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PNR North Main Line

The PNR North Main Line (Filipino: Pangunahing Linyang Pahilaga ng PNR, simply known as PNR North or Northrail) is one of the two trunk lines of the Philippine National Railways in the island of Luzon, the other being the PNR South Main Line. The line during its maximum extent led to various cities and municipalities in Central Luzon and the Ilocos Region.

PNR North Main Line
Solis station in 2011
Overview
Native namePangunahing Linyang Pahilaga ng PNR
StatusOperational[a]
OwnerPhilippine National Railways
LocaleMetro Manila
Central Luzon
Ilocos Region
Cordillera (until 1945)
Termini
Continues asPNR South Main Line
Stations6
Websitewww.pnr.gov.ph
Service
TypeCommuter rail
SystemPNR Luzon
Services2
Depot(s)Caloocan
Rolling stockPNR Hyundai Rotem DMU
8000 class DMUs
History
OpenedNovember 24, 1892; 130 years ago (1892-11-24)
Closed1997; 26 years ago (1997)
ReopenedAugust 1, 2018; 4 years ago (2018-08-01)
Technical
Line length6.4 km (4.0 mi)
Track length12.8 km (8.0 mi)
Number of tracksDouble-track
Single-track with sidings (former)
CharacterAt-grade
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Operating speed40 km/h (25 mph)

The project was originally proposed in 1875 during the Spanish era, and was constructed in stages between the 1880s and the 1890s as the Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan (lit.'Manila–Dagupan Railroad'). The line was opened to Dagupan, Pangasinan on November 24, 1892. Further extensions to the line reached as far as Bacnotan, La Union with passenger trains terminating at San Fernando U station in the provincial capitol. It also briefly reached Sudipen near the provincial border with Ilocos Sur during World War II but was later dismantled in 1945.

Services peaked in the 1960s and the early 1970s until several factors such as fierce competition with the national highway system, increasing maintenance costs, natural disasters and the 1997 Asian financial crisis eventually led to the closure of the line in the late 1990s. The line only served as a connection for trains returning to the Caloocan depot. After 21 years of inactivity, services on the North Main Line resumed on August 1, 2018, with the reopening of Solis station in Tondo, Manila. More stations opened for the next few months with the latest being Governor Pascual on December 3 that year.

Like its counterpart to the south, the line is also slated to be rebuilt. The North–South Commuter Railway (NSCR) is being constructed in the area of Bulacan. Once completed, it will connect Tutuban station with Clark International Airport in Pampanga, and New Clark City in Tarlac. To its west of the line is the Subic–Clark railway which will initially be built for freight trains between the Subic Special Economic and Freeport Zone and Clark Airport with an extension to New Clark City. Other railroad lines that are separate from the NSCR are collectively referred as the PNR North Long Haul. Currently, this last project is still being proposed.

History

The railroad network in Luzon, predecessor to today's Philippine National Railways, was first proposed on August 6, 1875. To the north of Manila are two main lines, one leading to Laoag, Ilocos Norte and the other leading to Tuguegarao, Cagayan. The system was approved by the Spanish East Indies government in 1880, but construction did not commence until 1887 due to the lack of a concession operator.[1] Unlike the South Main Line which was built to its planned terminus in Legazpi, Albay, the North Main Line network never reached its intended termini in Laoag for the northwestern line and Tuguegarao for the northeastern line.

Spanish era

 
One of the early trains of the Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan, taken c. 1880s.

The Manila Railway Company, Limited was created on June 1, 1887, and construction began.[1] Initial site inspection was presided by Lieutenant Colonel José Gago y Palomo (1849–1908), who was renowned for building fortifications and trails in Mindanao for Spanish Army General Valeriano Weyler.[2] According to Gary Satre on an investigative article in 1999, the use of 3 feet, 6 inches gauge was made both as a cost-cutting measure and to allow tighter curves in order to suit the island's mountainous terrain.[3] One of the main obstacles in the construction stage is crossing the Rio Grande de Pampanga, after which a box truss bridge was built.[1]

At the same time, several tank locomotives were ordered by the Manila Railway. This began with an order for 2 Manila Railway Manila class locomotives in 1886 from English manufacturer Hunslet Engine Company. These were later named Manila and Dagupan after the line's two planned termini.[4] Between 1888 and 1890, thirty Manila Railway Dagupan class locomotives were ordered from Neilson and Company and Dübs and Company.[5] Various passenger railcars and boxcars were also ordered from unknown British manufacturers.

Prior to the opening of the full length of the line to Pangasinan, José Rizal was one of the most popular commuters of the early Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan. He used the line to recruit potential La Liga Filipina members prior to his exile. On February 23, 1892, he took a train to San Fernando station in Pampanga.[6] He then commuted to various other locations in Central Luzon, until he took his last train with a 120 km (75 mi) trip to Tarlac on June 26. He wrote that the trip took 5 hours, 40 minutes. This was 2 weeks prior to his exile to Dapitan.[3] On November 24, 1892, the line to Dagupan was inaugurated.[7]

Revolutionary and American era

 
Aguinaldo's railcar c. 1898. The train was one of Aguinaldo's ways to retreat.

Manila Railway trains were used by both the Philippine Revolutionary Army and the United States Army forces during the Philippine–American War. President Emilio Aguinaldo and his cabinet ministers used First Class car Z4 as their primary method of travel on the railroad, especially during their retreat to northern Luzon.[8] On the other hand, the advancing American forces used the Manila Railway to carry freight and Army soldiers. Trains were also used as mobile hospitals, carrying soldiers who were either injured or killed during the fighting.[9] A river bridge in Bamban, Tarlac was destroyed along with one of the Dagupan class locomotives used by the US Army. This is to prevent the American advance to Central Luzon.[10] However, the efforts to sabotage the network were futile as Filipino forces were eventually defeated and President Aguinaldo was captured in 1901.[11]

After the war, the network was repaired and expanded. The British owners were still allowed to operate for the following years, having reorganized into the Manila Railway Company (1906) Limited.[12] Meanwhile, an American operator named the Manila Railroad Company (MRR) Corporation was established in New Jersey that same year.[13]

By 1909, the Manila Railroad took control of the system, although Horace L. Higgins still leads as its general manager in the country and the Annual Report was still prepared with British conventions.[13] New lines were defined by Insular Government Act No. 1905 as the Northern Lines. This include the Manila–Dagupan main line, the Antipolo branch of the Southern Lines, the Cabanatuan branch, the Fort Stotsenburg branch, and shortline railroads serving the Port of Manila and within Dagupan.[14]

The Baguio Special, the Philippines' first named express train service, was inaugurated in 1911. Originally only stopping at Damortis in Rosario, La Union with a luxury car service heading for the hill station of Baguio, this train started the scramble for a direct rail service.[15] Construction for the Aringay–Baguio line started in 1914 but was never finished and the tunnel leading to the city was never completed, citing British involvement in World War I as the reason.[16] This later made the Manila Railway's remaining Philippine unit to be absorbed into the Manila Railroad on January 8, 1917, with general manager Horace L. Higgins replaced by Colonel Henry Bayard McCoy.[17]

Under McCoy's leadership, the Manila Railroad modernized its locomotive fleet with the purchase of several American-built tender locomotives over the next few years. Meanwhile, the American Car and Foundry provided both regular passenger and sleeping cars, starting with the new Baguio Night Special service.[18] After his death in 1923, he was then succeeded by Jose Paez, the first Filipino general manager of the company. Paez continued the fleet modernization started by McCoy as well as expanded the network to its established termini at San Fernando, La Union on March 16, 1929, and a seamless network to the Bicol Region was opened on May 8, 1938.[19]

World War II and Japanese occupation

Although the line was damaged after the First Philippines campaign during World War II, the Japanese briefly extended it to Sudipen near the La UnionIlocos Sur border, some 41.6 kilometers (25.8 miles) north of San Fernando. After the Second Philippines campaign, the line has been closed. The line was eventually dismantled so that track materials would give way for the reconstruction of the Main Line South's network.[20] Additionally, the Aringay–Tuba section of the Baguio line was closed and the 300 class rack tank locomotives used for this service were scrapped in 1945.[21] However, the tracks remained by as late as the 1960s and were built over by paddy fields.[16]

Post-war era

Only over a third of the Manila Railroad system was usable after the war, amounting to 452 km (281 mi).[22] Around eighty percent of its rolling stock were also destroyed.[23] The system was eventually rebuilt, but not all branch lines were restored.

In 1951, Ramon Magsaysay was appointed as general manager of the Manila Railroad. Under Magsaysay's term as general manager despite being only three months, made the company extend its network to Bacnotan. He would also preside the beginning of the Cagayan Valley extension.[3] Magsaysay later became the President of the Philippines in 1953 and under his term, the Manila Railroad underwent another fleet modernization. Its entire steam locomotive fleet will be replaced by diesel locomotives starting in 1954. In August 1956, the modernization has been completed and all steam locomotives were relegated to maintenance work or retired altogether.[24] Yards along the North Main Line in Pampanga became the storage location of these locomotives until they were all scrapped in the 1960s and onwards.[25]

PNR era

 
Construction on the North–South Commuter Railway in Malolos, Bulacan. Originally proposed in 1978, the project's previous forms were repeatedly constructed and abandoned by as late as 2011.

By 1964, the Manila Railroad was reorganized and renamed into the present Philippine National Railways. The renaming took inspiration from the Japanese National Railways. The early days of the PNR was also claimed to be the agency's golden years. While operations were smaller in scale to its southern counterpart, the North Main Line was still a popular means of travel leading out of Metro Manila. The line sought an estimated daily ridership of 3,000 passengers.[22]

Decline and closure

 
Abandoned Northrail rail tracks along Caloocan in January 2014

The 1970s were the beginning of the decline of operations on the North Main Line. The Cagayan Valley extension was never fully realized and PNR trains only terminated at San Jose, Nueva Ecija. The tunnel boring machines were then sold-off as debt payment for the project, and track work has been reverted into roads. A later investigation found that the Marcos government transferred the funds to the construction of the Maharlika Highway.[3] The 1980s started the closure of the line due to decreasing ridership. A bridge collapse in 1984 ordered the closure of the services to the Ilocos Region. The line was then reduced to Caloocan in 1988, leaving the South Main Line the only operational intercity line at that point.[22] There was a brief return of a commuter rail service to Malolos as part of the Metrotren program between 1990 and 1997.[26]

Since then, the Ramos administration took advantage of the recently closed North Main Line to revitalize plans to electrify the commuter rail service in Metro Manila. The project was originally proposed by the Japan International Cooperation Agency in 1978.[27] This was named as the Manila–Clark rapid railway project with the assistance of Spain.[28][29] Construction continued as the Northrail project during the presidency of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, but stopped during the presidency of Benigno Aquino III due to disagreements with its Chinese backers. The project was never completed and ended like the failed Hopewell Project of Bangkok, Thailand.[30] It was not until the 2010s when the present form was realized as the North–South Commuter Railway.

 
The Silangan Railway Express 2000 project would have connected northern Quezon with Metro Manila.

Another railway project was also proposed during the late 1990s as part of the Philippines 2000 program under President Ramos. In 1995, the Manila–Rizal–Laguna–Quezon Growth Corridor (MARILAQUE) was proposed and the MARILAQUE Commission was established for the development of the area. They were tasked by the national government to implement the Silangan Railway Express 2000 project. The 95 km (59 mi) line would have connected the northern half of Metro Manila to Rizal similar to the pre-war Antipolo and Marikina lines. It would then be extended eastward towards eastern Rizal province and northern Quezon, both more rural than the areas once plied by the two aforementioned lines.[31] While plans continued under the term of President Joseph Estrada with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) by as late as 1999, it never materialized and was not considered to be built by future administrations.[32]

Reopening and contemporary history

There were no services on the North Main Line during much of the 2000s, although the line was still used for trains heading to PNR's maintenance facility in Caloocan. Trial service on the North Main Line were planned later on. Between 2009 and 2010, PNR stations were renovated including a number of stations on the North Main Line. Some second-hand 12 series coaches were also acquired from the East Japan Railway Company as the NR class. These coaches were later reassigned to the South Main Line.[33] Despite these initial plans not continuing as planned, the line was eventually reactivated. A Shuttle Service was opened from 10th Avenue station in Caloocan to Dela Rosa station in Makati on August 1, 2018.[34] Since then, a regular Metro North Commuter service has been opened and the Shuttle Service was expanded to Bicutan station in Parañaque.[35] Since 2020, the newly purchased PNR 8000 class diesel multiple units were then assigned to the line and replaced second-hand KiHa 350s and KiHa 52s DMUs.[36]

Station list

The North Main Line currently only has stations within northern Metro Manila, though it previously had stations in Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Pangasinan and La Union. Branch lines also led to Nueva Ecija, while tracks and track bed were already placed in Isabela and Cagayan prior to the Cagayan Valley extension project's cancellation in the 1970s.

Services

Only two commuter rail services run on the North Main Line, both of which only operate within Metro Manila. This is unlike its counterpart to the south that would have some trains lead to neighboring Laguna province during rush hour.[35]

Active

There are only two services that run on the North Main Line as of 2019:[35]

Defunct

The North Main Line hosted both intercity and commuter trains like its southern counterpart. While its intercity services have been discontinued since 1988 and much of the right of way has been converted to roads, its commuter service was reconstructed and reopened in 2018. However, not all of its historic commuter operations are in active service and these are set to be replaced within the 2020s either by rapid transit or the NSCR.

Commuter rail

There were several commuter rail services leading in and out of Manila on the North Main Line during its history. Some of the lines were eventually closed, and their reconstruction were later deemed unnecessary to restore because of existing rapid transit infrastructure from other systems.

  • The first known commuter rail branch on the North Main Line was the Antipolo line. Inaugurated in 1908, it connected Antipolo, Manila province to downtown Manila via Santa Mesa. Services on this line were hauled by specialized tank locomotives due to its steep gradients such as the Manila Railroad 160 class KitsonMeyer locomotives. This was however closed in 1917 after a Supreme Court of the Philippines ruling that ordered the closure of the line.[37] The return of train services to Rizal were proposed later on, the latest being the LRT Line 2 eastward extension to Antipolo (Masinag). The extension opened on July 5, 2021, replacing the old Antipolo line.
    • The Marikina branch was finished earlier than the Antipolo line in 1906 to Marikina, but was closed much later. The line branched off the Antipolo line in Marikina and led to Montalban. After the Antipolo line was closed in 1917, the line was closed in 1936 at the same time with the Naic line to Cavite.[38] The section up to Marikina is also set to be replaced by the LRT Line 2 eastward extension.
    • The Guadalupe line was the 13 km (8.1 mi) reconstruction of the old Antipolo line in the 1970s from Santa Mesa, Manila to Mandaluyong. It terminated at Guadalupe station, but it was located on the other side of the Pasig River as its namesake district in Makati.[39] The line was closed in 1983 after only 9 years of operations, and the rail bridge that carried the line was destroyed in 1991. The area in which the Guadalupe line operated has now been covered by the LRT Line 2 and the MRT Line 3.
  • There was also a once-a-day service between Tutuban and San Fernando. It was opened on January 21, 1968. The service took around 2 hours in 1976, in which it was extended to Angeles.[40] The service was closed in 1988 with the closure of the entire North Main Line outside of Metro Manila. This service in particular shall be superseded by the NSCR North, which will extend services further to New Clark City in Capas, Tarlac.
  • The last commuter service on the line out of Metro Manila was the Metrotren Tutuban–Malolos service. Inaugurated not long after the closure of the commuter service to Pampanga in 1990, the service led to Malolos, Bulacan. However, it was short-lived and was closed amidst the 1997 Asian financial crisis.[26] This service shall also be superseded by the NSCR North with Malolos as the terminus of Phase 1.

Intercity rail

The North Main Line was first opened when the Manila–Dagupan Railway was opened in 1892. At its height between the 1950s and 1960s, the line went from Tutuban to Dagupan and also served until San Fernando, La Union. The line also boasted several rail yards. It also had branch lines to various areas in Central Luzon. However, its services severely deteriorated in the 1980s. All regular operations outside Metro Manila first ended in 1988,[41] and the line was closed in 1997.

Amianan Express

The Amianan Express was a night train service that opened in 1974. It left Manila by 11 PM and arrived in San Fernando by 4:30 AM the next day. It was serviced by then-new PNR 900 class diesel-electric locomotives and five coaches capable of seating 912 people. After ending in San Fernando station, commuters would take the bus to Ilocos Norte and Sur, and Benguet. Later, it was expanded into two services, the Amianan Day Express and the Amianan Night Express. The Amianan Night Express ran faster than its day counterpart, the Amianan Day Express, making the 260 km (160 mi) run to San Fernando, La Union in five hours.[42]

Baguio train-road services
 
1912 Stanley Motor Carriage Model 88 Mountain Wagon similar to the Benguet Auto Line vehicles traveling Kennon Road in the early 20th century.

The difficulty of terrain to build new train lines prevented both MRR and PNR to have direct train services to Baguio City, then a small hill station in the Cordillera Region. There were already plans for a rail line to the town, but was ultimately cancelled in 1917 due to lack of funding.

  • The first train service was the Baguio Special (Spanish: Manila a Baguio Especial, lit.'Manila–Baguio Special'[43]). It was inaugurated in 1911 and was the country's first flagship service. The train initially stopped in Pangasinan until the line was later extended to Damortis station in Santo Tomas, La Union.[44] From here, limousines would take travelers to Baguio. This service was extremely popular that Damortis went through an overhaul in 1938 to support the demand of travelers.[45]
  • A second service was inaugurated by the MRR by around 1955. Passengers would ride the train from Tutuban to Damortis station in Santo Tomas, La Union, then will ride a limousine service of Chevrolet Bel Airs to Pines Hotel in Baguio. It costed ₱45 (equivalent to $217 in 2020 US Dollars) for this package.[47]
  • The third and last service was opened during the PNR era with a bus service leading to Baguio, with buses provided by Hino Motors. This service operated until all provincial services on the North Main Line were suspended by late 1984, when all trains to the Ilocos Region were suspended.[48]
Dagupan Express

The Dagupan Express opened on February 10, 1979. It was serviced by the MCBP class diesel multiple units, the intercity version of the MC-300 multiple units of 1968. Like the Amianan Express, the Dagupan Express also ended in 1984 after all North Main Line services terminated in Tarlac.[49]

Ilocos Express

The Ilocos Express was inaugurated on March 15, 1930. The services includes a dining car with catering provided by the Manila Hotel. Another variant of the service was the Baguio-Ilocos Express. Following the modernization program of the Manila Railway Company in 1955, the Ilocos Express featured a 7A class "De Luxe" coach until 1979, when the lack of operable air-conditioned coaches caused a switch to a "Tourist"-class coach. The company also operated the Paniqui Express in the 1930s, but that was eclipsed by the Ilocos Express. There were two accidents involving the service, one in 1939 and another in 1959.[50]

It was also known as the Ilocos Special on Spanish language promotional material. Such services were intended to connect Tutuban and Manila within 6 hours using newly-refurbished locomotives that burn fuel oil instead of coal.[51]

Rolling stock

Due to the North Main Line only running a few kilometers north to Malabon, the line runs relatively few trains. The line currently uses PNR Hyundai Rotem DMUs, 203 series and PNR 8000 class trainsets.[36] Ex-JNR rolling stock such as KiHa 35 and KiHa 52 have been out of service for the line.[52]

Reconstruction

PNR North Luzon Railways Program
Overview
StatusUnder construction (NSCR)
OwnerPhilippine National Railways
LocaleMetro Manila
Central Luzon
Termini
Stations20 (NSCR)
Service
TypeUrban rail transit (S-train)
Inter-city rail
SystemPNR Luzon
Services5
Operator(s)Philippine National Railways
Daily ridership490,000[c]
History
Opened2024 (NSCR)
Technical
Line length721 km (448 mi)[d]
Track lengthAt least 812 km (505 mi)
Number of tracksDouble-track (NSCR)
Single-track (SCRP)
CharacterGrade-separated
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification1,500 V DC OHLE
Operating speed160 km/h (99 mph)

The Build! Build! Build! Infrastructure Program provided an overview of the planned system in northern and central Luzon. All new lines are standard-gauge railways.

NSCR North

The North section of the North–South Commuter Railway, also known as NSCR North and PNR Clark, is a 91 km (57 mi) section that shall rebuild the historic commuter services to Malolos in Bulacan, as well as San Fernando and Angeles City in Pampanga before terminating at Clark International Airport. The line shall also be extended to New Clark City,[53] with a targeted opening date between 2023 and 2025.[54]

Development started after the old Northrail project was cancelled when the Department of Transportation and Communications attempted to reactivate the construction of a new electrified commuter rail line. Canadian firm CPCS Transcom Limited was commissioned to conduct a feasibility study for a Malolos–Los Baños commuter line as part of a larger effort to reform Metro Manila's public transport system.[55][56] This was eventually approved as the North–South Railway Project (NSRP) in 2014.[57] In August 2015, the track gauge for the NSRP was changed from standard gauge to 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) narrow gauge so there will be no need of an overhaul of the existing network.[58] This was later reverted to standard gauge after the North–South Commuter Railway in its present form was announced on June 1, 2018.[59]

Construction

Pre-construction work such as clearing of the right of way was started on January 6, 2018. The groundbreaking and construction from Tutuban to Malolos started on February 15, 2019.[60] The contract for the construction of NSCR North 1 was awarded to the Filipino-Japanese consortium of DMCI Holdings and Taisei Corporation on May 21, 2019.[61][62] The contract for the construction of the railway viaduct from Tutuban to Bocaue was awarded in December 2020 to Swiss firm VSL International, a subsidiary of French conglomerate Bouygues.[63] NSCR North 2 was then awarded starting in August 2020 to various consortiums of local and international companies.[64][65][66][67]

On April 12, 2021, clearing works began for the new Calumpit station in Barangay Iba Oeste (West), Calumpit, Bulacan. The three-floor building will be the first station to be constructed for the NSCR North Phase 2.[68] Prior to May, construction work for Apalit station commenced. As of May 1, concrete pouring has been completed on some of the piers while geotechnical engineering work are still ongoing.[69]

Electric stock

The NSCR will be the PNR's first electrified mainline. With this move to electrification, the DOTr has allotted a total of 360 electric multiple units for this service. The first batch of 104 Sustina Commuter EMUs commuter trains were already ordered from the Japan Transport Engineering Company. Another batch of 200 commuter EMUs and 56 airport express trains are also being procured.[70][71]

Northeast Commuter Line

PNR requested a feasibility study for the reconstruction of the old Cabanatuan branch line in January 2019. Once approved, this will become the Northeast Commuter Line. It will start on NSCR tracks in Makati and will branch off the main line at Balagtas station in Bulacan. The line proper will continue for at least 92 km (57 mi) northeast towards Nueva Ecija, ending at the city of Cabanatuan.[72] There are also plans for an extension to San Jose, Nueva Ecija, sealing a loop with the NSCR northward extension there.[73]

The Environmental Protection Division (Enro) of Cabanatuan held a stakeholders' consultation meeting on July 29, 2020. This also announced that the line has 17 stations with the extension to San Jose. At Guiguinto, the line will take a new right-of-way compared to the old Cabanatuan line.[74] At San Rafael, Bulacan, the Northeast Commuter will then follow the old route to Cabanatuan. Another new route will be built towards San Jose. This will join with the Tarlac–San Jose extension of the NSCR (NSCR North 4) towards North Long Haul East, which will then terminate at Tuguegarao.[75]

PNR general manager Junn Magno stated on an interview with local TV show Motoring Today on February 7, 2021, that the agency is still developing proposals for the line. Once completed, it will shorten travel times between job centers in Metro Manila and commuter towns in eastern Bulacan within 55 to 60 minutes.[52]

Freight railroads

  • The Subic–Clark Railway (SCRP) is a line to be constructed between the Subic Special Economic and Freeport Zone and Clark International Airport. The 71 km (44 mi) railroad shall be built initially with a single track and to be operated with diesel locomotives, accommodating solely for freight trains between the two freeport zones. The maximum speed for the initial line is 80 km/h (50 mph). The current right-of-way already has an allowance for upgrade to double-track and an electrified system. Under these upgrades shall passenger services be included, with a maximum speed of 160 km/h (99 mph).[76] Once successful, this project shall pave the way for the construction of the PNR North Long Haul.[77]
  • The North Philippine Dry Port Container Rail Transport Service, or simply the North Dry Port is a proposed 27 km (17 mi) single-track freight line connecting the Manila North Harbor with the upcoming Balagtas Dry Port in Balagtas, Bulacan.[78] This will reconstruct the present North Main Line infrastructure as well as the branch line leading to the North Harbor that was already dismantled. There are also plans to connect it with the Subic–Clark Railway[79] for an estimated total length of 86 km (53 mi).[78] As of February 2021, the project is still in the proposal stage with its feasibility study still being made.[52] The track gauge for this system is yet to be determined, although a maximum speed of 80 km/h (50 mph) was selected for the line.[79]

Both rail lines shall be interconnected to the North Long Haul via the Subic–Clark Railway, and to the South Long Haul via the overhaul of the existing tracks of the PNR Metro Commuter Line.[80]

Freight stock

The diesel-electric locomotive to be used for the service is yet to be determined. It is expected that there will be four- and six-axle designs capable of at least 80 km/h (50 mph) operational speed. Meanwhile, the freight cars are classified into two categories: containerized and non-containerized. The average train lengths are between 250–350 meters (820–1,150 ft) for the initial phase while 650 meters (2,130 ft) will be the trains' maximum allowable length per the design of the line.[81]

In 2016, promotional images use the China Railways HXN5 as a sample rolling stock for the line.[82]

North Long Haul

The North Long Haul project shall revive the intercity section of the North Main Line north of New Clark City station in Capas. It shall also expand into regions that were not served by railways. The line is set to be connected to the South Main Line through the NSCR, the SCRP and the North Dry Port projects.[52]

A majority of the project's main lines have been proposed since 1875, long before intercity services were opened in 1892. The Cagayan Valley Extension, predecessor to the North Long Haul East, initially had some of its right of way built in the 1950s and 1960s. However, construction was cancelled after 1966 and the equipment used was later sold.[3] Contemporary efforts to reviving the North Main Line were first announced in 2017 during a DOTr's presentation to the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[83] It is expected that the system will be electrified with 1.5 kV DC electrification, being future extensions of the NSCR North and the SCRP. The upgrades shall happen once enough traffic has been reached to justify their implementation.[77]

The system consists of two lines:

  • The North Long Haul West is a reconstruction of the old North Main Line between New Clark City and La Union. The line is expected to be around 159 km (99 mi) long, shortened from the former length of 175 km (109 mi) due to changes in design.[83]
  • The North Long Haul East aims to revive the failed Cagayan Valley Extension project that was cancelled in the late 1960s. Branching off the old main line at Tarlac City, the line will continue towards the direction of San Jose, Nueva Ecija from which the 10 km (6.2 mi) Caraballo Tunnel will be built. After the tunnel, the line continues northward to Isabela and Cagayan until it terminates at Tuguegarao.[3] The line is expected to be around 308 km (191 mi) long.[76]

Notes

  1. ^ Only a short portion of the North Main Line is operational as part of the PNR Metro Commuter Line.
  2. ^ Subic–Clark Railway would ends at the Port of Subic, North Long Haul would ends either at San Fernando, La Union or Tuguegarao.
  3. ^ NSCR North only, deducted the total daily ridership of 830,000 with NSCR South's ridership of 340,000.[52]
  4. ^ 91 km (57 mi) for the NSCR North, 92 km (57 mi) for the Northeast Commuter Line, 71 km (44 mi) for the Subic–Clark Railway and 467 km (290 mi) for the North Long Haul.

References

  1. ^ a b c Peris Torner, Juan (November 13, 2018). "Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan – Plan General de Ferrocarriles de la Isla de Luzón – Filipinas". Ferrocarriles de España (in Spanish). Retrieved October 21, 2020.
  2. ^ "Gago Palomo, José" (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved May 20, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Satre, Gary. "The Cagayan Valley Railway Extension Project". Japan Railway & Transport Review. No. 22.
  4. ^ Corpuz, Arturo (May 1989). Railroads and regional development in the Philippines: Views from the colonial iron horse, 1875–1935 (Thesis). Cornell University. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  5. ^ Unson, P. (1947). MANILA RAILROAD CO. MECH. DEPT. DIAGRAMS LOCOS, COACHES, MOTOR CARS 1947. Outlines and Particulars (Report). Manila Railroad Company Mechanical Department. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
  6. ^ . Baktin Corporation. January 16, 2012. Archived from the original on September 28, 2020. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
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External links

  • Subic-Clark Railway Project Map — ArcGIS map of the alignment for this project.
  • Railways Sector — A webpage detailing the proposed rail lines under the Build! Build! Build! Infrastructure Program on the official website of the Department of Transportation.
  • Gary Satre's 1999 article on the Cagayan Valley Extension Project on the University of the Philippines Diliman's official website.

north, main, line, filipino, pangunahing, linyang, pahilaga, simply, known, north, northrail, trunk, lines, philippine, national, railways, island, luzon, other, being, south, main, line, line, during, maximum, extent, various, cities, municipalities, central,. The PNR North Main Line Filipino Pangunahing Linyang Pahilaga ng PNR simply known as PNR North or Northrail is one of the two trunk lines of the Philippine National Railways in the island of Luzon the other being the PNR South Main Line The line during its maximum extent led to various cities and municipalities in Central Luzon and the Ilocos Region PNR North Main LineSolis station in 2011OverviewNative namePangunahing Linyang Pahilaga ng PNRStatusOperational a OwnerPhilippine National RailwaysLocaleMetro ManilaCentral LuzonIlocos RegionCordillera until 1945 TerminiTutubanGovernor PascualContinues asPNR South Main LineStations6Websitewww wbr pnr wbr gov wbr phServiceTypeCommuter railSystemPNR LuzonServices2Depot s CaloocanRolling stockPNR Hyundai Rotem DMU8000 class DMUsHistoryOpenedNovember 24 1892 130 years ago 1892 11 24 Closed1997 26 years ago 1997 ReopenedAugust 1 2018 4 years ago 2018 08 01 TechnicalLine length6 4 km 4 0 mi Track length12 8 km 8 0 mi Number of tracksDouble trackSingle track with sidings former CharacterAt gradeTrack gauge1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in Operating speed40 km h 25 mph The project was originally proposed in 1875 during the Spanish era and was constructed in stages between the 1880s and the 1890s as the Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan lit Manila Dagupan Railroad The line was opened to Dagupan Pangasinan on November 24 1892 Further extensions to the line reached as far as Bacnotan La Union with passenger trains terminating at San Fernando U station in the provincial capitol It also briefly reached Sudipen near the provincial border with Ilocos Sur during World War II but was later dismantled in 1945 Services peaked in the 1960s and the early 1970s until several factors such as fierce competition with the national highway system increasing maintenance costs natural disasters and the 1997 Asian financial crisis eventually led to the closure of the line in the late 1990s The line only served as a connection for trains returning to the Caloocan depot After 21 years of inactivity services on the North Main Line resumed on August 1 2018 with the reopening of Solis station in Tondo Manila More stations opened for the next few months with the latest being Governor Pascual on December 3 that year Like its counterpart to the south the line is also slated to be rebuilt The North South Commuter Railway NSCR is being constructed in the area of Bulacan Once completed it will connect Tutuban station with Clark International Airport in Pampanga and New Clark City in Tarlac To its west of the line is the Subic Clark railway which will initially be built for freight trains between the Subic Special Economic and Freeport Zone and Clark Airport with an extension to New Clark City Other railroad lines that are separate from the NSCR are collectively referred as the PNR North Long Haul Currently this last project is still being proposed Contents 1 History 1 1 Spanish era 1 2 Revolutionary and American era 1 3 World War II and Japanese occupation 1 4 Post war era 1 5 PNR era 1 5 1 Decline and closure 1 5 2 Reopening and contemporary history 2 Station list 3 Services 3 1 Active 3 2 Defunct 3 2 1 Commuter rail 3 2 2 Intercity rail 3 2 2 1 Amianan Express 3 2 2 2 Baguio train road services 3 2 2 3 Dagupan Express 3 2 2 4 Ilocos Express 4 Rolling stock 5 Reconstruction 5 1 NSCR North 5 1 1 Construction 5 1 2 Electric stock 5 2 Northeast Commuter Line 5 3 Freight railroads 5 3 1 Freight stock 5 4 North Long Haul 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditSee also Philippine National Railways History The railroad network in Luzon predecessor to today s Philippine National Railways was first proposed on August 6 1875 To the north of Manila are two main lines one leading to Laoag Ilocos Norte and the other leading to Tuguegarao Cagayan The system was approved by the Spanish East Indies government in 1880 but construction did not commence until 1887 due to the lack of a concession operator 1 Unlike the South Main Line which was built to its planned terminus in Legazpi Albay the North Main Line network never reached its intended termini in Laoag for the northwestern line and Tuguegarao for the northeastern line Spanish era Edit One of the early trains of the Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan taken c 1880s The Manila Railway Company Limited was created on June 1 1887 and construction began 1 Initial site inspection was presided by Lieutenant Colonel Jose Gago y Palomo 1849 1908 who was renowned for building fortifications and trails in Mindanao for Spanish Army General Valeriano Weyler 2 According to Gary Satre on an investigative article in 1999 the use of 3 feet 6 inches gauge was made both as a cost cutting measure and to allow tighter curves in order to suit the island s mountainous terrain 3 One of the main obstacles in the construction stage is crossing the Rio Grande de Pampanga after which a box truss bridge was built 1 At the same time several tank locomotives were ordered by the Manila Railway This began with an order for 2 Manila Railway Manila class locomotives in 1886 from English manufacturer Hunslet Engine Company These were later named Manila and Dagupan after the line s two planned termini 4 Between 1888 and 1890 thirty Manila Railway Dagupan class locomotives were ordered from Neilson and Company and Dubs and Company 5 Various passenger railcars and boxcars were also ordered from unknown British manufacturers Prior to the opening of the full length of the line to Pangasinan Jose Rizal was one of the most popular commuters of the early Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan He used the line to recruit potential La Liga Filipina members prior to his exile On February 23 1892 he took a train to San Fernando station in Pampanga 6 He then commuted to various other locations in Central Luzon until he took his last train with a 120 km 75 mi trip to Tarlac on June 26 He wrote that the trip took 5 hours 40 minutes This was 2 weeks prior to his exile to Dapitan 3 On November 24 1892 the line to Dagupan was inaugurated 7 Revolutionary and American era Edit Aguinaldo s railcar c 1898 The train was one of Aguinaldo s ways to retreat Manila Railway trains were used by both the Philippine Revolutionary Army and the United States Army forces during the Philippine American War President Emilio Aguinaldo and his cabinet ministers used First Class car Z4 as their primary method of travel on the railroad especially during their retreat to northern Luzon 8 On the other hand the advancing American forces used the Manila Railway to carry freight and Army soldiers Trains were also used as mobile hospitals carrying soldiers who were either injured or killed during the fighting 9 A river bridge in Bamban Tarlac was destroyed along with one of the Dagupan class locomotives used by the US Army This is to prevent the American advance to Central Luzon 10 However the efforts to sabotage the network were futile as Filipino forces were eventually defeated and President Aguinaldo was captured in 1901 11 After the war the network was repaired and expanded The British owners were still allowed to operate for the following years having reorganized into the Manila Railway Company 1906 Limited 12 Meanwhile an American operator named the Manila Railroad Company MRR Corporation was established in New Jersey that same year 13 By 1909 the Manila Railroad took control of the system although Horace L Higgins still leads as its general manager in the country and the Annual Report was still prepared with British conventions 13 New lines were defined by Insular Government Act No 1905 as the Northern Lines This include the Manila Dagupan main line the Antipolo branch of the Southern Lines the Cabanatuan branch the Fort Stotsenburg branch and shortline railroads serving the Port of Manila and within Dagupan 14 The Baguio Special the Philippines first named express train service was inaugurated in 1911 Originally only stopping at Damortis in Rosario La Union with a luxury car service heading for the hill station of Baguio this train started the scramble for a direct rail service 15 Construction for the Aringay Baguio line started in 1914 but was never finished and the tunnel leading to the city was never completed citing British involvement in World War I as the reason 16 This later made the Manila Railway s remaining Philippine unit to be absorbed into the Manila Railroad on January 8 1917 with general manager Horace L Higgins replaced by Colonel Henry Bayard McCoy 17 Under McCoy s leadership the Manila Railroad modernized its locomotive fleet with the purchase of several American built tender locomotives over the next few years Meanwhile the American Car and Foundry provided both regular passenger and sleeping cars starting with the new Baguio Night Special service 18 After his death in 1923 he was then succeeded by Jose Paez the first Filipino general manager of the company Paez continued the fleet modernization started by McCoy as well as expanded the network to its established termini at San Fernando La Union on March 16 1929 and a seamless network to the Bicol Region was opened on May 8 1938 19 World War II and Japanese occupation Edit Although the line was damaged after the First Philippines campaign during World War II the Japanese briefly extended it to Sudipen near the La Union Ilocos Sur border some 41 6 kilometers 25 8 miles north of San Fernando After the Second Philippines campaign the line has been closed The line was eventually dismantled so that track materials would give way for the reconstruction of the Main Line South s network 20 Additionally the Aringay Tuba section of the Baguio line was closed and the 300 class rack tank locomotives used for this service were scrapped in 1945 21 However the tracks remained by as late as the 1960s and were built over by paddy fields 16 Post war era Edit Only over a third of the Manila Railroad system was usable after the war amounting to 452 km 281 mi 22 Around eighty percent of its rolling stock were also destroyed 23 The system was eventually rebuilt but not all branch lines were restored In 1951 Ramon Magsaysay was appointed as general manager of the Manila Railroad Under Magsaysay s term as general manager despite being only three months made the company extend its network to Bacnotan He would also preside the beginning of the Cagayan Valley extension 3 Magsaysay later became the President of the Philippines in 1953 and under his term the Manila Railroad underwent another fleet modernization Its entire steam locomotive fleet will be replaced by diesel locomotives starting in 1954 In August 1956 the modernization has been completed and all steam locomotives were relegated to maintenance work or retired altogether 24 Yards along the North Main Line in Pampanga became the storage location of these locomotives until they were all scrapped in the 1960s and onwards 25 PNR era Edit Construction on the North South Commuter Railway in Malolos Bulacan Originally proposed in 1978 the project s previous forms were repeatedly constructed and abandoned by as late as 2011 By 1964 the Manila Railroad was reorganized and renamed into the present Philippine National Railways The renaming took inspiration from the Japanese National Railways The early days of the PNR was also claimed to be the agency s golden years While operations were smaller in scale to its southern counterpart the North Main Line was still a popular means of travel leading out of Metro Manila The line sought an estimated daily ridership of 3 000 passengers 22 Decline and closure Edit Abandoned Northrail rail tracks along Caloocan in January 2014 The 1970s were the beginning of the decline of operations on the North Main Line The Cagayan Valley extension was never fully realized and PNR trains only terminated at San Jose Nueva Ecija The tunnel boring machines were then sold off as debt payment for the project and track work has been reverted into roads A later investigation found that the Marcos government transferred the funds to the construction of the Maharlika Highway 3 The 1980s started the closure of the line due to decreasing ridership A bridge collapse in 1984 ordered the closure of the services to the Ilocos Region The line was then reduced to Caloocan in 1988 leaving the South Main Line the only operational intercity line at that point 22 There was a brief return of a commuter rail service to Malolos as part of the Metrotren program between 1990 and 1997 26 Since then the Ramos administration took advantage of the recently closed North Main Line to revitalize plans to electrify the commuter rail service in Metro Manila The project was originally proposed by the Japan International Cooperation Agency in 1978 27 This was named as the Manila Clark rapid railway project with the assistance of Spain 28 29 Construction continued as the Northrail project during the presidency of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo but stopped during the presidency of Benigno Aquino III due to disagreements with its Chinese backers The project was never completed and ended like the failed Hopewell Project of Bangkok Thailand 30 It was not until the 2010s when the present form was realized as the North South Commuter Railway The Silangan Railway Express 2000 project would have connected northern Quezon with Metro Manila Another railway project was also proposed during the late 1990s as part of the Philippines 2000 program under President Ramos In 1995 the Manila Rizal Laguna Quezon Growth Corridor MARILAQUE was proposed and the MARILAQUE Commission was established for the development of the area They were tasked by the national government to implement the Silangan Railway Express 2000 project The 95 km 59 mi line would have connected the northern half of Metro Manila to Rizal similar to the pre war Antipolo and Marikina lines It would then be extended eastward towards eastern Rizal province and northern Quezon both more rural than the areas once plied by the two aforementioned lines 31 While plans continued under the term of President Joseph Estrada with the Japan International Cooperation Agency JICA by as late as 1999 it never materialized and was not considered to be built by future administrations 32 Reopening and contemporary history Edit There were no services on the North Main Line during much of the 2000s although the line was still used for trains heading to PNR s maintenance facility in Caloocan Trial service on the North Main Line were planned later on Between 2009 and 2010 PNR stations were renovated including a number of stations on the North Main Line Some second hand 12 series coaches were also acquired from the East Japan Railway Company as the NR class These coaches were later reassigned to the South Main Line 33 Despite these initial plans not continuing as planned the line was eventually reactivated A Shuttle Service was opened from 10th Avenue station in Caloocan to Dela Rosa station in Makati on August 1 2018 34 Since then a regular Metro North Commuter service has been opened and the Shuttle Service was expanded to Bicutan station in Paranaque 35 Since 2020 the newly purchased PNR 8000 class diesel multiple units were then assigned to the line and replaced second hand KiHa 350s and KiHa 52s DMUs 36 Station list EditMain article List of Philippine National Railways stations North Main Line Northrail The North Main Line currently only has stations within northern Metro Manila though it previously had stations in Bulacan Pampanga Tarlac Pangasinan and La Union Branch lines also led to Nueva Ecija while tracks and track bed were already placed in Isabela and Cagayan prior to the Cagayan Valley extension project s cancellation in the 1970s Services EditOnly two commuter rail services run on the North Main Line both of which only operate within Metro Manila This is unlike its counterpart to the south that would have some trains lead to neighboring Laguna province during rush hour 35 Active Edit There are only two services that run on the North Main Line as of 2019 35 The Metro North Commuter service runs between Tutuban station in Manila and Governor Pascual station in Malabon This service does not pass through any stations on the South Main Line due to the wye junction in Tondo Manila The Shuttle Service runs between Governor Pascual and Bicutan Paranaque on the South Main Line Unlike the Metro North Commuter it skips Tutuban via the Tondo wye and would go towards the direction of Blumentritt for southbound trains or Solis for northbound trains Defunct Edit The North Main Line hosted both intercity and commuter trains like its southern counterpart While its intercity services have been discontinued since 1988 and much of the right of way has been converted to roads its commuter service was reconstructed and reopened in 2018 However not all of its historic commuter operations are in active service and these are set to be replaced within the 2020s either by rapid transit or the NSCR Commuter rail Edit There were several commuter rail services leading in and out of Manila on the North Main Line during its history Some of the lines were eventually closed and their reconstruction were later deemed unnecessary to restore because of existing rapid transit infrastructure from other systems The first known commuter rail branch on the North Main Line was the Antipolo line Inaugurated in 1908 it connected Antipolo Manila province to downtown Manila via Santa Mesa Services on this line were hauled by specialized tank locomotives due to its steep gradients such as the Manila Railroad 160 class Kitson Meyer locomotives This was however closed in 1917 after a Supreme Court of the Philippines ruling that ordered the closure of the line 37 The return of train services to Rizal were proposed later on the latest being the LRT Line 2 eastward extension to Antipolo Masinag The extension opened on July 5 2021 replacing the old Antipolo line The Marikina branch was finished earlier than the Antipolo line in 1906 to Marikina but was closed much later The line branched off the Antipolo line in Marikina and led to Montalban After the Antipolo line was closed in 1917 the line was closed in 1936 at the same time with the Naic line to Cavite 38 The section up to Marikina is also set to be replaced by the LRT Line 2 eastward extension The Guadalupe line was the 13 km 8 1 mi reconstruction of the old Antipolo line in the 1970s from Santa Mesa Manila to Mandaluyong It terminated at Guadalupe station but it was located on the other side of the Pasig River as its namesake district in Makati 39 The line was closed in 1983 after only 9 years of operations and the rail bridge that carried the line was destroyed in 1991 The area in which the Guadalupe line operated has now been covered by the LRT Line 2 and the MRT Line 3 There was also a once a day service between Tutuban and San Fernando It was opened on January 21 1968 The service took around 2 hours in 1976 in which it was extended to Angeles 40 The service was closed in 1988 with the closure of the entire North Main Line outside of Metro Manila This service in particular shall be superseded by the NSCR North which will extend services further to New Clark City in Capas Tarlac The last commuter service on the line out of Metro Manila was the Metrotren Tutuban Malolos service Inaugurated not long after the closure of the commuter service to Pampanga in 1990 the service led to Malolos Bulacan However it was short lived and was closed amidst the 1997 Asian financial crisis 26 This service shall also be superseded by the NSCR North with Malolos as the terminus of Phase 1 Intercity rail Edit The North Main Line was first opened when the Manila Dagupan Railway was opened in 1892 At its height between the 1950s and 1960s the line went from Tutuban to Dagupan and also served until San Fernando La Union The line also boasted several rail yards It also had branch lines to various areas in Central Luzon However its services severely deteriorated in the 1980s All regular operations outside Metro Manila first ended in 1988 41 and the line was closed in 1997 Amianan Express Edit The Amianan Express was a night train service that opened in 1974 It left Manila by 11 PM and arrived in San Fernando by 4 30 AM the next day It was serviced by then new PNR 900 class diesel electric locomotives and five coaches capable of seating 912 people After ending in San Fernando station commuters would take the bus to Ilocos Norte and Sur and Benguet Later it was expanded into two services the Amianan Day Express and the Amianan Night Express The Amianan Night Express ran faster than its day counterpart the Amianan Day Express making the 260 km 160 mi run to San Fernando La Union in five hours 42 Baguio train road services Edit 1912 Stanley Motor Carriage Model 88 Mountain Wagon similar to the Benguet Auto Line vehicles traveling Kennon Road in the early 20th century The difficulty of terrain to build new train lines prevented both MRR and PNR to have direct train services to Baguio City then a small hill station in the Cordillera Region There were already plans for a rail line to the town but was ultimately cancelled in 1917 due to lack of funding The first train service was the Baguio Special Spanish Manila a Baguio Especial lit Manila Baguio Special 43 It was inaugurated in 1911 and was the country s first flagship service The train initially stopped in Pangasinan until the line was later extended to Damortis station in Santo Tomas La Union 44 From here limousines would take travelers to Baguio This service was extremely popular that Damortis went through an overhaul in 1938 to support the demand of travelers 45 In 1922 a night service was added At least one car was ordered from the American Car and Foundry Company to serve the Baguio Night Special Both services ended in 1941 46 A second service was inaugurated by the MRR by around 1955 Passengers would ride the train from Tutuban to Damortis station in Santo Tomas La Union then will ride a limousine service of Chevrolet Bel Airs to Pines Hotel in Baguio It costed 45 equivalent to 217 in 2020 US Dollars for this package 47 The third and last service was opened during the PNR era with a bus service leading to Baguio with buses provided by Hino Motors This service operated until all provincial services on the North Main Line were suspended by late 1984 when all trains to the Ilocos Region were suspended 48 Dagupan Express Edit The Dagupan Express opened on February 10 1979 It was serviced by the MCBP class diesel multiple units the intercity version of the MC 300 multiple units of 1968 Like the Amianan Express the Dagupan Express also ended in 1984 after all North Main Line services terminated in Tarlac 49 Ilocos Express Edit The Ilocos Express was inaugurated on March 15 1930 The services includes a dining car with catering provided by the Manila Hotel Another variant of the service was the Baguio Ilocos Express Following the modernization program of the Manila Railway Company in 1955 the Ilocos Express featured a 7A class De Luxe coach until 1979 when the lack of operable air conditioned coaches caused a switch to a Tourist class coach The company also operated the Paniqui Express in the 1930s but that was eclipsed by the Ilocos Express There were two accidents involving the service one in 1939 and another in 1959 50 It was also known as the Ilocos Special on Spanish language promotional material Such services were intended to connect Tutuban and Manila within 6 hours using newly refurbished locomotives that burn fuel oil instead of coal 51 Rolling stock EditMain article List of Philippine National Railways rolling stock Due to the North Main Line only running a few kilometers north to Malabon the line runs relatively few trains The line currently uses PNR Hyundai Rotem DMUs 203 series and PNR 8000 class trainsets 36 Ex JNR rolling stock such as KiHa 35 and KiHa 52 have been out of service for the line 52 Reconstruction EditPNR North Luzon Railways ProgramOverviewStatusUnder construction NSCR OwnerPhilippine National RailwaysLocaleMetro ManilaCentral LuzonTerminiTutubanNew Clark City b Stations20 NSCR ServiceTypeUrban rail transit S train Inter city railSystemPNR LuzonServices5Operator s Philippine National RailwaysDaily ridership490 000 c HistoryOpened2024 NSCR TechnicalLine length721 km 448 mi d Track lengthAt least 812 km 505 mi Number of tracksDouble track NSCR Single track SCRP CharacterGrade separatedTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification1 500 V DC OHLEOperating speed160 km h 99 mph The Build Build Build Infrastructure Program provided an overview of the planned system in northern and central Luzon All new lines are standard gauge railways NSCR North Edit Main article North South Commuter Railway NSCR North The North section of the North South Commuter Railway also known as NSCR North and PNR Clark is a 91 km 57 mi section that shall rebuild the historic commuter services to Malolos in Bulacan as well as San Fernando and Angeles City in Pampanga before terminating at Clark International Airport The line shall also be extended to New Clark City 53 with a targeted opening date between 2023 and 2025 54 Development started after the old Northrail project was cancelled when the Department of Transportation and Communications attempted to reactivate the construction of a new electrified commuter rail line Canadian firm CPCS Transcom Limited was commissioned to conduct a feasibility study for a Malolos Los Banos commuter line as part of a larger effort to reform Metro Manila s public transport system 55 56 This was eventually approved as the North South Railway Project NSRP in 2014 57 In August 2015 the track gauge for the NSRP was changed from standard gauge to 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in narrow gauge so there will be no need of an overhaul of the existing network 58 This was later reverted to standard gauge after the North South Commuter Railway in its present form was announced on June 1 2018 59 Construction Edit Pre construction work such as clearing of the right of way was started on January 6 2018 The groundbreaking and construction from Tutuban to Malolos started on February 15 2019 60 The contract for the construction of NSCR North 1 was awarded to the Filipino Japanese consortium of DMCI Holdings and Taisei Corporation on May 21 2019 61 62 The contract for the construction of the railway viaduct from Tutuban to Bocaue was awarded in December 2020 to Swiss firm VSL International a subsidiary of French conglomerate Bouygues 63 NSCR North 2 was then awarded starting in August 2020 to various consortiums of local and international companies 64 65 66 67 On April 12 2021 clearing works began for the new Calumpit station in Barangay Iba Oeste West Calumpit Bulacan The three floor building will be the first station to be constructed for the NSCR North Phase 2 68 Prior to May construction work for Apalit station commenced As of May 1 concrete pouring has been completed on some of the piers while geotechnical engineering work are still ongoing 69 Electric stock Edit The NSCR will be the PNR s first electrified mainline With this move to electrification the DOTr has allotted a total of 360 electric multiple units for this service The first batch of 104 Sustina Commuter EMUs commuter trains were already ordered from the Japan Transport Engineering Company Another batch of 200 commuter EMUs and 56 airport express trains are also being procured 70 71 Northeast Commuter Line Edit PNR requested a feasibility study for the reconstruction of the old Cabanatuan branch line in January 2019 Once approved this will become the Northeast Commuter Line It will start on NSCR tracks in Makati and will branch off the main line at Balagtas station in Bulacan The line proper will continue for at least 92 km 57 mi northeast towards Nueva Ecija ending at the city of Cabanatuan 72 There are also plans for an extension to San Jose Nueva Ecija sealing a loop with the NSCR northward extension there 73 The Environmental Protection Division Enro of Cabanatuan held a stakeholders consultation meeting on July 29 2020 This also announced that the line has 17 stations with the extension to San Jose At Guiguinto the line will take a new right of way compared to the old Cabanatuan line 74 At San Rafael Bulacan the Northeast Commuter will then follow the old route to Cabanatuan Another new route will be built towards San Jose This will join with the Tarlac San Jose extension of the NSCR NSCR North 4 towards North Long Haul East which will then terminate at Tuguegarao 75 PNR general manager Junn Magno stated on an interview with local TV show Motoring Today on February 7 2021 that the agency is still developing proposals for the line Once completed it will shorten travel times between job centers in Metro Manila and commuter towns in eastern Bulacan within 55 to 60 minutes 52 Freight railroads Edit The Subic Clark Railway SCRP is a line to be constructed between the Subic Special Economic and Freeport Zone and Clark International Airport The 71 km 44 mi railroad shall be built initially with a single track and to be operated with diesel locomotives accommodating solely for freight trains between the two freeport zones The maximum speed for the initial line is 80 km h 50 mph The current right of way already has an allowance for upgrade to double track and an electrified system Under these upgrades shall passenger services be included with a maximum speed of 160 km h 99 mph 76 Once successful this project shall pave the way for the construction of the PNR North Long Haul 77 The North Philippine Dry Port Container Rail Transport Service or simply the North Dry Port is a proposed 27 km 17 mi single track freight line connecting the Manila North Harbor with the upcoming Balagtas Dry Port in Balagtas Bulacan 78 This will reconstruct the present North Main Line infrastructure as well as the branch line leading to the North Harbor that was already dismantled There are also plans to connect it with the Subic Clark Railway 79 for an estimated total length of 86 km 53 mi 78 As of February 2021 the project is still in the proposal stage with its feasibility study still being made 52 The track gauge for this system is yet to be determined although a maximum speed of 80 km h 50 mph was selected for the line 79 Both rail lines shall be interconnected to the North Long Haul via the Subic Clark Railway and to the South Long Haul via the overhaul of the existing tracks of the PNR Metro Commuter Line 80 Freight stock Edit The diesel electric locomotive to be used for the service is yet to be determined It is expected that there will be four and six axle designs capable of at least 80 km h 50 mph operational speed Meanwhile the freight cars are classified into two categories containerized and non containerized The average train lengths are between 250 350 meters 820 1 150 ft for the initial phase while 650 meters 2 130 ft will be the trains maximum allowable length per the design of the line 81 In 2016 promotional images use the China Railways HXN5 as a sample rolling stock for the line 82 North Long Haul Edit The North Long Haul project shall revive the intercity section of the North Main Line north of New Clark City station in Capas It shall also expand into regions that were not served by railways The line is set to be connected to the South Main Line through the NSCR the SCRP and the North Dry Port projects 52 A majority of the project s main lines have been proposed since 1875 long before intercity services were opened in 1892 The Cagayan Valley Extension predecessor to the North Long Haul East initially had some of its right of way built in the 1950s and 1960s However construction was cancelled after 1966 and the equipment used was later sold 3 Contemporary efforts to reviving the North Main Line were first announced in 2017 during a DOTr s presentation to the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs 83 It is expected that the system will be electrified with 1 5 kV DC electrification being future extensions of the NSCR North and the SCRP The upgrades shall happen once enough traffic has been reached to justify their implementation 77 The system consists of two lines The North Long Haul West is a reconstruction of the old North Main Line between New Clark City and La Union The line is expected to be around 159 km 99 mi long shortened from the former length of 175 km 109 mi due to changes in design 83 The North Long Haul East aims to revive the failed Cagayan Valley Extension project that was cancelled in the late 1960s Branching off the old main line at Tarlac City the line will continue towards the direction of San Jose Nueva Ecija from which the 10 km 6 2 mi Caraballo Tunnel will be built After the tunnel the line continues northward to Isabela and Cagayan until it terminates at Tuguegarao 3 The line is expected to be around 308 km 191 mi long 76 Notes Edit Only a short portion of the North Main Line is operational as part of the PNR Metro Commuter Line Subic Clark Railway would ends at the Port of Subic North Long Haul would ends either at San Fernando La Union or Tuguegarao NSCR North only deducted the total daily ridership of 830 000 with NSCR South s ridership of 340 000 52 91 km 57 mi for the NSCR North 92 km 57 mi for the Northeast Commuter Line 71 km 44 mi for the Subic Clark Railway and 467 km 290 mi for the North Long Haul References Edit a b c Peris Torner Juan November 13 2018 Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan Plan General de Ferrocarriles de la Isla de Luzon Filipinas Ferrocarriles de Espana in Spanish Retrieved October 21 2020 Gago Palomo Jose in Spanish Real Academia de la Historia Retrieved May 20 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d e f Satre Gary The Cagayan Valley Railway Extension Project Japan Railway amp Transport Review No 22 Corpuz Arturo May 1989 Railroads and regional development in the Philippines Views from the colonial iron horse 1875 1935 Thesis Cornell University Retrieved June 20 2020 Unson P 1947 MANILA RAILROAD CO MECH DEPT DIAGRAMS LOCOS COACHES MOTOR CARS 1947 Outlines and Particulars Report Manila Railroad Company Mechanical Department Retrieved April 10 2021 San Fernando train station San Fernando Pampanga Baktin Corporation Baktin Corporation January 16 2012 Archived from the original on September 28 2020 Retrieved May 26 2021 M Pante 2014 Mobility and Modernity in the Urban Transport Systems of Colonial Manila and Singapore Journal of Social History 47 4 855 877 doi 10 1093 jsh shu023 Halstead Murat April 28 2014 The Story of the Philippines The El Dorado of the Orient Chicago Illinois USA Our Possessions Publishing Co ISBN 9781499286656 Train load of injured and dead American troops at Caloocan University of Michigan via George Lane on Flickr 1899 Retrieved May 21 2021 Hunslet Bamban 1900s Retrieved May 21 2021 Linn Brian McAllister 2000 The Philippine War 1899 1902 University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1225 3 Sammlung eines Mitglieds des Ersten Deutschen Historic Actien Clubs e V EDHAC e V le EDHAC e V 1907 a b Annual Report of the Manila Railroad Company for the Fiscal Year Ended December 31 1913 Annual Report of the Manila Railroad Company 1913 17 Report April 3 1914 AN ACT GRANTING THE MANILA RAILROAD COMPANY CERTAIN ADDITIONAL CONCESSIONS FOR RAILROAD LINES IN THE ISLAND OF LUZON Act No 1905 of May 19 1909 Philippine Commission Lane George 1911 Baguio Special at Manila Station Far Eastern Review Retrieved May 21 2021 a b Sotelo Yolanda November 26 2014 The saga of Aringay rail line Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved May 21 2021 DID YOU KNOW History of the Manila Railroad Company January 8 2018 Retrieved May 20 2021 Report of the General Manager for the Year Ended December 31 1922 Reports of the General Manager Report Manila Railroad Company March 25 1923 Damian Johnson Mabazza Daniel 2017 Tracing the History of the Philippine National Railways PDF University of the Philippines Diliman Retrieved May 21 2021 Kratoska Paul 2001 South East Asia Colonial History Imperial decline nationalism and the Japanese challenge 1920s 1940s Vol 4 New York City USA Routledge ISBN 9780415215435 Retrieved May 21 2021 MANILA RAILROAD COMPANY 1914 SWISS LOCO amp MACHINE NUMBER PLATE worthpoint com Retrieved April 11 2021 a b c Brief history of PNR Philippine National Railways February 27 2009 Archived from the original on February 27 2009 Retrieved November 4 2011 Chapter I Present Conditions Report of Survey of the Manila Railroad Company and the Preliminary Survey of Railroads for Mindanao Report Chicago De Leuw Cather amp Company 1951 pp 1 12 The Passing of the Steam Engine This Week August 12 1956 Retrieved January 22 2021 Sherron Dave 1963 Nippon Sharyo No 302 Retrieved May 23 2021 a b Metrotren Inaugural Manila Chronicle May 11 1990 Retrieved May 6 2021 REPORT ON STUDY OF THE ELECTRIFICATION OF THE PNR COMMUTER SERVICE PDF Japanese International Cooperation Agency JICA December 1978 Retrieved February 15 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Romero Purple Off track Northrail timeline ABS CBN News Retrieved February 17 2019 Inquirer Philippine Daily January 17 2019 WHAT WENT BEFORE The Northrail Project newsinfo inquirer net Retrieved February 16 2019 Philippines China funded Northrail project derailed Financial Times Retrieved February 17 2019 CREATING AN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE TO OVERSEE THE BOT BOO IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PROPOSED SILANGAN EXPRESS 2000 RAILWAY SYSTEM CONNECTING METRO MANILA AND QUEZON PROVINCE Administrative Order No 214 s 1995 of August 30 1995 Office of the President Philippines Retrieved May 28 2021 TECHNICAL REPORT NO 3 URBAN TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CONDITION IN ADJOINING AREAS PDF METRO MANILA URBAN TRANSPORTATION INTEGRATION STUDY Report Japan International Cooperation Agency 1999 Retrieved May 28 2021 Peadon Brad April 2020 Philippine National Railways Rolling Stock Update Philippine Railways Historical Society 3 PNR reopens Caloocan to Makati route Manila Standard August 1 2018 Retrieved May 21 2021 a b c Metro North Commuter SHUTTLE TRAIN SERVICE Philippine National Railways December 16 2019 Retrieved May 21 2021 a b PNR PT INKA DHMU CLASS 8000 SET 02 8002 IN ASISTIO STATION May 10 2021 Retrieved May 21 2021 EN BANC G R No L 10624 March 24 1916 THE MANILA RAILROAD COMPANY Plaintiff Appellee vs THE INSULAR COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS Defendant Appellant www chanrobles com Retrieved October 26 2020 Railways of old in Manila and Rizal d0ctrine com November 8 2011 Retrieved May 22 2021 1974 0911 PNR Schedule Times Journal September 11 1976 Retrieved May 22 2021 Belen Gorio January 20 1968 To Fulfill Another Commitment Times Journal Retrieved May 22 2021 Manila North Line When There Were Stations Asia April 13 2011 Retrieved March 8 2020 1974 0215 PNR Amianan Express Trains Flickr February 15 1974 Retrieved March 8 2020 Swiss luxury watch brand Omega featuring Manila Railroad s Baguio Special train in a 1915 advertisement Omega SA via Philipine Train Enthusiasts and Railfans Club 1915 Retrieved November 7 2021 Baguio Special at Manila Station c 1911 September 1912 Retrieved May 26 2021 Report of the General Manager for the Year Ended December 31 1938 Reports of the General Manager Report Manila Railroad Company March 17 1939 Report of the General Manager for the Year Ended December 31 1922 Reports of the General Manager Report Manila Railroad Company March 25 1923 1955 0916 MRR Package Tour ad Flickr September 16 2010 Retrieved March 11 2020 1984 PNR MOTOR SERVICES Flickr June 22 1984 Retrieved March 11 2020 1974 0215 PNR Amianan Express Trains Flickr January 12 2012 Retrieved March 8 2020 Official Week in Review April 12 April 18 1959 Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines Retrieved March 11 2020 1930 MRR Ilocos Express Special Ad March 15 1930 Retrieved November 14 2022 a b c d e The Status of PNR Projects and Plans in 2021 Motoring Forum 16 9 YouTube in Tagalog February 7 2021 Retrieved May 25 2021 Project Details Build Build gov ph Department of Transportation Philippines June 1 2018 Retrieved January 9 2020 Department of Transportation The Republic of the Philippines October 2018 FEASIBILITY STUDY ON THE NORTH SOUTH RAILWAY PROJECT SOUTH LINE COMMUTER NORTH SOUTH COMMUTER RAILWAY EXTENSION PROJECT IN THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES PDF jica go jp Japan International Cooperation Agency DOTC eyes elevated railway from Malolos to Los Banos ABS CBN News July 22 2013 Retrieved April 23 2019 Govt eyes elevated rail project in Luzon Manila Standard Today Archived from the original on January 2 2014 Retrieved January 1 2014 Main Points of the Roadmap PDF Report Japan International Cooperation Agency September 2014 Archived from the original PDF on October 11 2014 North South Railway Project PDF Department of Transportation and Communications August 2015 Retrieved May 23 2021 North South Commuter Railway PDF June 1 2018 Retrieved May 23 2021 Department of Transportation Philippines Facebook Retrieved February 18 2019 Patena Aerol John DOTr awards contract to DMCI Consortium for PNR North Phase 1 Project www ptvnews ph Retrieved May 10 2019 DMCI Japanese partner bag P54 B contract for North South Commuter Railway project GMA News Online Retrieved May 28 2019 Viaduct contract awarded for Philippines NSCR International Railway Journal December 22 2020 Retrieved May 17 2021 Manuel Pilar September 21 2020 Megawide 2 Korean firms secure construction for part of Malolos Clark Railway CNN Philippines Retrieved May 5 2021 Loyola James September 21 2020 Megawide Korean partners win P28 B railway project Manila Bulletin Retrieved May 5 2021 Amojelar Darwin May 4 2021 Megawide signs P2 9 b concrete supply contract for Malolos Clark railway Manilastandard net Manila Standard Retrieved May 5 2021 Philippines awards North South Commuter Railway contracts International Railway Journal August 4 2020 Retrieved May 17 2021 Padilla Omar April 12 2021 Clearing works sa itatayong airport train ng Pinas sinimulan Clearing works began for the first airport train in the Philippines Pilipino Star Ngayon in Tagalog Retrieved May 26 2021 ARE YOU READY FOR THE MASSIVE SEAMLESS AND MODERN RAIL LINE NETWORK OF THE COUNTRY Facebook Department of Transportation Philippines May 24 2021 Retrieved May 26 2021 1 local 5 foreign firms bid for P50 8 B PNR Clark Phase 2 GMA News October 16 2019 Retrieved February 15 2020 Environmental Impact Assessment PDF Proposed Multitranche Financing Facility Republic of the Philippines South Commuter Railway Project Report Department of Transportation Philippines and the Asian Development Bank July 1 2020 Retrieved May 17 2021 Villanueva Joann January 22 2019 PNR asks for feasibility of Cabanatuan Makati line Retrieved May 25 2021 Feasibility Study for the Northeast Commuter Line November 26 2019 Retrieved May 25 2021 Project Alignment Bulacan Stakeholders Consultation 2020 Report Cabanatuan Enro July 29 2020 Project Alignment Nueva Ecija Stakeholders Consultation 2020 Report Cabanatuan Enro July 29 2020 a b SCRP Eligibility Documents November 3 2020 Retrieved May 24 2021 a b Arellano Mark January 15 2018 PNR to be extended to La Union Tuguegarao Subic Freeport Retrieved May 25 2021 a b BIDDING DOCUMENTS CONDUCT OF FEASIBILITY STUDY OF THE NORTH PHILIPPINE DRY PORT CONTAINER RAIL TRANSPORT SERVICE www neda gov ph National Economic and Development Authority October 2018 Retrieved May 25 2021 a b North Philippine Dry Port Container Rail Transport Service PDF January 2020 Retrieved May 25 2021 Matias Pizarro Shirley May 4 2021 P50 B Subic Clark Railway Project on track Retrieved May 26 2021 Environmental Impact Statement EIS PDF Proposed Subic Clark Railway Project SCRP Report Bases Conversion and Development Authority August 2021 Retrieved November 7 2021 Project Details www build gov ph October 20 2016 Retrieved May 26 2021 a b RAILWAY PROJECT ROADSHOW MINDANAO RAILWAY TAGUM DAVAO DIGOS SEGMENT Department of Transportation Philippines presented to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs South Korea December 13 2017 Retrieved May 24 2021 External links EditSubic Clark Railway Project Map ArcGIS map of the alignment for this project Railways Sector A webpage detailing the proposed rail lines under the Build Build Build Infrastructure Program on the official website of the Department of Transportation Gary Satre s 1999 article on the Cagayan Valley Extension Project on the University of the Philippines Diliman s official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PNR North Main Line amp oldid 1150613639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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