Misplaced Pages

Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Wenzhou–Fuzhou Railway) Railway line in China
Hangzhou–Fuzhou–Shenzhen high-speed railway
Wenzhou–Fuzhou Section
The railway in Lianjiang County, Fujian.
Overview
Native name杭福深高速铁路温福段
StatusOperational
Owner
LocaleZhejiang province
Fujian province
Service
TypeHigh-speed rail
Heavy rail
SystemChina Railway High-speed China Railway High-speed
Operator(s)
Depot(s)Fuzhou
History
OpenedSeptember 28, 2009 (2009-09-28)
Technical
Line length298.1 km (185 mi)
Number of tracks2 (Double-track)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC (Overhead line)
Operating speed250 km/h (155 mph)
Maximum incline0.6%
Route map

Legend
km
Yongtaiwen railway
to Hangzhou
Jinhua–Wenzhou railway
Wenzhou
0 Wenzhou South
23 Rui'an
40 Pingyang
57 Cangnan
Zhejiang
Fujian
border
94 Fuding
113 Taimushan
147 Xiapu
179 Fu'an
206 Ningde
230 Luoyuan
262 Lianjiang
Mawei
298 Fuzhou South
Fuxia railway
to Shenzhen North via Xiamen North
302 Fuzhou
Nanfu railway
This diagram:
Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway
Simplified Chinese温福铁路
Traditional Chinese溫福鐵路
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWēnfú Tiělù
Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway
Technical
Line length298.1 km (185 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in)
Operating speed200 km/h (124 mph) max.

The Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway, also known as the Wenfu railway, (Chinese: 温福铁路) is a dual-track, electrified, high-speed rail line running between Wenzhou in Zhejiang and Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian. The line has a total length of 298.4 km (185.4 mi) and forms part of the Hangzhou–Fuzhou–Shenzhen passenger-dedicated railway. Construction began in August 2005, and the line opened to freight traffic on July 1, 2009. Passenger service began on September 28, 2009. Trains running on the line reach top speeds of 250 kilometres per hour, and the shortest trip between Wenzhou and Fuzhou takes 1.5 hours. The line required investment of ¥12.66 billion. To improve connections between Fuzhou and Zhejiang, the government is proposing to build a faster parallel passenger dedicated line called the Wenzhou–Fuzhou high-speed railway.

Route

The Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway follows the rugged but prosperous coast of southern Zhejiang and northern Fujian with 69 km (43 mi) in the former and 229.1 km (142.4 mi) in the latter. Bridges and tunnels account for over 78% of the line's total length. Major cities along route include Rui'an, Cangnan, Fuding, Ningde, Luoyuan and Lianjiang.

History

The Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway is the first railway to connect the two neighboring provinces. Most high-speed rail lines in China follow the routes of older conventional railroads, but there were no railways on the southeast coast prior to the building of high-speed rail. Historically, the southeast coastal region relied on maritime transportation, and rugged terrain made railway construction more expensive. In the first half of the 20th century, warfare and political instability delayed railway construction. During the Cold War, the southeast coast faced the threat of invasion from Republic of China on Taiwan and all railways were built inland. Only when political tensions across the Taiwan Strait eased in the late 1990s did planning of the Wenzhou–Fuzhou railway take place. In October 2002, the project was initially approved by the National Development and Reform Commission as a single-track railway at the 140 km/h (87 mph) standard. The project was then upgraded to a double-track 200 km/h (120 mph) standard and received State Council approval in 2004. Construction on an experimental basis began in December 2004 and on a full-scale in August 2005. Track-laying was completed in April 2009. Freight and passenger service began, respectively on July 1 and September 28, 2009.

Rail connections

See also

References

  1. ^ "China to open Wenzhou-Fuzhou railroad at mid-year" People's Daily 2009-03-09
  2. "交通部与福建省签署协议,温福高铁方案出炉一年后最新消息曝光_霞浦". www.sohu.com. Retrieved 2019-07-03.
  3. "福建印发《关于建立更加有效的区域协调发展新机制的实施方案》-新闻-上海证券报·中国证券网". news.cnstock.com. Retrieved 2019-07-03.
  4. ^ 温福铁路7月1日起通车运营 年内开行动车组列车 (in Simplified Chinese). Xinhua News. 2009-07-01.
Coastal corridor
Dandong–Dalian
Dalian–Shenyang(–Harbin)see Template:Beijing–Harbin, Beijing–Hong Kong (Macau) corridor
Shenyang–Qinhuangdao
Qinhuangdao–Tianjin
Tianjin–Weifang–Yantai (u/c)see Template:Second Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway
Weifang–Laixi branch
(Jinan–)Weifang–Qingdaosee Template:Qingdao–Yinchuan corridor
Qingdao–Rongcheng
Yantai connection
Qingdao–Yancheng
Yancheng–Nantong
Shanghai–Suzhou–Nantongsee Template:Second Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway
Shanghai–Hangzhousee Template:Shanghai–Kunming high-speed railway
Hangzhou–Shenzhen
Hangzhou–Ningbo
Ningbo–Taizhou–Wenzhou
Wenzhou–Fuzhou
Zhanglin–Fuzhou connection
Fuzhou–Xiamen
Fuzhou–Xiamen HSR
Xinglin–Xiamen connection
Xiamen–Shenzhen
Shenzhen–Zhanjiang
Zhanjiang–Hepuplanned
(Beihai–)Hepu–Qinzhou
Qinzhou–Fangchenggang
Fangchenggang–Dongxing (u/c)
italic: stations that are under construction, reserved stations, stations that operate freight transports only
High-speed rail in China
High-speed demonstrative maglev
National 8+8 high-speed corridors
Coastal
Hangshen
parallel
other branches
Beijing–Shanghai
West route
East route
branches
Beijing–Hong Kong (Taipei)§
To Hong Kong
To Taipei
Harbin–Hong Kong (Macau)§
Hohhot–Nanning
Beijing–KunmingBeijing–Xiong'an–Xinzhou–Xi'an–Chengdu–Yibin–Kunming
Branch lines
Baotou (Yinchuan)–Hainan
Lanzhou (Xining)–Guangzhou
Suifenhe–Manzhouli
Beijing–Lanzhou
Qingdao–Yinchuan
Eurasia Continental
Yangtze River
Old lineShanghai–Wuxi–Nanjing–Hefei–Wuhan–Yichang–Lichuan–Chongqing–Suining–Chengdu
Shanghai–Kunming
Xiamen–Chongqing
Guangzhou–KunmingGuangzhou–Nanning–Kunming
Other conventional high-speed railways (list)
Intercity and
long-distance
Regional intercity
Upgraded old lines
Rolling stock
  • Italics: under construction or currently not operational
  • (-), Place A-: section under construction or currently not operational
  • §: in/related to Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan
  • (Place A–Place B): share tracks with other lines
High-speed railway lines
Africa
Morocco
Asia
China
Indonesia
Japan
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Taiwan
Turkey
Uzbekistan
Europe
Belgium
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Italy
Netherlands
Norway
PolandGrodzisk–Zawiercie*
Russia
Spain
SwedenBothnia Line
United Kingdom
North America
United StatesNortheast Corridor*
OceaniaNone
South AmericaNone
* An asterisk indicates overlap with conventional services.
Categories: