South Holland, Netherlands
Transit typeLight rail
Number of lines4
Number of stations73
Daily ridership125,000 (2018)
Operation
Began operation29 October 2006 (2006-10-29)
Operator(s)HTM Personenvervoer (HTM) and Rotterdamse Elektrische Tram (RET)
Rolling stock
Technical
System length~71 km (44 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in)
System map

Legend
Arnold Spoelplein3
Pisuissestraat
Mozartlaan
4De Uithof Heliotrooplaan
Beresteinlaan Muurbloemweg
Bouwlustlaan Hoefbladlaan
De Rade De S. Lohmanplein34
Dedemsvaartweg Appelstraat
Zuidwoldepad Zonnebloemstraat
Leyenburg Azaleaplein
Monnickendamplein Goudenregenstraat
Tienhovenselaan Fahrenheitstraat
Dierenselaan Valkenbosplein
De la Reyweg Conradkade
Monstersestraat Van Speijkstraat
Elandstraat
HMC Westeinde
Brouwersgracht
Grote Markt
Spui
EDen Haag Centraal
Beatrixkwartier
Laan van NOI
Voorburg 't Loo
Leidschendam-Voorburg
Forepark Buytenwegh
Leidschenveen De Leyens
Voorweg Leidsewallen
Nootdorp Meerzicht
Pijnacker Centrum Driemanspolder
Pijnacker Zuid Delftsewallen
Berkel Westpolder Dorp
Rodenrijs Centrum-West3
Meijersplein / Airport Stadhuis (Z)
Melanchthonweg Palenstein
Blijdorp Seghwaert
enlarge… Rotterdam Centraal
Stadhuis (R) Willem Dreeslaan
Beurs Oosterheem
Leuvehaven Javalaan
Wilhelminaplein Van Tuyllpark
Rijnhaven Lansingerland-Z'meer
Maashaven 4 34
Zuidplein
ESlinge

RandstadRail (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈrɑntstɑtˌreːl]) is a tram-train network in the Rotterdam–The Hague metropolitan area in the west of the Netherlands that is jointly operated by HTM Personenvervoer (HTM) and Rotterdamse Elektrische Tram (RET). It connects the cities of Rotterdam, The Hague and Zoetermeer, primarily using former train and existing tram tracks.

Named after the Randstad conurbation, the light rail network came into operation in 2006, after regular train services on the Hofpleinlijn and Zoetermeer Stadslijn had been discontinued. The system consists of four routes and serves 73 stations, with a total length of approximately 71 kilometres (44 mi). In 2018, it had a daily ridership of around 125,000 passengers.

Light rail network

RandstadRail E
Den Haag Centraal E
Laan van NOI
Voorburg 't Loo
Leidschendam-Voorburg
Forepark
Leidschenveen
Nootdorp
Pijnacker Centrum
Pijnacker Zuid
Berkel Westpolder
Rodenrijs
Wilgenplas (until 2010)
Meijersplein / Airport
Melanchthonweg
Hofplein (until 2010)
Blijdorp
Rotterdam Centraal
Stadhuis
Beurs
Leuvehaven
Wilhelminaplein
Rijnhaven
Maashaven
Zuidplein
Slinge E
RandstadRail 3
Arnold Spoelplein 3
Pisuissestraat
Mozartlaan
Heliotrooplaan
Muurbloemweg
Hoefbladlaan
De Sav. Lohmanplein
Appelstraat
Zonnebloemstraat
Azaleaplein
Goudenregenstraat
Fahrenheitstraat
Valkenbosplein
Conradkade
Van Speijkstraat
Elandstraat
HMC Westeinde
Brouwersgracht
Grote Markt
Spui
Den Haag Centraal
Beatrixkwartier
Laan van NOI
Voorburg 't Loo
Leidschendam-Voorburg
Forepark
Leidschenveen
Voorweg
Meerzicht Buytenwegh
Driemanspolder De Leyens
Delftsewallen Leidsewallen
Dorp Seghwaert
3 Centrum-West Palenstein
Stadhuis
RandstadRail 4 and 34
4 De Uithof
Beresteinlaan
Bouwlustlaan De S. Lohmanplein 34
De Rade Appelstraat
Dedemsvaartweg Zonnebloemstraat
Zuidwoldepad Azaleaplein
Leyenburg Goudenregenstraat
Monnickendamplein Fahrenheitstraat
Tienhovenselaan Valkenbosplein
Dierenselaan Conradkade
De la Reyweg Van Speijkstraat
Monstersestraat Elandstraat
HMC Westeinde
Brouwersgracht
Grote Markt
Spui
Den Haag Centraal
Beatrixkwartier
Laan van NOI
Voorburg 't Loo
Leidschendam-Voorburg
Forepark
Leidschenveen
Voorweg (Lower)
Centrum-West
Stadhuis
Palenstein
Seghwaert
Willem Dreeslaan
Oosterheem
Javalaan
Van Tuyllpark
Lansingerland-Z'meer
4 34
Map of the RandstadRail network between The Hague (northwest), Zoetermeer (northeast) and Rotterdam (south) as of 2021

The RandstadRail network consists of four routes: one metro line (E) between The Hague and Rotterdam, and three tram-train lines (3, 4 and 34) between The Hague and Zoetermeer. Line E is operated by RET and uses high-floor Flexity Swift vehicles, while lines 3, 4 and 34 are operated by HTM and use low-floor RegioCitadis vehicles. Stations that are served by both types of carriages have extended platforms with a higher and a lower part.

Line Route Stations Opened Type
E Den Haag CentraalRotterdam Slinge 23 2006 High-floor
3 Den Haag LoosduinenZoetermeer Centrum-West 39 2007 Low-floor
4 Den Haag De UithofLansingerland-Zoetermeer 33 2006
34 Den Haag De Savornin LohmanpleinLansingerland-Zoetermeer 31 2020

Line E

See also: Rotterdam Metro § Line E

Line E (formerly Erasmuslijn) is a metro line, which also belongs to the Rotterdam Metro network. For a great part, it runs on the former Hofpleinlijn railway line between Den Haag Centraal railway station and Rotterdam Hofplein railway station. After the train services had been discontinued, the track was re-opened as a RandstadRail line in September 2006, running between Nootdorp and Hofplein. In November 2006, the line was extended to The Hague.

As part of the line's conversion to RandstadRail operation, it began using RET metro trains, and more stops were added and train frequencies increased. Although the conversion had not been flawless, with a series of technical problems and a derailment, the line has been in full operation since September 2007.

In 2010, Hofplein terminus was replaced with the Statenwegtracé, a bored tunnel connecting the line with the local metro network at Rotterdam Centraal railway station. In December 2011, the line was further extended to Slinge metro station in the south of Rotterdam, sharing the section between Rotterdam Centraal and Slinge with the already existing line D.

Lines 3, 4 and 34

The RandstadRail network originally included two tram-train lines: line 3 between Loosduinen and Zoetermeer Centrum-West, and line 4 between De Uithof and Lansingerland-Zoetermeer. On 23 July 2020, a third tram-train line was added to the network: line 34, which serves as a combination of lines 3 and 4, connecting Loosduinen to Lansingerland-Zoetermeer railway station.

West of Den Haag Centraal railway station, these lines are operated as regular street-running tram lines, partially interlined with the local network and passing through the Haagse tramtunnel, a 1.25 km (0.78 mi) tunnel under the Grote Marktstraat [nl] in the city centre. Between Den Haag Centraal and Zoetermeer, they operate on dedicated tracks as a light rail system. The section from Den Haag Centraal to Laan van NOI is elevated on a viaduct. From Laan van NOI to Leidschenveen, the lines share the track and stations with line E.

East of Leidschenveen, line 3 follows the same route as the former Zoetermeer Stadslijn, while lines 4 and 34 branch off towards Oosterheem after Seghwaert station. In 2019, the Oosterheem branch was extended from Javalaan to Lansingerland-Zoetermeer.

Other services

A ZoRo bus on the newly constructed bus lane near Berkel en Rodenrijs

ZoRo buses

In December 2012, two bus lines were added to the network. These so-called "ZoRo" buses run between Zoetermeer and Rodenrijs RandstadRail station, where they connect with RandstadRail line E. A new bus lane was constructed for the project. The buses are operated by RET and have an almost instant connection to arriving metros at Rodenrijs station. At the termini in Zoetermeer, the ZoRo buses connect with regional bus lines (Arriva and Veolia Transport) and RandstadRail lines 3, 4 and 34.

Line Route
170
173

Associated tram lines

Despite not being a part of the RandstadRail network, lines 2 and 19 of HTM's local tram network make use of RandstadRail-liveried RegioCitadis vehicles in addition to the regular Siemens Avenio trams. For line 19, this is necessary as it lacks balloon loops at its termini, meaning that the uni-directional GTL8 vehicles cannot be used on this route. Since 2015, the rolling stock of line 2 has been gradually replaced by Avenio vehicles.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ "RandstadRail nu hét voorbeeld van light rail". OV-Magazine (in Dutch). 5 July 2018. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Wat is RandstadRail". RandstadRail (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  3. ^ "RandstadRail (wit-blauwe trams)". HTM (in Dutch). Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  4. "Lightrail springt in gat 'waar ov nu niet zoveel te bieden heeft'". NOS (in Dutch). 12 August 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Achtergrond en Historie". RandstadRail (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  6. Vos, Allan (13 July 2020). "Let op! Deze Haagse trams en bussen krijgen deze zomer nieuwe vertrektijden". indebuurt Den Haag (in Dutch). Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  7. "Randstadrail stopt pas in mei bij station Lansingerland-Zoetermeer". Omroep West (in Dutch). 14 September 2018. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  8. ^ "Vanaf 9 december rijdt de ZoRo-bus". Gemeente Lansingerland (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 29 November 2012. Retrieved 10 November 2021.

External links

RandstadRail
Infrastructure
Line E
Line 3
Line 4
Line 34
Netherlands Urban public transport networks and systems in the Netherlands
Metro A Siemens Combino tram in Amsterdam (Line 2).
Light rail
Trams
Trolleybuses
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