fbpx
Wikipedia

Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway

The Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway (simplified Chinese: 京津城际铁路; traditional Chinese: 京津城際鐵路; pinyin: Jīng-Jīn chéngjì tiělù) is a Chinese high-speed railway that runs 117 kilometres (72.7 mi) line between Beijing and Tianjin. Designed for passenger traffic only, the Chinese government built the line to accommodate trains traveling at a maximum speed of 350 km/h (217 mph), and currently carries CRH high-speed trains running speeds up to 350 km/h (217 mph) since August 2018.[2]

Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway
A CR400BF high-speed train at the Tianjin railway station.
Overview
Native name京津城际铁路
京津高铁
StatusOperational
Owner China Railway
Locale
Termini
Stations9
Service
TypeHigh-speed rail
System China Railway High-speed
Operator(s) China Railway Beijing Group
History
OpenedAugust 1, 2008 (2008-08-01)
Last extensionSeptember 20, 2015 (2015-09-20)[1]
Technical
Line length161 km (100 mi)
Number of tracks2 (Double-track)
CharacterElevated
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC (Overhead line)
Operating speed350 km/h (220 mph)
SignallingCTCS-3
Route map

0.000 Beijing South
21.321 Yizhuang
(reserved station)
45.573 Yongle
(reserved station)
83.242 Wuqing
116.939 Tianjin
Airport Branch
to Tianjin Airport East (planned)
Airport West blockpost
Junliangcheng North
Binhai West
Binhai West blockpost
Tanggu
Binhai

When the line opened on August 1, 2008, it set the record for the fastest conventional train service in the world by top speed, and reduced travel time between the two largest cities in northern China from 70 to 30 minutes.[3][4] A second phase of construction extended this line from Tianjin to Yujiapu railway station in the Binhai New Area was opened on September 20, 2015.[1]

The line is projected to approach operating capacity in the first half of 2016. Anticipating this, a second parallel line, the Beijing–Binhai intercity railway, commenced construction on December 29, 2015.[5] It will run from Beijing Sub-Center railway station to Binhai railway station via Baodi and Tianjin Binhai International Airport, along a new route to the northeast of the Beijing–Tianjin ICR.

Route and stations

 
Viaduct on the Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway.

Beijing to Tianjin

From Beijing South railway station, the line runs in a southeasterly direction, following the Beijing–Tianjin–Tanggu Expressway to Tianjin. It has three intermediate stations at Yizhuang (reserved station), Yongle (reserved station) and Wuqing. The service has peak speed between cities.

As an intercity line, it will provide train service only between the two metropolitan areas, unlike the Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway which will continue beyond Shanghai.

The Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway has a current length of 116.939 km (72.663 mi) (fare mileage: 120 km (75 mi)), of which roughly 100 km (62 mi) is built on viaducts and the last 17 kilometres (11 mi) on an embankment. The elevated track ensures level tracks over uneven terrain and eliminates the trains having to slow down to safely navigate through at-grade road crossings.

 
Tianjin railway station

Extension to Binhai New Area

Sometimes known as the Tianjin–Binhai intercity railway, this 44.68 km (27.76 mi) extension continues southeasterly from Tianjin railway station, following the conventional railway to Tanggu railway station but built on elevated piers with three new stations were to be added. It passes a blockpost at Airport West, through Junliangcheng North railway station to Tanggu railway station before entering a tunnel to an underground station, Yujiapu railway station.[6]

Junctions have been built along the line allowing services to branch off to a new station under Tianjin Binhai International Airport and to Binhai West railway station on the Tianjin–Qinhuangdao High-Speed Railway. Trial operations of the extension started on August 14, 2015, with official opening on September 20, 2015. the railway reduced travel times from Beijing South station to Yujiapu station to 1 hour 02 minutes and from Tianjin railway station to Yujiapu to 23 minutes.[7]

 
Yujiapu railway station

Service

 
"5100" brand mineral water. A passenger can get a complimentary bottle on showing his or her intercity train ticket

These intercity trains are designated by the prefixed "C" (城) followed by four digits, from C2001 to C2298. Of these, C2001–C2198 are non-stop trains from Beijing South to Tianjin. The odd numbers for trains departing from Beijing South and even numbers for those running to Beijing South. Trains numbered C2201–C2268 are trains from Beijing South and Tianjin that stop on the way at Wuqing station. Trains C2271–C2298 run from Beijing South to Tanggu.

The line opened on August 1, 2008, with 47 daily pairs of intercity trains between Beijing South and Tianjin. Since September 14, 2008, 10 more pairs of trains were added, reducing the minimum interval from 15 minutes to 10 minutes. On September 24, 2008, 4 pairs of trains extended to Tanggu along the conventional railway. On September 28, 2008, 2 more pairs of trains were added into service. Frequencies have consistently been increased since to cope with rising demand, reaching 136 pairs of trains operating daily by 2018.[8]

In addition to the intercity service, 13 pairs of trains were diverted to this line from the preexisting Beijing-Shanghai (Jinghu) Railway, including trains from Beijing South to Jinan, Qingdao, Shanghai, and Tianjin West. With the opening of the Beijing–Shanghai high-speed railway, these trains have been diverted to the new line.

Tickets

 
Tickets bought at high-speed railway stations are blue magnetic tickets, different from the regular pink tickets

Manual ticket windows and automatic ticket machines developed by GDT are installed at each station along the Beijing-Tianjin intercity railroad (including Beijing South Station, Tianjin Station, and Wuqing Station). The vending machines can accept RMB 100, RMB 50, RMB 20, RMB 10, and RMB 5 bills and support payment by bank card. As of June 2009, tickets sold through the vending machines have accounted for 24% of all Beijing-Tianjin intercity train tickets.

On March 7, 2009, the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway launched the "Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card", which uses a non-contact IC card system and can be recharged repeatedly. The "Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card" is divided into two types: Ordinary Card and Gold Card. The Ordinary Card is priced at RMB 1,000 and can be used in the second-class compartment of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway. The Gold Card is priced at RMB 3,000 and allows passengers to travel in the first-class compartment of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway, with the maximum amount of stored value not exceeding RMB 5,000. As of July 22, 2009, 13,700 Fast pass cards have been sold, and the total number of cardholders is 82,000, with the highest number of cardholders on a single train being 93. On June 1, 2011, the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Fast pass card system was upgraded to match the real-name system of national train tickets, and all cardholders are required to bring their original valid IDs, otherwise they will not be able to enter the station and ride. Since July 22, 2012, the former "Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card" has been discontinued and the newly introduced "China Railway Silver Pass Card" has replaced the "Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card".[9]

From June 12, 2011, online railroad ticketing was first tested on the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway. Passengers can pay for their tickets online using bank cards (including debit and credit cards) from the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural Bank of China, the Bank of China and China Merchants Bank or through the China UnionPay online payment system and can make subsequent ticket changes and refunds. After purchasing a ticket, if passengers use a second-generation ID card, passengers can use their ID card as a travel voucher to check their ticket directly at the entry/exit gates; if passengers use other documents or need reimbursement vouchers, they can exchange their ID card for a paper ticket at the station ticket window or at a sales outlet.[9]

On February 6, 2017, the mayor of Tianjin, Wang Dongfeng, said at the symposium of the central media's "Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Cooperative Development Research Line" interview group that the Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway is expected to implement a monthly ticket system, and from May 1, 2017, in order to facilitate the travel of commuters between Beijing and Tianjin, China Railway Yin Tong Payment Co. "China Railway Beijing-Tianjin Intercity City Discount Card" for frequent commuters of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway, who can enjoy certain discounts for a certain number of purchases. As of April 30, 2018, a total of 20,160 "Beijing-Tianjin Intercity City Discount Cards" were sold, including 2,911 gold cards and 17,249 silver cards, with a total of 962,600 passengers taking the card.[9]

Technical information

The line is the first railway in China to be built for operational speeds above 300 km/h (186 mph). This railway line allows speeds up to 350 km/h (217 mph).[10] A trip between Beijing and Tianjin takes 30 minutes.[11]

High-speed lines

113.5 kilometers (70.5 mi) of the line is ballast-free track, using the plate ballast-free track technology imported from the German company Borg. A total of 36,092 pieces of Borg track plates were used on the whole line. In addition, in order to save land use, the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway uses bridges instead of roads on a large scale, with 87% of the entire line being bridges, with a cumulative length of 101 km (63 mi), including 5 special bridges. Each kilometer of bridge can save 30,000 square meters (320,000 sq ft) of land compared with the traditional roadbed. In addition, soft soil, loose and soft soil areas roadbed design, bridge deformation and foundation settlement control technology are adopted. The railroad track uses the advanced welding process of long steel rails, and the comprehensive inspection shows that the line quality is stable. The expected service life of the ballast-free track is 60 years, while the service life of the main structure of the bridge is up to 100 years, reducing the comprehensive maintenance costs.

Traction power supply

When a high-speed train runs at a speed of 350 kilometers per hour (220 mph), that is, nearly 100 meters per second, there are high requirements for the stability of the current receiving between the catenary and the pantograph, as well as the power supply equipment for electrified railways. The Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway adopts SCADA system for remote monitoring, and for the first time in China adopts a magnesium-copper alloy, small cross-section (120 mm (4.7 in)), high tension, lightweight simple chain-type belt reinforced wire suspension catenary system. There are 3 traction substations, 4 divisional substations and 2 switching substations along the whole line.[12]

Communication Signal and Dispatch

The Beijing-Tianjin intercity railroad adopts GSM-R railroad digital mobile communication system for the whole line, which realizes mobile voice communication and wireless data transmission; it also uses ETCS-1 level and CTCS-2 level signaling systems, as well as CTCS-3D (China high-speed railroad train control terrestrial digital transmission system) level signaling system, and the minimum departure interval is designed to be 3 minutes. In terms of operation scheduling, Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway applies decentralized self-regulating dispatching centralized system (CTC) to realize centralized dispatching control for trains running on the whole line.[12]

Safety and security

In order to avoid natural disasters affecting the safety of railroad traffic, the whole line of Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway has established a disaster prevention and safety monitoring system including wind warning monitoring, earthquake monitoring system and foreign object intrusion monitoring. In addition, the whole railroad line also has a comprehensive grounding system, ballastless track, contact network columns, station platforms, sound barriers, retaining walls are connected to ground.

History

Preliminary preparation

In February 2002, Binglian Liu, a professor at Nankai University in Tianjin, first proposed the construction of a high-speed railroad between Beijing and Tianjin during a discussion on the "Beijing-Tianjin Economic Integration Strategy Study and Proposal". In June 2003, the Ministry of Railways and the municipal governments of Beijing and Tianjin began preliminary discussions. In January 2004, the executive meeting of the State Council adopted the Medium and Long-Term Railway Network Plan, in which the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway was included, and on October 24, 2004, the Ministry of Railways, Beijing Municipal Government and Tianjin Municipal Government jointly determined the route plan. On March 3, 2005, Zhijun Liu, Minister of Railway, Qishan Wang, Mayor of Beijing, and Xianglong Dai, Mayor of Tianjin, co-chaired the meeting of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Rail Transit System Construction Leading Group. The meeting determined the financing method of the railroad construction.[12]

Construction history

On July 4, 2005, the construction of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway officially started. The entire Beijing-Tianjin intercity rail transit system construction project adopts the "two points and one line" construction strategy, which is divided into three parts: the Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway, Beijing South Railway Station, and Tianjin Station transportation hub reconstruction project, which are carried out simultaneously. In August 2007, the roadbed and bridge works were completed. On October 31, 2007, the track Borg board laying was completed. On November 13, 2007, the laying of the track began. The 100-meter-long steel rails used on the entire line of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway are all produced by Panzhihua Iron and Steel Company, with a total weight of 27,000 tons, and the 500-meter-long steel rails are welded on site. On December 16, 2007, the entire track was laid. On December 19, 2007, the construction of the electrified catenary under the charge of the China Railway Electrification Bureau was in full swing. On February 2, 2008, the electrification project was completed, and the grid began to be electrified. In March 2008, the construction of the Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway entered the stage of system joint debugging and joint testing, including four parts: EMU type test, integration test, comprehensive test and trial operation. On May 13, 2008, a CRH2C electric multiple units from Beijing South Railway Station to Tianjin Railway Station created the fastest speed of a wheel-rail train in China at that time at a speed of 372 kilometers per hour during the test. On June 24, 2008, a CRH3C EMU reached a speed of 394.3 kilometers per hour during the test on the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway, breaking the record set by the CRH2C EMU on May 13. And refresh the highest speed of China's current wheel-rail train. On July 1, 2008, the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway began trial operation without carrying passengers according to the official operating conditions to verify the tracking interval of trains, the interval between trains receiving and departing at stations, etc., and at the same time arrange simulated equipment failures and emergency response in bad weather drill.[12]

Open for operation

The Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway was officially opened to traffic on August 1, 2008, with Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang, Beijing Municipal Party Secretary Liu Qi and Tianjin Municipal Party Secretary Zhang Gaoli attending the opening ceremony. On September 27, 2008, Premier Wen Jiabao visited the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway and put forward the requirements of "quality, energy saving, land saving and environmental protection" for the railroad construction. On March 4, 2009, Hong Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang visited Tianjin by the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity High-speed Train, and on August 1, 2009, the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway celebrated its first anniversary of operation. Within one year, the Beijing-Tianjin intercity high-speed trains sent a total of 18.7 million passengers, the train punctuality rate reached 98%, the average train occupancy rate reached nearly 70%, and more than 200 heads of state, dignitaries and railroad inspection teams from all over the world, including the United States, Russia and Japan, visited the Beijing-Tianjin intercity railroad.[12]

On October 1, 2009, construction of the Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Extension, or Jinbin Intercity Railway, began, with an estimated 40+ minutes from Beijing South Station to Binhai Station in the core area of Binhai New Area. The Yujiapu extension opened on September 20, 2015, and the Beijing-Tianjin intercity train no longer travels the Jinshan Railway when running between the central city of Tianjin and the core area of the Binhai New Area, and the running time has been significantly shortened.[12]

Ridership

Before the line was finished, it was expected that the railway line would handle 32 million passengers in 2008 and 54 million passengers in 2015.[13]

The line opened on August 1, 2008, just before the opening of the 2008 Summer Olympics, which held some football matches in Tianjin. The introduction of high-speed rail service significantly boosted rail travel between the two cities. In 2007, conventional train service between Beijing and Tianjin delivered 8.3 million rides. In the first year of high-speed rail service, from August 2008 to July 2009, total rail passenger volume between Beijing and Tianjin reached 18.7 million, of which 15.85 million rode the Intercity trains.[14] Meanwhile, during the same period, ridership on intercity buses fell by 36.8%.[15] As of September 2010, daily ridership averaged 69,000 or an annual rate of 25.2 million.[16] The line has a capacity of delivering 100 million rides annually[17] and initial estimated repayment period of 16 years.[16]

From 2008 to 2013, ridership grew at an annual rate of 20% reaching a cumulative 88 million passengers.[18] In the first half of 2018 the line was carrying over 82,000 passengers each day.[2]

Finances

At the start of construction, an expected ¥12.3 billion (US$1.48 billion) was expected to be invested into the Beijing–Tianjin intercity railway.[19] At the time of construction, the Ministry of Railways and the Tianjian government had each contributed ¥2.6 billion (US$325 million) to the project, while the central government requisitioned land and paid for the resettlement of those affected.[13] However, it would later cost $2.34 billion to build.[20]

As of 2010, the line cost ¥1.8 billion per annum to operate, including ¥0.6 billion in interest payments on its ¥10 billion of loan obligations.[16] The terms of the loans range from 5–10 years at interest rates of 6.3 to 6.8 percent.[16] In its first year of operation from August 1, 2008, to July 31, 2009, the line generated ¥1.1 billion in revenues on 18.7 million rides delivered and incurred a loss of ¥0.7 billion. In the second year, ridership rose to 22.3 million and revenues improved to ¥1.4 billion, which narrowed to below ¥0.5 billion.[16] To break even, the line must deliver 30 million rides annually.[16] To be able to repay principal, ridership would need to exceed 40 million.[16] As of 2012, Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway officially reported to break even financially, defined as operational costs with debt payments is matched with revenue.[21] By 2015, the line is operating with an operational profit.[22]

Long-term planning

Beijing-Tianjin intercity railroad will lead the future liaison line through Nan Cang Bridge to access the intercity field of Tianjin West Station. The Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway Beijing-Tianjin intercity liaison line Nan Cang Special Bridge project starts at the Pu Ji He Dao overpass and extends to the east of Tianjin West Station in a southwesterly direction, with a total length of 4.38 km. In turn, it realizes the connection between Beijing-Tianjin intercity railroad and Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railroad. The liaison line has been basically completed and will be ready for operation after the construction of the intercity field at Tianjin West Station.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "京津城际延伸线开通 京津冀"一小时交通圈"快速推进". 人民网. 北京日报. September 21, 2015. Retrieved September 21, 2015.
  2. ^ a b . xinhuanet.com. Archived from the original on August 13, 2018. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
  3. ^ China inaugurates 220 mph fastest rail service in world in time for Olympics
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on April 26, 2009. Retrieved August 3, 2008.
  5. ^ 曹政 (December 30, 2015). . 北京日报. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 30, 2015.
  6. ^ . tj.leju.com. Archived from the original on December 6, 2017. Retrieved December 5, 2017.
  7. ^ "京津城际延伸线开通 京津冀"一小时交通圈"快速推进--社会--人民网". society.people.com.cn. Retrieved December 5, 2017.
  8. ^ 中国经济网 (August 3, 2018). "京津城际8月8日起按350km/h运行 时间缩短5分钟票价不变". finance.sina.com.cn. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d "京津城际铁路", 维基百科,自由的百科全书 (in Chinese), March 3, 2023, retrieved March 19, 2023
  10. ^ Beijing – Tianjin elevated line anticipates 350 km/h May 16, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Railway Gazette International March 2006
  11. ^ Velaro sets Chinese speed record, Railway Gazette International June 27, 2008
  12. ^ a b c d e f "京津城际铁路", 维基百科,自由的百科全书 (in Chinese), March 3, 2023, retrieved March 16, 2023
  13. ^ a b Dingding, Xin (November 27, 2006). . China Daily. Archived from the original on April 14, 2017. Retrieved April 24, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  14. ^ (Chinese)[http://www.eeo.com.cn/Politics/official/2010/05/20/170492.shtml "发改委回应高铁垄断举报[permanent dead link] 将适时制定高铁正式票价"]May 20, 2010
  15. ^ "Beijing-Tianjin high-speed train has caused 30% decrease in intercity bus transport". CCTV.com. February 9, 2010. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g (Chinese) "不计建设投资 京津高铁今年持平" 经济观察报 September 18, 2010
  17. ^ (Chinese) "4万公里快速铁路网冲刺" 21世纪经济报道 September 30, 2010
  18. ^ "China’s high-speed programme back on track" International Railway Journal January 10, 2013
  19. ^ Yan, Qin (July 4, 2005). . China Daily. Archived from the original on November 15, 2018. Retrieved April 24, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  20. ^ Moxley, Mitch (September 20, 2010). . Inter Press Service English News Wire. Archived from the original on April 18, 2016. Retrieved May 23, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  21. ^ "Bullet trains trigger profit growth for railways" The Irish Times September 25, 2012
  22. ^ "中国高铁盈利地图:东部线路赚翻 中西部巨亏(图)-新华网". news.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved July 3, 2017.

External links

  • Beijing – Tianjin elevated line anticipates 350 km/h May 16, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Railway Gazette International March 2006
  • Beijing-Tianjin High-Speed Commuter Link, China
  • Beijing-Tianjin High-Speed Train Schedule

39°30′19″N 116°49′33″E / 39.5054°N 116.8259°E / 39.5054; 116.8259

beijing, tianjin, intercity, railway, simplified, chinese, 京津城际铁路, traditional, chinese, 京津城際鐵路, pinyin, jīng, jīn, chéngjì, tiělù, chinese, high, speed, railway, that, runs, kilometres, line, between, beijing, tianjin, designed, passenger, traffic, only, chin. The Beijing Tianjin intercity railway simplified Chinese 京津城际铁路 traditional Chinese 京津城際鐵路 pinyin Jing Jin chengji tielu is a Chinese high speed railway that runs 117 kilometres 72 7 mi line between Beijing and Tianjin Designed for passenger traffic only the Chinese government built the line to accommodate trains traveling at a maximum speed of 350 km h 217 mph and currently carries CRH high speed trains running speeds up to 350 km h 217 mph since August 2018 2 Beijing Tianjin intercity railwayA CR400BF high speed train at the Tianjin railway station OverviewNative name京津城际铁路京津高铁StatusOperationalOwnerChina RailwayLocaleNorth China Beijing TianjinTerminiBeijing SouthYujiapuStations9ServiceTypeHigh speed railSystemChina Railway High speedOperator s China Railway Beijing GroupHistoryOpenedAugust 1 2008 2008 08 01 Last extensionSeptember 20 2015 2015 09 20 1 TechnicalLine length161 km 100 mi Number of tracks2 Double track CharacterElevatedTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification25 kV 50 Hz AC Overhead line Operating speed350 km h 220 mph SignallingCTCS 3Route mapLegend0 000 Beijing South21 321 Yizhuang reserved station 45 573 Yongle reserved station 83 242 WuqingTo Tianjin West116 939 TianjinAirport Branchto Tianjin Airport East planned Airport West blockpostJunliangcheng NorthBinhai WestTianjin Qinhuangdao HSRto QinhuangdaoBinhai West blockpostTianjin Shanhaiguan railwayTangguTianjin Shanhaiguan railwayBinhaiWhen the line opened on August 1 2008 it set the record for the fastest conventional train service in the world by top speed and reduced travel time between the two largest cities in northern China from 70 to 30 minutes 3 4 A second phase of construction extended this line from Tianjin to Yujiapu railway station in the Binhai New Area was opened on September 20 2015 1 The line is projected to approach operating capacity in the first half of 2016 Anticipating this a second parallel line the Beijing Binhai intercity railway commenced construction on December 29 2015 5 It will run from Beijing Sub Center railway station to Binhai railway station via Baodi and Tianjin Binhai International Airport along a new route to the northeast of the Beijing Tianjin ICR Contents 1 Route and stations 1 1 Beijing to Tianjin 1 2 Extension to Binhai New Area 2 Service 2 1 Tickets 3 Technical information 4 History 4 1 Preliminary preparation 4 2 Construction history 4 3 Open for operation 5 Ridership 6 Finances 7 Long term planning 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksRoute and stations Edit Viaduct on the Beijing Tianjin intercity railway Beijing to Tianjin Edit From Beijing South railway station the line runs in a southeasterly direction following the Beijing Tianjin Tanggu Expressway to Tianjin It has three intermediate stations at Yizhuang reserved station Yongle reserved station and Wuqing The service has peak speed between cities As an intercity line it will provide train service only between the two metropolitan areas unlike the Beijing Shanghai High Speed Railway which will continue beyond Shanghai The Beijing Tianjin intercity railway has a current length of 116 939 km 72 663 mi fare mileage 120 km 75 mi of which roughly 100 km 62 mi is built on viaducts and the last 17 kilometres 11 mi on an embankment The elevated track ensures level tracks over uneven terrain and eliminates the trains having to slow down to safely navigate through at grade road crossings Tianjin railway stationExtension to Binhai New Area Edit Sometimes known as the Tianjin Binhai intercity railway this 44 68 km 27 76 mi extension continues southeasterly from Tianjin railway station following the conventional railway to Tanggu railway station but built on elevated piers with three new stations were to be added It passes a blockpost at Airport West through Junliangcheng North railway station to Tanggu railway station before entering a tunnel to an underground station Yujiapu railway station 6 Junctions have been built along the line allowing services to branch off to a new station under Tianjin Binhai International Airport and to Binhai West railway station on the Tianjin Qinhuangdao High Speed Railway Trial operations of the extension started on August 14 2015 with official opening on September 20 2015 the railway reduced travel times from Beijing South station to Yujiapu station to 1 hour 02 minutes and from Tianjin railway station to Yujiapu to 23 minutes 7 Yujiapu railway stationService Edit 5100 brand mineral water A passenger can get a complimentary bottle on showing his or her intercity train ticketThese intercity trains are designated by the prefixed C 城 followed by four digits from C2001 to C2298 Of these C2001 C2198 are non stop trains from Beijing South to Tianjin The odd numbers for trains departing from Beijing South and even numbers for those running to Beijing South Trains numbered C2201 C2268 are trains from Beijing South and Tianjin that stop on the way at Wuqing station Trains C2271 C2298 run from Beijing South to Tanggu The line opened on August 1 2008 with 47 daily pairs of intercity trains between Beijing South and Tianjin Since September 14 2008 10 more pairs of trains were added reducing the minimum interval from 15 minutes to 10 minutes On September 24 2008 4 pairs of trains extended to Tanggu along the conventional railway On September 28 2008 2 more pairs of trains were added into service Frequencies have consistently been increased since to cope with rising demand reaching 136 pairs of trains operating daily by 2018 8 In addition to the intercity service 13 pairs of trains were diverted to this line from the preexisting Beijing Shanghai Jinghu Railway including trains from Beijing South to Jinan Qingdao Shanghai and Tianjin West With the opening of the Beijing Shanghai high speed railway these trains have been diverted to the new line Tickets Edit Tickets bought at high speed railway stations are blue magnetic tickets different from the regular pink ticketsManual ticket windows and automatic ticket machines developed by GDT are installed at each station along the Beijing Tianjin intercity railroad including Beijing South Station Tianjin Station and Wuqing Station The vending machines can accept RMB 100 RMB 50 RMB 20 RMB 10 and RMB 5 bills and support payment by bank card As of June 2009 tickets sold through the vending machines have accounted for 24 of all Beijing Tianjin intercity train tickets On March 7 2009 the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway launched the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card which uses a non contact IC card system and can be recharged repeatedly The Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card is divided into two types Ordinary Card and Gold Card The Ordinary Card is priced at RMB 1 000 and can be used in the second class compartment of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway The Gold Card is priced at RMB 3 000 and allows passengers to travel in the first class compartment of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway with the maximum amount of stored value not exceeding RMB 5 000 As of July 22 2009 13 700 Fast pass cards have been sold and the total number of cardholders is 82 000 with the highest number of cardholders on a single train being 93 On June 1 2011 the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Fast pass card system was upgraded to match the real name system of national train tickets and all cardholders are required to bring their original valid IDs otherwise they will not be able to enter the station and ride Since July 22 2012 the former Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card has been discontinued and the newly introduced China Railway Silver Pass Card has replaced the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway Express Card 9 From June 12 2011 online railroad ticketing was first tested on the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway Passengers can pay for their tickets online using bank cards including debit and credit cards from the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China the Agricultural Bank of China the Bank of China and China Merchants Bank or through the China UnionPay online payment system and can make subsequent ticket changes and refunds After purchasing a ticket if passengers use a second generation ID card passengers can use their ID card as a travel voucher to check their ticket directly at the entry exit gates if passengers use other documents or need reimbursement vouchers they can exchange their ID card for a paper ticket at the station ticket window or at a sales outlet 9 On February 6 2017 the mayor of Tianjin Wang Dongfeng said at the symposium of the central media s Beijing Tianjin Hebei Cooperative Development Research Line interview group that the Beijing Tianjin intercity railway is expected to implement a monthly ticket system and from May 1 2017 in order to facilitate the travel of commuters between Beijing and Tianjin China Railway Yin Tong Payment Co China Railway Beijing Tianjin Intercity City Discount Card for frequent commuters of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway who can enjoy certain discounts for a certain number of purchases As of April 30 2018 a total of 20 160 Beijing Tianjin Intercity City Discount Cards were sold including 2 911 gold cards and 17 249 silver cards with a total of 962 600 passengers taking the card 9 Technical information EditThe line is the first railway in China to be built for operational speeds above 300 km h 186 mph This railway line allows speeds up to 350 km h 217 mph 10 A trip between Beijing and Tianjin takes 30 minutes 11 High speed lines113 5 kilometers 70 5 mi of the line is ballast free track using the plate ballast free track technology imported from the German company Borg A total of 36 092 pieces of Borg track plates were used on the whole line In addition in order to save land use the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway uses bridges instead of roads on a large scale with 87 of the entire line being bridges with a cumulative length of 101 km 63 mi including 5 special bridges Each kilometer of bridge can save 30 000 square meters 320 000 sq ft of land compared with the traditional roadbed In addition soft soil loose and soft soil areas roadbed design bridge deformation and foundation settlement control technology are adopted The railroad track uses the advanced welding process of long steel rails and the comprehensive inspection shows that the line quality is stable The expected service life of the ballast free track is 60 years while the service life of the main structure of the bridge is up to 100 years reducing the comprehensive maintenance costs Traction power supplyWhen a high speed train runs at a speed of 350 kilometers per hour 220 mph that is nearly 100 meters per second there are high requirements for the stability of the current receiving between the catenary and the pantograph as well as the power supply equipment for electrified railways The Beijing Tianjin intercity railway adopts SCADA system for remote monitoring and for the first time in China adopts a magnesium copper alloy small cross section 120 mm 4 7 in high tension lightweight simple chain type belt reinforced wire suspension catenary system There are 3 traction substations 4 divisional substations and 2 switching substations along the whole line 12 Communication Signal and DispatchThe Beijing Tianjin intercity railroad adopts GSM R railroad digital mobile communication system for the whole line which realizes mobile voice communication and wireless data transmission it also uses ETCS 1 level and CTCS 2 level signaling systems as well as CTCS 3D China high speed railroad train control terrestrial digital transmission system level signaling system and the minimum departure interval is designed to be 3 minutes In terms of operation scheduling Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway applies decentralized self regulating dispatching centralized system CTC to realize centralized dispatching control for trains running on the whole line 12 Safety and securityIn order to avoid natural disasters affecting the safety of railroad traffic the whole line of Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway has established a disaster prevention and safety monitoring system including wind warning monitoring earthquake monitoring system and foreign object intrusion monitoring In addition the whole railroad line also has a comprehensive grounding system ballastless track contact network columns station platforms sound barriers retaining walls are connected to ground History EditThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available January 2018 Preliminary preparation Edit In February 2002 Binglian Liu a professor at Nankai University in Tianjin first proposed the construction of a high speed railroad between Beijing and Tianjin during a discussion on the Beijing Tianjin Economic Integration Strategy Study and Proposal In June 2003 the Ministry of Railways and the municipal governments of Beijing and Tianjin began preliminary discussions In January 2004 the executive meeting of the State Council adopted the Medium and Long Term Railway Network Plan in which the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway was included and on October 24 2004 the Ministry of Railways Beijing Municipal Government and Tianjin Municipal Government jointly determined the route plan On March 3 2005 Zhijun Liu Minister of Railway Qishan Wang Mayor of Beijing and Xianglong Dai Mayor of Tianjin co chaired the meeting of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Rail Transit System Construction Leading Group The meeting determined the financing method of the railroad construction 12 Construction history Edit On July 4 2005 the construction of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway officially started The entire Beijing Tianjin intercity rail transit system construction project adopts the two points and one line construction strategy which is divided into three parts the Beijing Tianjin intercity railway Beijing South Railway Station and Tianjin Station transportation hub reconstruction project which are carried out simultaneously In August 2007 the roadbed and bridge works were completed On October 31 2007 the track Borg board laying was completed On November 13 2007 the laying of the track began The 100 meter long steel rails used on the entire line of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway are all produced by Panzhihua Iron and Steel Company with a total weight of 27 000 tons and the 500 meter long steel rails are welded on site On December 16 2007 the entire track was laid On December 19 2007 the construction of the electrified catenary under the charge of the China Railway Electrification Bureau was in full swing On February 2 2008 the electrification project was completed and the grid began to be electrified In March 2008 the construction of the Beijing Tianjin intercity railway entered the stage of system joint debugging and joint testing including four parts EMU type test integration test comprehensive test and trial operation On May 13 2008 a CRH2C electric multiple units from Beijing South Railway Station to Tianjin Railway Station created the fastest speed of a wheel rail train in China at that time at a speed of 372 kilometers per hour during the test On June 24 2008 a CRH3C EMU reached a speed of 394 3 kilometers per hour during the test on the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway breaking the record set by the CRH2C EMU on May 13 And refresh the highest speed of China s current wheel rail train On July 1 2008 the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway began trial operation without carrying passengers according to the official operating conditions to verify the tracking interval of trains the interval between trains receiving and departing at stations etc and at the same time arrange simulated equipment failures and emergency response in bad weather drill 12 Open for operation Edit The Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway was officially opened to traffic on August 1 2008 with Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang Beijing Municipal Party Secretary Liu Qi and Tianjin Municipal Party Secretary Zhang Gaoli attending the opening ceremony On September 27 2008 Premier Wen Jiabao visited the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway and put forward the requirements of quality energy saving land saving and environmental protection for the railroad construction On March 4 2009 Hong Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang visited Tianjin by the Beijing Tianjin Intercity High speed Train and on August 1 2009 the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway celebrated its first anniversary of operation Within one year the Beijing Tianjin intercity high speed trains sent a total of 18 7 million passengers the train punctuality rate reached 98 the average train occupancy rate reached nearly 70 and more than 200 heads of state dignitaries and railroad inspection teams from all over the world including the United States Russia and Japan visited the Beijing Tianjin intercity railroad 12 On October 1 2009 construction of the Beijing Tianjin Intercity Extension or Jinbin Intercity Railway began with an estimated 40 minutes from Beijing South Station to Binhai Station in the core area of Binhai New Area The Yujiapu extension opened on September 20 2015 and the Beijing Tianjin intercity train no longer travels the Jinshan Railway when running between the central city of Tianjin and the core area of the Binhai New Area and the running time has been significantly shortened 12 Ridership EditBefore the line was finished it was expected that the railway line would handle 32 million passengers in 2008 and 54 million passengers in 2015 13 The line opened on August 1 2008 just before the opening of the 2008 Summer Olympics which held some football matches in Tianjin The introduction of high speed rail service significantly boosted rail travel between the two cities In 2007 conventional train service between Beijing and Tianjin delivered 8 3 million rides In the first year of high speed rail service from August 2008 to July 2009 total rail passenger volume between Beijing and Tianjin reached 18 7 million of which 15 85 million rode the Intercity trains 14 Meanwhile during the same period ridership on intercity buses fell by 36 8 15 As of September 2010 daily ridership averaged 69 000 or an annual rate of 25 2 million 16 The line has a capacity of delivering 100 million rides annually 17 and initial estimated repayment period of 16 years 16 From 2008 to 2013 ridership grew at an annual rate of 20 reaching a cumulative 88 million passengers 18 In the first half of 2018 the line was carrying over 82 000 passengers each day 2 Finances EditAt the start of construction an expected 12 3 billion US 1 48 billion was expected to be invested into the Beijing Tianjin intercity railway 19 At the time of construction the Ministry of Railways and the Tianjian government had each contributed 2 6 billion US 325 million to the project while the central government requisitioned land and paid for the resettlement of those affected 13 However it would later cost 2 34 billion to build 20 As of 2010 the line cost 1 8 billion per annum to operate including 0 6 billion in interest payments on its 10 billion of loan obligations 16 The terms of the loans range from 5 10 years at interest rates of 6 3 to 6 8 percent 16 In its first year of operation from August 1 2008 to July 31 2009 the line generated 1 1 billion in revenues on 18 7 million rides delivered and incurred a loss of 0 7 billion In the second year ridership rose to 22 3 million and revenues improved to 1 4 billion which narrowed to below 0 5 billion 16 To break even the line must deliver 30 million rides annually 16 To be able to repay principal ridership would need to exceed 40 million 16 As of 2012 Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway officially reported to break even financially defined as operational costs with debt payments is matched with revenue 21 By 2015 the line is operating with an operational profit 22 Long term planning EditBeijing Tianjin intercity railroad will lead the future liaison line through Nan Cang Bridge to access the intercity field of Tianjin West Station The Beijing Shanghai high speed railway Beijing Tianjin intercity liaison line Nan Cang Special Bridge project starts at the Pu Ji He Dao overpass and extends to the east of Tianjin West Station in a southwesterly direction with a total length of 4 38 km In turn it realizes the connection between Beijing Tianjin intercity railroad and Beijing Shanghai high speed railroad The liaison line has been basically completed and will be ready for operation after the construction of the intercity field at Tianjin West Station 9 See also EditFastest trains in ChinaReferences Edit a b 京津城际延伸线开通 京津冀 一小时交通圈 快速推进 人民网 北京日报 September 21 2015 Retrieved September 21 2015 a b 京津城际时速将恢复至350公里 车票价格不变 新华网 xinhuanet com Archived from the original on August 13 2018 Retrieved January 6 2021 China inaugurates 220 mph fastest rail service in world in time for Olympics Sify News China to open world s fastest rail line ahead of Olympics Archived from the original on April 26 2009 Retrieved August 3 2008 曹政 December 30 2015 京唐京滨城际先期工程昨开工 明年上半年全线建设 北京日报 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 30 2015 京津城际延伸线年内铺轨 市区至于家堡15分钟到 土地 天津乐居网 tj leju com Archived from the original on December 6 2017 Retrieved December 5 2017 京津城际延伸线开通 京津冀 一小时交通圈 快速推进 社会 人民网 society people com cn Retrieved December 5 2017 中国经济网 August 3 2018 京津城际8月8日起按350km h运行 时间缩短5分钟票价不变 finance sina com cn Retrieved January 6 2021 a b c d 京津城际铁路 维基百科 自由的百科全书 in Chinese March 3 2023 retrieved March 19 2023 Beijing Tianjin elevated line anticipates 350 km h Archived May 16 2012 at the Wayback Machine Railway Gazette International March 2006 Velaro sets Chinese speed record Railway Gazette International June 27 2008 a b c d e f 京津城际铁路 维基百科 自由的百科全书 in Chinese March 3 2023 retrieved March 16 2023 a b Dingding Xin November 27 2006 High speed rail to link Beijing Tianjin before Games China Daily Archived from the original on April 14 2017 Retrieved April 24 2015 via HighBeam Research Chinese http www eeo com cn Politics official 2010 05 20 170492 shtml 发改委回应高铁垄断举报 permanent dead link 将适时制定高铁正式票价 May 20 2010 Beijing Tianjin high speed train has caused 30 decrease in intercity bus transport CCTV com February 9 2010 Retrieved February 19 2010 a b c d e f g Chinese 不计建设投资 京津高铁今年持平 经济观察报 September 18 2010 Chinese 4万公里快速铁路网冲刺 21世纪经济报道 September 30 2010 China s high speed programme back on track International Railway Journal January 10 2013 Yan Qin July 4 2005 High speed rail link making tracks China Daily Archived from the original on November 15 2018 Retrieved April 24 2015 via HighBeam Research Moxley Mitch September 20 2010 China Massive Rail Network to Cross Continents Inter Press Service English News Wire Archived from the original on April 18 2016 Retrieved May 23 2015 via HighBeam Research Bullet trains trigger profit growth for railways The Irish Times September 25 2012 中国高铁盈利地图 东部线路赚翻 中西部巨亏 图 新华网 news xinhuanet com Retrieved July 3 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Beijing Tianjin Intercity Railway Beijing Tianjin elevated line anticipates 350 km h Archived May 16 2012 at the Wayback Machine Railway Gazette International March 2006 Beijing Tianjin High Speed Commuter Link China Beijing Tianjin High Speed Train Schedule 39 30 19 N 116 49 33 E 39 5054 N 116 8259 E 39 5054 116 8259 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beijing Tianjin intercity railway amp oldid 1147388522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.