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Rail transport in South Korea

Rail transport in South Korea is a part of the transport network in South Korea and an important mode of the conveyance of people and goods, though railways play a secondary role compared to the road network.[5][6][7] The network consists of 4,285 km (2,663 mi) of standard-gauge lines connecting all major cities with the exception of Jeju City on Jeju Island, which does not have railways; of the network, 2,790 km (1,730 mi) are double-tracked and 3,187 km (1,980 mi) are electrified.[3] In 2018, rails carried 11.5 percent of all traffic in South Korea – 134.8 million passengers and 30.9 million tonnes of freight – with roads carrying 88.3 percent.[8][9]

Republic of Korea
KTX train
Operation
National railwayKORAIL
Infrastructure companyKorea National Railway[1]
Major operatorsKORAIL and SR
Statistics
Ridership
Passenger km
Freight28.7 million tonnes (2019)[3]
System length
Total4,285 km (2,663 mi) (2020)[3]
Double track2,790 km (1,730 mi) (2020)[3]
Electrified3,187 km (1,980 mi) (2020)[3]
High-speed625 km (388 mi)
Track gauge
Main1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
High-speed1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Electrification
Main25 kV AC 60 Hz
25 kV ACAll Korail operated network except Ilsan Line
1.5 kV DCAll rapid transit networks including Korail Ilsan Line
Features
Longest tunnelYulhyeon Tunnel
50.3 km (31.3 mi)[4]
No. stations
Highest elevation1,225 m (4,019 ft)
 atChujeon Station
Lowest elevation−36 m (−118 ft)
 atYeouinaru Station
Map
Route Map of Korail

Passenger and freight services are primarily provided by the Korea Railroad Corporation, branded as Korail, a state-owned enterprise under the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, although some rail lines and services, including high-speed intercity rails and metropolitan rapid transit, are operated by private companies. The Korea National Railway (formerly the Korea Rail Network Authority), another state company under the Transport Ministry, is responsible for constructing and maintaining the railway infrastructure, with Korail and other rail operators paying track access charges to Korea National Railway. Both Korail and Korea National Railway were created in 2004–2005 after the government decided to split the state-owned Korean National Railroad.[1][10][11]

History Edit

Korean Empire and Partition Edit

 
Opening ceremony of the Gyeongin Railway between Seoul and Chemulpo (today Incheon) on September 18, 1899.

Rail transport in Korea began in the late 19th century. On March 19, 1896, the late Joseon Dynasty that ruled Korea awarded American engineer James R. Morse a concession to build a railway between Seoul and Chemulpo (today Incheon), while on July 4, the French company Compagnie de Fives - Lille represented by Antoine Grille received another concession to connect Seoul and Wonsan by rail, later modified to run from Seoul to Uiju as the Gyeongui Line instead. Construction on the Chemulpo line begun on March 22, 1897, under the management of American businessmen Henry Collbran and Harry Bostwick on behalf of James Morse, but after Morse was unable to secure the necessary funding, he sold the concession to a Japanese company headed by Shibusawa Eiichi;[12] the sale went into effect on December 31, 1898. The line was inaugurated on September 18, 1899, between Chemulpo and Yeongdeungpo on the south bank of the Han River, with the section to Seoul opening on July 9, 1900, after the construction of a bridge across the river. Additionally, on February 1, 1898, the Seoul Electric Company (today Korea Electric Power Corporation) was founded to manage electricity generation in Seoul, as well as to build tram lines in the city. The first tram line was opened on May 20, 1899 between Seodaemun and Dongdaemun (today two districts of Seoul),[13] before the Seoul-Chemulpo railway, becoming the first railroad on the Korean Peninsula. The French surrendered their concession in 1899 for the Gyeongui Line having been unable to raise the capital necessary to fund construction, with the Korean government in turn founding the Northwest Railway Bureau[14] and agreeing to finance building the rail to Uiju with French support.[15] On May 8, 1902, construction started on this line under the name Northwestern Railway, from Seoul to Uiju through Kaesong and Pyongyang, with completion in 1905 under the supervision of the Japanese military.[16][17][18][19][20]

 
Tehosa-class steam tender locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company in 1911 for the Chōsen Government Railway.

Japan's influence on railway development in Korea begun even before Japan's occupation of Korea in 1910. On September 8, 1898, the Korean government awarded a concession to connect Seoul and Busan by rail to a Japanese company.[21] The Japanese government in 1901 founded the Seoul‑Busan Railway Corporation to oversee construction, however, due to delays, the Japanese government took direct control of the project in 1903. Construction lasted from August 21, 1901 to December 27, 1904, with operations beginning on January 1, 1905; in the early years, the rail trip between Seoul and Busan took almost 14 hours.[22][23] This and other railway lines were constructed by Japanese companies and the Japanese military to facilitate Japanese troop movements across the Korean peninsula during the Russo-Japanese War in 1904–1905 and Japan's subsequent expansion into Manchuria before and during World War II.[24][25] Roadways played a secondary role to railways in Japan's military plans.[26]

To manage the rail infrastructure and services, on July 6, 1906, the Japanese created the Railway Management Bureau under the administration of the Japanese Resident-General of Korea. On September 1, 1906, the Railway Management Bureau was merged with the Temporary Military Railway of the Imperial Japanese Army and the Gyeongbu Railway – by then the only privately owned railway operator in Korea – to create the National Railway Administration, renamed the Korea Railway Administration on December 16, 1909. After the Japanese annexed Korea in 1910, on October 1, the administration became the Railway Bureau of the Government-General of Korea. This operated for the first few years as an agency under the direct control of the Governor-General's secretariat, then from July 31, 1917 to March 31, 1925 under the management from the South Manchuria Railway,[14][27] finally becoming and independent agency on April 1, 1925 as the Chōsen Government Railway.[28][29][30]

Following World War II and during the divided occupation of Korea, from September 14, 1945, to September 7, 1948, the United States Army Military Government in Korea operated all railroads in Korea. A state-owned company was established on September 7, 1948, to take over operating the railways from the American military. The railroad network was badly damaged during the Korean War, but it was later rebuilt and improved by USATC.[31][32]

South Korea Edit

Between 1948 and 1963, the Korean government exercised direct control over the country's railways. To provide for more independent operations, on September 1, 1963, the government established the Korea National Railroad, an independent agency of the Ministry of Transportation. This agency was in charge of all rails throughout the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, and continued electrifying and double-tracking heavily used tracks.[33][34] The first electrified test rail track in the country opened on June 9, 1972, a 10.7 kilometers (6.6 mi) stretch between Gohan and Jeongseon on the Taebaek Line; the first fully electrified line was the 155.2 kilometers (96.4 mi) long section between Jeongseon and Cheongnyangni on Jungang Line, opening on June 20, 1973.[35]

However, government investment in railways continued to decline as a share of total investment in transportation modes, from 61 percent of all investment during the first five-year plan of 1962–1966 to 10 percent during the sixth five-year plan of 1987–1991. Roads and highways were the primary beneficiaries of this decline.[36] While new tracks were constructed, due to the closure of tracks the length of the country's rail network only increased from 3,032 kilometers (1,884 mi) in 1962 to 3,123 kilometers (1,941 mi) in 2000. In comparison, the road network grew from 27,000 kilometers (17,000 mi) to 90,000 kilometers (56,000 mi) during the same time period.[37]

Railroads in the 1980s were useful primarily in the transportation of freight, and they were important for passenger traffic around Seoul and in the heavily traveled corridor linking the capital with the southern port of Busan. Although the railroad system grew little during the 1980s, rail improvements – the increased electrification of tracks, replacement of older tracks, and the addition of rolling stock – allowed rail traffic to boom. Some of the busiest lines south of Seoul linking the capital with Busan and Mokpo had three or four tracks. The 1980s also saw the introduction of high-speed trains connecting Seoul with Busan, Jeonju, Mokpo, and Gyeongju. The famous "Blue Train" (Saemaul-ho) between Seoul and Busan (via Daejeon and Daegu) took only four hours and fifty minutes and offered two classes of service: first class and special. In 1987 approximately 525 million passengers and 59.28 million metric tons (65.35 million short tons; 58.34 million long tons) were transported by the railroad system.[38]

Rapid transit Edit

 
A Korail Class 1000 train, Seoul's first generation of subway cars. This particular car, Car 1001, part of Consist 101, entered service on August 15, 1974, the subway's opening day.

While investment in railroads between cities languished in the 1960s–1980s, railroads in cities continued to receive attention. Announced in 1965, the first line of the Seoul Metropolitan Subway, the first rapid transit system in South Korea, opened in 1974. Lines 2–4 followed in subsequent years as part of the first phase of construction, but construction on lines 5–8 – the second phase – was postponed in the 1980s and only started in the 1990s. Of the four planned lines in phase three, only line 9 was built, partly through a public-private partnership. As of 2021, the lines are operated by Seoul Metro, formed through the merger of Seoul Metro Corporation and Seoul Metropolitan Rapid Transit Corporation in 2017. Outside of Seoul, subways opened in Busan in 1985, Daegu in 1997, Incheon in 1999, Gwangju in 2004 and Daejeon in 2006.[39][40][41]

KTX Edit

The government decided to invest in Korea's first high-speed rail to ease traffic congestion between Seoul and Busan. With more than two-thirds of the country's population, passenger traffic, and freight traffic concentrated in the corridor connecting the two cities – and a new expressway built in the 1970s failing to solve traffic problems – several studies commissioned by the government in the 1970s proposed building a high-speed railroad. Construction became a priority in the 1980s, when it was included in the 1982–1986 five-year plan.[42]

Planning started before the government decided on the rolling stock. In 1991, Korea sent a request for proposals to Japan, France and Germany, all countries with successful high-speed railways with the Shinkansen, TGV and ICE, respectively. While initially favoring the Japanese Shinkansen, Korea selected the TGV as its preferred rolling stock as the Japanese were hesitant to transfer their technological know-how to the Koreans, with the French willing to do so. The French also agreed that after building the first few train sets in France, the rest would be built in Korea with involvement from Korean companies.[43]

In March 1992, the government created the Korea High Speed Rail Construction Authority to oversee the construction of the Gyeongbu High Speed Railway (Gyeongbu HSR). Construction started on June 30, 1992, before choosing the vehicle. The initial completion goal was 1998; lack of experience, frequent redesign, difficulties in purchasing land, and the IMF crisis delayed the entire project. As a result, Korea Train Express (KTX) service began April 1, 2004. Since its opening in 2004, the high-speed rail service has halved the demand for air transport on this corridor which used to be one of the busiest direct air routes in the world.[44][45][46]

Reform and private rail companies Edit

 
Bombardier Innovia Advanced Rapid Transit railcar on the Everline-operated people mover line in Yongin.

Private investment in railways in South Korea before the mid-1990s was nominal. Between 1968–1994, only 12 rail projects with a total combined cost of US$660 million received private investment, but the operation and management of all remained in government hands. In 1994, to encourage private investment in infrastructure projects through public-private partnerships, the South Korean parliament adopted the Promotion of Private Capital in Social Overhead Capital Investment Act, followed in 1998 by the Act on Private Participation in Infrastructure and in 2005 the Act on Public-Private Partnership in Infrastructure given the limited impact of the first law. PPPs can take the form of build–operate–transfer, build-lease-transfer, and build-own-operate delivery models and can be controlled by either the national or local governments. After the 1997 Asian financial crisis, several government-driven railroad construction projects were reviewed, postponed, redesigned, revoked or turned into build-operate-transfer projects. Several companies, including Macquarie Group, Shinhan Bank and Hyundai, have participated in the projects.[47] Notably, AREX and Seoul Metro 9 are in operation,[48] with the Seohae Line due to open in January 2023.[49] However, due to the continuing deficit, most shares of Airport Express Co. were taken over by Korail. Several private railroads, such as Shinbundang Line, BGLRT, and Everline, have begun service as well.[50][51][10]

The government had been aiming to improve the governance of Korean railways since the 1980s. Initially, the transportation ministry aimed to regain full control over the Korean National Railroad, which operated as an independent government agency, and re-establish it as a government-owned corporation. These efforts petered out in 1995, when government instead granted increased autonomy to KNR. In 1999, the division of KNR responsible for railway construction was merged with the Korea High Speed Rail Construction Authority, which was overseeing the building of the Gyeongbu HSR. A few years later, the government decided to split the national railroad into separate companies for operation and construction. As a result, after building Gyeongbu HSR, the Korean National Railroad was split into Korail (established in January 2004) and Korea Rail Network Authority (established in January 2005 and renamed to Korea National Railway in September 2020[1]), the former managing operation and the latter maintaining tracks. This allowed open access in the Korean railway system. KR was constituted with old KNR infrastructure assets, and several debts due to construction of railway lines were transferred.[5][52][53]

 
KTX-Sancheon Class 130000 train of the SR Corporation at Seoul's Suseo station.

Railway reform and the introduction of private rail companies into Korea's network continued into the 2010s. In 2012, the then-Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs called for bids to operate high-speed trains for 15 years on the Seoul–Busan and Seoul–Mokpo lines. The ministry's goal was to end the state-owned Korail's monopoly and create competition for the state-run KTX trains, hoping to increase the quality of service and decrease fares.[54] SR Corporation, founded in 2014, won the concession to operate the trains; though Korail owns 41 percent of its shares, a teachers' pension fund and two Korean banks own a combined 59 percent of shares, with SR thus operating independently from the government and Korail.[55] SR's high-speed rail services were launched from Seoul's Suseo station in 2016, but within a few months, the ministry started studying the possibility of merging Korail and SR.[56][57]

Reconnection with North Korea Edit

On November 30, 2018, 30 officials from North and South Korea began an 18-day survey in both Koreas to connect the Korean railroads.[58][59][60] The survey, which had previously been obstructed by the Korean Demilitarized Zone's (DMZ) "frontline" guard posts and landmines located at the DMZ's Arrowhead Hill, consists of a 400-kilometre (248-mile) railroad section between Kaesong and Sinuiju that cuts through the North's central region and northeastern coast.[61] The railway survey, which involved the inspection of the Gyeongui Line, concluded on December 5, 2018.[60] On December 8, 2018, an inter-Korean survey began in both Koreas for the Donghae Line.[62] On December 13, 2018, it was announced that the groundbreaking ceremony to symbolize the reconnection of the roads and railways in both Koreas will be held on December 26, 2018 in Kaesong.[63][64] On December 17, 2018, the latest inter-Korean railway survey, which involved an 800-kilometer (500 mi) rail from Kumgangsan near the inter-Korean border to the Tumen River bordering Russia in the east, was completed.[65] A potential threat to the groundbreaking ceremony emerged after it was revealed that the North Korean railway was in poor condition.[65] On December 21, 2018, however, the United States agreed to no longer obstruct plans by both Koreas to hold a groundbreaking ceremony.[66] The same day, a four-day inter-Korean road survey began when ten working-level South Korean surveyors entered North Korea to work with ten North Korean surveyors on a three-day survey of a 100-kilometer (62 mi) long section on the eastern Donghae Line.[67] On December 26, 2018, a groundbreaking ceremony was held in the North Korean city of Kaesong to reconnect railroads and roads between both North and South Korea.[68] However, it was acknowledged that these reconnected North Korean railroads needed more inspection and construction in order to be active, due to deterioration.[68]

Traffic volume Edit

Korail traffic volume by calendar year[69]
Passenger volume
(number of journeys)
Passenger-kilometers Freight volume
(tons)
Ton-kilometers
2016 136,541,105 23,989,379,034 32,555,441 8,414,121,799
2017 136,815,092 21,935,189,633 31,669,610 8,229,194,876
2018 134,784,809 23,108,145,611 30,914,733 7,877,511,772
2019 139,531,121 23,590,036,002 28,663,738 7,357,429,858

Railway lines Edit

The principal and most used railway line is the Gyeongbu Line (경부선), which connects Seoul, the capital and largest city, with Busan, the country's second largest city and largest seaport; the second is the Honam Line (호남선), which branches off the Gyeongbu Line at Daejeon and ends at Gwangju or Mokpo.[6][70]

The following is a table of major railway lines in South Korea:[71][72]

Line name Hangul name Termini and major stations
Gyeongbu Line 경부선 Seoul Suwon, Daejeon, Dongdaegu Busan
Gyeongbu HSR 경부고속선
Honam Line 호남선 Seodaejeon Iksan, Gwangju Songjeong Mokpo
Honam HSR 호남고속선 Osong Iksan Gwangju Songjeong
Suseo–Pyeongtaek HSR 수서평택고속선 Suseo Dongtan PyeongtaekJije
Gyeongui Line 경의선 Seoul Ilsan Dorasan
Gyeongwon Line 경원선 Cheongnyangni Dongducheon Baengmagoji
Chungbuk Line 충북선 Jochiwon Cheongju, Chungju Jecheon
Gyeongjeon Line 경전선 Samnangjin Masan, Jinju, Suncheon Gwangju-Songjeong
Janghang Line 장항선 Cheonan Onyangoncheon, Hongseong Iksan
Jeolla Line 전라선 Iksan Jeonju, Suncheon Yeosu Expo
Gyeongchun Line 경춘선 Mangu Gapyeong Chuncheon
Donghae Line 동해선 Bujeon Taehwagang, Gyeongju, Pohang Yeongdeok
Jungang Line 중앙선 Cheongnyangni Wonju, Jecheon, Yeongju, Andong Moryang
Yeongdong Line 영동선 Yeongju Donghae Gangneung
Gyeongbuk Line 경북선 Gimcheon Sangju Yeongju
Taebaek Line 태백선 Jecheon Yeongwol Taebaek
Gyeonggang Line 경강선 Manjong Pyeongchang Gangneung
Incheon Int'l Airport Line 인천국제공항선 Seoul Gimpo International Airport Incheon International Airport Terminal 2

There is no railway service on Jeju Island.

Services Edit

Frequent service is provided on most routes, with trains every 15–60 minutes connecting Seoul to all major South Korean cities.

High-speed rail services Edit

 
KTX, SRT high-speed train service map

A high-speed railroad by the name of the Korea Train Express (KTX) is in service between Seoul, Busan, Yeosu, Jinju, Donghae, Gangneung and Mokpo.[73] The railway uses French TGV/LGV technology. Service started on April 1, 2004, using the completed high-speed line sections and using upgraded conventional lines. Another section of high-speed line sped up Seoul-Busan services from November 1, 2010. Additional services on new routes will be introduced to Masan on the Gyeongjeon Line on December 15, 2010, and to Yeosu on the Jeolla Line in April 2011. As of 2010, the top speed on dedicated high-speed track is 305 kilometers per hour (190 mph). A second operator of high speed trains, SRT, operates KTX style trains from southern Seoul's Suseo Terminal (close to the Gangnam neighborhood) to both Busan and Mokpo.[74]

  • KTX, the high-speed railway system, takes passengers from downtown Seoul to downtown Busan faster than an airplane (including check-in time), makes fewer stops and is more expensive than other trains.
    • KTX-Eum is higher-speed railway system with maximum speed 260 km/h (160 mph). It offers superior seats and standard seats.
  • SRT, another high-speed railway system, operated by private company called "SR". It connects Gangnam of Seoul and Busan, Mokpo

Conventional rail services Edit

  • ITX, semi-fast trains, operates on selected lines:
  • Mugunghwa-ho (무궁화호, "Rose of Sharon") service, which is the most popular, stops at most stations, and offers a mixture of reserved and unreserved seating.[76]
  • Nuriro (누리로), which will replace mid-long distance Mugunghwa service in selected routes. Currently operates Seoul-Sinchang route and other lines.[77]

Excursion luxury cruise train Edit

There is currently one all-sleeper cruise train service in South Korea, operated by Korail - Rail Cruise Haerang (레일크루즈 해랑). Rail Cruise Haerang commenced operation in 2008. Currently the train operates itineraries which are curated monthly along three routes - to southeastern Korea, to southwestern Korea and a Grand Tour.[78] The detail of travel plans changes seasonally and annually, and there are special travel plans available in certain periods. Eiji Mitooka indirectly implied that he referred to this train for the design of Seven Stars in Kyushu.[79]

The cost per person is here (For Deluxe and Suite room, two-people. For Family room, three-people.) :[80]

Travel itinerary Family Room Deluxe Room Suite Room
2-day (Off-season) approx. KRW 646,700 KRW 800,000 KRW 965,000
2-day (Peak season) approx. KRW 691,700 KRW 845,000 KRW 1,010,000
3-day (Off-season) approx. KRW 996,700 KRW 1,220,000 KRW 1,450,000
3-day (Peak season) approx. KRW 1,066,700 KRW 1,290,000 KRW 1,520,000

Rapid transit Edit

South Korea's six largest cities—Seoul, Busan, Daegu, Gwangju, Daejeon and Incheon—all have subway systems.

Seoul Metropolitan Subway is the oldest system in the country, with the Seoul Station-Cheongnyangni section of Line 1 opening in 1974.[39]

Rolling stock Edit

 
A Korail Class 8000 locomotive, the first electric locomotive in South Korea, on the Jungang Line, 21 July 1979.

The first locomotives used in Korea were steam locomotives. The locomotives used on the Gyeongin Railway when it opened on September 18, 1899 were four 2-6-0T steam tank engines built by the American Brooks Locomotive Works. They were delivered to Korea disassembled on June 17, 1899, and assembled at a factory in Incheon. Numbered 1–4, they eventually became the Chōsen Government Railway's Mogai-class locomotives. Steam locomotives remained the dominant motive power of South Korea's railways until the 1950s and the last steam engine was retired on August 31, 1967.[81][82]

Diesel engines were introduced in 1955.[81] The first diesel engines were four EMD SW8 (later classified as Korail Class 2000) switcher locomotives manufactured in the United States by General Motors Electro-Motive Division and General Motors Diesel, donated to the Korean railways by United Nations Command in March 1955. These four locomotives were among 35 locomotives dispatched to Korea to be used by United Nations and American forces during the Korean War due to the dearth of Korean railroad equipment; they arrived on Korean soil on July 15, 1951.[83]

The first electric locomotives, the Korail Class 8000, were introduced the same year the electrification of railway lines kicked off in 1972.[84] The first 8000 trains were assembled by the 50 C/S Group – consisting of ACEC, AEG-Telefunken, Alsthom, Brown Boveri, MTE, and Siemens – in Belgium and arrived in Korea on March 7, 1972. After a successful test run on a section of the Taebaek Line on June 9, it entered into regular service on June 20, 1973 on the Jungang Line. Initially, locomotives were mostly imported from abroad, but domestic manufacturing of electric engines began in 1976 and diesel engines in 1980.[10][85]

 
As of 2019, Korail Commuter Diesel Cars such as the one in the picture are, on average, the oldest rail vehicles still in service in South Korea.

As of 2019, Korean rail companies owned 16,180 rail vehicles, a decrease from the high of 20,100 in 1993. Of these, 1530 were KTX and 100 SR Corporation high-speed vehicles, and 254 were diesel and 175 electric locomotives. 2913 were multiple units, with 2792 being electric multiple units. The majority of all rail vehicles, 10,359 units, were railroad cars. When it came to the average age of rail vehicles, it ranged from an average of 7 years for certain higher-speed electric multiple units to 10 and 19 years for electric and diesel locomotives, respectively, to 23 years for diesel multiple units.[86]

International service Edit

 
View of the inoperative Donghae Bukbu line, connecting North and South Korea, through the Korean Demilitarized Zone.

  North Korea: Same gauge but not generally available. Until the division of Korea following the end of the Second World War, the Gyeongui Line and Gyeongwon Line extended into what is now North Korea. The Gyeongui Line connected Seoul to Kaesong, Pyongyang, and Sinuiju on the Chinese border, while the Gyeongwon Line served Wonsan on the east coast. Another line—the Geumgangsan Line—connected the town of Cheorwon, now on the border of North and South Korea, on the Gyeongwon Line, to Mt. Geumgang, now in the North.[87]

The Gyeongui Line is one of two lines whose southern and northern halves are now being reconnected, the other being the Donghae Bukbu Line. On 17 May 2007, two test trains ran on the reconnected lines: one on the west line from Munsan to Kaesong; the second on the east from Jejin to Kumgang.[88]

In December 2007, regular freight service started on the Gyeongui line, from South Korea into the Kaesong Industrial Park in the north. The service has been underused: As reported in October 2008, on 150 out of 163 return trips that had been done so far, the train carried no cargo. The amount of cargo carried over this period had been merely 340 metric tons (330 long tons; 370 short tons). This absence of interest in the service has been explained by the customers' (companies operating in Kaesong) preference for road transport.[89] In November 2008, North Korea shut down the link. On 26 June 2018 the two Koreas agreed to reconnect the Gyeongui Line and the Donghae Bukbu Line again.[90]

A Trans-Korean Main Line, spanning North Korea and connecting to Russian Railways, is planned.[91]

  Japan: There's no railroad connection between South Korea and Japan. But Korail and JR West have a joint rail pass (한일공동승차권) which includes discounted KTX and Shinkansen tickets with a Busan-Shimonoseki/Fukuoka ferry ticket. A Korean Strait undersea tunnel has been proposed,[92] but the project has not progressed beyond initial planning as studies in the early 2010s showed the development not to be economical.[93][94][95]

Timeline Edit

2008 Edit

  • Map of 2015 vision[96]

2018 Edit

  • A groundbreaking ceremony is held to symbolize to reconnection of the North and South Korea railroads.[68]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Im 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Korail 2020, p. 7.
  3. ^ a b c d e International Union of Railways 2021.
  4. ^ Chang 2015.
  5. ^ a b Lee 2004.
  6. ^ a b Shin 2005, p. 13.
  7. ^ Lee & Chung 2020.
  8. ^ Gha 2021.
  9. ^ International Union of Railways 2019.
  10. ^ a b c Finger & Montero 2020, p. 138.
  11. ^ Gil 2013, p. 38.
  12. ^ Valliant 1974, pp. 154.
  13. ^ Lee 2014, pp. 13–14.
  14. ^ a b Korea Railway Industry Information Center 2010.
  15. ^ Valliant 1974, pp. 158–159.
  16. ^ Neff, Robert (5 September 2010). "The Failed Attempts of Korea's First Railroads". The Korea Times. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
  17. ^ Lee 2014, pp. 16–24.
  18. ^ Sibul, Eric Allan (2008). Forging Iron Horses and Iron Men: Rail Transport in the Korean War and the Influence of the US Army Transportation Corps on the development of the Korean National Railroad (Thesis). University of York. pp. 59–65.
  19. ^ United States Congressional Serial Set, Volume 7987. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1922. p. 31.
  20. ^ Allen 1901, pp. 34–41.
  21. ^ Allen 1901, p. 39.
  22. ^ Lee 2014, p. 16.
  23. ^ Finger & Montero 2020, p. 132.
  24. ^ Davis 2010, p. 172.
  25. ^ Sibul 2011, p. 49.
  26. ^ Roy, Alexandre (2015). "The Beginnings of Japan's Economic Hold over Colonial Korea, 1900-1919". Cipango - French Journal of Japanese Studies (4). doi:10.4000/cjs.1046. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
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  28. ^ Byun 1999, p. 1548.
  29. ^ Rew 1962, pp. 137–139.
  30. ^ Kokubu 2007, p. 69.
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  32. ^ Sibul 2011, p. 51.
  33. ^ Hwang & Kim 2014, pp. 144–145.
  34. ^ Lee 2014, pp. 37–38.
  35. ^ Byun 1999, pp. 213, 218.
  36. ^ Finger & Montero 2020, p. 137.
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  38. ^ Savada & Shaw 1992, pp. 181–182.
  39. ^ a b Lankov 2011.
  40. ^ Tebay 2017.
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  45. ^ Cho & Chung 2008, pp. 15, 42.
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rail, transport, south, korea, part, transport, network, south, korea, important, mode, conveyance, people, goods, though, railways, play, secondary, role, compared, road, network, network, consists, standard, gauge, lines, connecting, major, cities, with, exc. Rail transport in South Korea is a part of the transport network in South Korea and an important mode of the conveyance of people and goods though railways play a secondary role compared to the road network 5 6 7 The network consists of 4 285 km 2 663 mi of standard gauge lines connecting all major cities with the exception of Jeju City on Jeju Island which does not have railways of the network 2 790 km 1 730 mi are double tracked and 3 187 km 1 980 mi are electrified 3 In 2018 rails carried 11 5 percent of all traffic in South Korea 134 8 million passengers and 30 9 million tonnes of freight with roads carrying 88 3 percent 8 9 Republic of KoreaKTX trainOperationNational railwayKORAILInfrastructure companyKorea National Railway 1 Major operatorsKORAIL and SRStatisticsRidershipKorail 139 5 million 2019 2 SR 24 million 2019 2 Passenger kmKorail 23 6 billion 2019 2 SR 5 4 billion 2019 2 Freight28 7 million tonnes 2019 3 System lengthTotal4 285 km 2 663 mi 2020 3 Double track2 790 km 1 730 mi 2020 3 Electrified3 187 km 1 980 mi 2020 3 High speed625 km 388 mi Track gaugeMain1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in High speed1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in ElectrificationMain25 kV AC 60 Hz25 kV ACAll Korail operated network except Ilsan Line1 5 kV DCAll rapid transit networks including Korail Ilsan LineFeaturesLongest tunnelYulhyeon Tunnel50 3 km 31 3 mi 4 No stationsKorail 698 2 SR 3 2 Highest elevation1 225 m 4 019 ft atChujeon StationLowest elevation 36 m 118 ft atYeouinaru StationMapRoute Map of KorailPassenger and freight services are primarily provided by the Korea Railroad Corporation branded as Korail a state owned enterprise under the Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport although some rail lines and services including high speed intercity rails and metropolitan rapid transit are operated by private companies The Korea National Railway formerly the Korea Rail Network Authority another state company under the Transport Ministry is responsible for constructing and maintaining the railway infrastructure with Korail and other rail operators paying track access charges to Korea National Railway Both Korail and Korea National Railway were created in 2004 2005 after the government decided to split the state owned Korean National Railroad 1 10 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Korean Empire and Partition 1 2 South Korea 1 3 Rapid transit 1 4 KTX 1 5 Reform and private rail companies 1 6 Reconnection with North Korea 2 Traffic volume 3 Railway lines 4 Services 4 1 High speed rail services 4 2 Conventional rail services 4 3 Excursion luxury cruise train 4 4 Rapid transit 5 Rolling stock 6 International service 6 1 Timeline 6 1 1 2008 6 1 2 2018 7 See also 8 References 9 BibliographyHistory EditKorean Empire and Partition Edit Opening ceremony of the Gyeongin Railway between Seoul and Chemulpo today Incheon on September 18 1899 Rail transport in Korea began in the late 19th century On March 19 1896 the late Joseon Dynasty that ruled Korea awarded American engineer James R Morse a concession to build a railway between Seoul and Chemulpo today Incheon while on July 4 the French company Compagnie de Fives Lille represented by Antoine Grille received another concession to connect Seoul and Wonsan by rail later modified to run from Seoul to Uiju as the Gyeongui Line instead Construction on the Chemulpo line begun on March 22 1897 under the management of American businessmen Henry Collbran and Harry Bostwick on behalf of James Morse but after Morse was unable to secure the necessary funding he sold the concession to a Japanese company headed by Shibusawa Eiichi 12 the sale went into effect on December 31 1898 The line was inaugurated on September 18 1899 between Chemulpo and Yeongdeungpo on the south bank of the Han River with the section to Seoul opening on July 9 1900 after the construction of a bridge across the river Additionally on February 1 1898 the Seoul Electric Company today Korea Electric Power Corporation was founded to manage electricity generation in Seoul as well as to build tram lines in the city The first tram line was opened on May 20 1899 between Seodaemun and Dongdaemun today two districts of Seoul 13 before the Seoul Chemulpo railway becoming the first railroad on the Korean Peninsula The French surrendered their concession in 1899 for the Gyeongui Line having been unable to raise the capital necessary to fund construction with the Korean government in turn founding the Northwest Railway Bureau 14 and agreeing to finance building the rail to Uiju with French support 15 On May 8 1902 construction started on this line under the name Northwestern Railway from Seoul to Uiju through Kaesong and Pyongyang with completion in 1905 under the supervision of the Japanese military 16 17 18 19 20 Tehosa class steam tender locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company in 1911 for the Chōsen Government Railway Japan s influence on railway development in Korea begun even before Japan s occupation of Korea in 1910 On September 8 1898 the Korean government awarded a concession to connect Seoul and Busan by rail to a Japanese company 21 The Japanese government in 1901 founded the Seoul Busan Railway Corporation to oversee construction however due to delays the Japanese government took direct control of the project in 1903 Construction lasted from August 21 1901 to December 27 1904 with operations beginning on January 1 1905 in the early years the rail trip between Seoul and Busan took almost 14 hours 22 23 This and other railway lines were constructed by Japanese companies and the Japanese military to facilitate Japanese troop movements across the Korean peninsula during the Russo Japanese War in 1904 1905 and Japan s subsequent expansion into Manchuria before and during World War II 24 25 Roadways played a secondary role to railways in Japan s military plans 26 To manage the rail infrastructure and services on July 6 1906 the Japanese created the Railway Management Bureau under the administration of the Japanese Resident General of Korea On September 1 1906 the Railway Management Bureau was merged with the Temporary Military Railway of the Imperial Japanese Army and the Gyeongbu Railway by then the only privately owned railway operator in Korea to create the National Railway Administration renamed the Korea Railway Administration on December 16 1909 After the Japanese annexed Korea in 1910 on October 1 the administration became the Railway Bureau of the Government General of Korea This operated for the first few years as an agency under the direct control of the Governor General s secretariat then from July 31 1917 to March 31 1925 under the management from the South Manchuria Railway 14 27 finally becoming and independent agency on April 1 1925 as the Chōsen Government Railway 28 29 30 Following World War II and during the divided occupation of Korea from September 14 1945 to September 7 1948 the United States Army Military Government in Korea operated all railroads in Korea A state owned company was established on September 7 1948 to take over operating the railways from the American military The railroad network was badly damaged during the Korean War but it was later rebuilt and improved by USATC 31 32 South Korea Edit Between 1948 and 1963 the Korean government exercised direct control over the country s railways To provide for more independent operations on September 1 1963 the government established the Korea National Railroad an independent agency of the Ministry of Transportation This agency was in charge of all rails throughout the 1970s 1980s and 1990s and continued electrifying and double tracking heavily used tracks 33 34 The first electrified test rail track in the country opened on June 9 1972 a 10 7 kilometers 6 6 mi stretch between Gohan and Jeongseon on the Taebaek Line the first fully electrified line was the 155 2 kilometers 96 4 mi long section between Jeongseon and Cheongnyangni on Jungang Line opening on June 20 1973 35 However government investment in railways continued to decline as a share of total investment in transportation modes from 61 percent of all investment during the first five year plan of 1962 1966 to 10 percent during the sixth five year plan of 1987 1991 Roads and highways were the primary beneficiaries of this decline 36 While new tracks were constructed due to the closure of tracks the length of the country s rail network only increased from 3 032 kilometers 1 884 mi in 1962 to 3 123 kilometers 1 941 mi in 2000 In comparison the road network grew from 27 000 kilometers 17 000 mi to 90 000 kilometers 56 000 mi during the same time period 37 Railroads in the 1980s were useful primarily in the transportation of freight and they were important for passenger traffic around Seoul and in the heavily traveled corridor linking the capital with the southern port of Busan Although the railroad system grew little during the 1980s rail improvements the increased electrification of tracks replacement of older tracks and the addition of rolling stock allowed rail traffic to boom Some of the busiest lines south of Seoul linking the capital with Busan and Mokpo had three or four tracks The 1980s also saw the introduction of high speed trains connecting Seoul with Busan Jeonju Mokpo and Gyeongju The famous Blue Train Saemaul ho between Seoul and Busan via Daejeon and Daegu took only four hours and fifty minutes and offered two classes of service first class and special In 1987 approximately 525 million passengers and 59 28 million metric tons 65 35 million short tons 58 34 million long tons were transported by the railroad system 38 Rapid transit Edit A Korail Class 1000 train Seoul s first generation of subway cars This particular car Car 1001 part of Consist 101 entered service on August 15 1974 the subway s opening day While investment in railroads between cities languished in the 1960s 1980s railroads in cities continued to receive attention Announced in 1965 the first line of the Seoul Metropolitan Subway the first rapid transit system in South Korea opened in 1974 Lines 2 4 followed in subsequent years as part of the first phase of construction but construction on lines 5 8 the second phase was postponed in the 1980s and only started in the 1990s Of the four planned lines in phase three only line 9 was built partly through a public private partnership As of 2021 the lines are operated by Seoul Metro formed through the merger of Seoul Metro Corporation and Seoul Metropolitan Rapid Transit Corporation in 2017 Outside of Seoul subways opened in Busan in 1985 Daegu in 1997 Incheon in 1999 Gwangju in 2004 and Daejeon in 2006 39 40 41 KTX Edit Main article Korea Train Express The government decided to invest in Korea s first high speed rail to ease traffic congestion between Seoul and Busan With more than two thirds of the country s population passenger traffic and freight traffic concentrated in the corridor connecting the two cities and a new expressway built in the 1970s failing to solve traffic problems several studies commissioned by the government in the 1970s proposed building a high speed railroad Construction became a priority in the 1980s when it was included in the 1982 1986 five year plan 42 Planning started before the government decided on the rolling stock In 1991 Korea sent a request for proposals to Japan France and Germany all countries with successful high speed railways with the Shinkansen TGV and ICE respectively While initially favoring the Japanese Shinkansen Korea selected the TGV as its preferred rolling stock as the Japanese were hesitant to transfer their technological know how to the Koreans with the French willing to do so The French also agreed that after building the first few train sets in France the rest would be built in Korea with involvement from Korean companies 43 In March 1992 the government created the Korea High Speed Rail Construction Authority to oversee the construction of the Gyeongbu High Speed Railway Gyeongbu HSR Construction started on June 30 1992 before choosing the vehicle The initial completion goal was 1998 lack of experience frequent redesign difficulties in purchasing land and the IMF crisis delayed the entire project As a result Korea Train Express KTX service began April 1 2004 Since its opening in 2004 the high speed rail service has halved the demand for air transport on this corridor which used to be one of the busiest direct air routes in the world 44 45 46 Reform and private rail companies Edit Bombardier Innovia Advanced Rapid Transit railcar on the Everline operated people mover line in Yongin Private investment in railways in South Korea before the mid 1990s was nominal Between 1968 1994 only 12 rail projects with a total combined cost of US 660 million received private investment but the operation and management of all remained in government hands In 1994 to encourage private investment in infrastructure projects through public private partnerships the South Korean parliament adopted the Promotion of Private Capital in Social Overhead Capital Investment Act followed in 1998 by the Act on Private Participation in Infrastructure and in 2005 the Act on Public Private Partnership in Infrastructure given the limited impact of the first law PPPs can take the form of build operate transfer build lease transfer and build own operate delivery models and can be controlled by either the national or local governments After the 1997 Asian financial crisis several government driven railroad construction projects were reviewed postponed redesigned revoked or turned into build operate transfer projects Several companies including Macquarie Group Shinhan Bank and Hyundai have participated in the projects 47 Notably AREX and Seoul Metro 9 are in operation 48 with the Seohae Line due to open in January 2023 49 However due to the continuing deficit most shares of Airport Express Co were taken over by Korail Several private railroads such as Shinbundang Line BGLRT and Everline have begun service as well 50 51 10 The government had been aiming to improve the governance of Korean railways since the 1980s Initially the transportation ministry aimed to regain full control over the Korean National Railroad which operated as an independent government agency and re establish it as a government owned corporation These efforts petered out in 1995 when government instead granted increased autonomy to KNR In 1999 the division of KNR responsible for railway construction was merged with the Korea High Speed Rail Construction Authority which was overseeing the building of the Gyeongbu HSR A few years later the government decided to split the national railroad into separate companies for operation and construction As a result after building Gyeongbu HSR the Korean National Railroad was split into Korail established in January 2004 and Korea Rail Network Authority established in January 2005 and renamed to Korea National Railway in September 2020 1 the former managing operation and the latter maintaining tracks This allowed open access in the Korean railway system KR was constituted with old KNR infrastructure assets and several debts due to construction of railway lines were transferred 5 52 53 KTX Sancheon Class 130000 train of the SR Corporation at Seoul s Suseo station Railway reform and the introduction of private rail companies into Korea s network continued into the 2010s In 2012 the then Ministry of Land Transport and Maritime Affairs called for bids to operate high speed trains for 15 years on the Seoul Busan and Seoul Mokpo lines The ministry s goal was to end the state owned Korail s monopoly and create competition for the state run KTX trains hoping to increase the quality of service and decrease fares 54 SR Corporation founded in 2014 won the concession to operate the trains though Korail owns 41 percent of its shares a teachers pension fund and two Korean banks own a combined 59 percent of shares with SR thus operating independently from the government and Korail 55 SR s high speed rail services were launched from Seoul s Suseo station in 2016 but within a few months the ministry started studying the possibility of merging Korail and SR 56 57 Reconnection with North Korea Edit On November 30 2018 30 officials from North and South Korea began an 18 day survey in both Koreas to connect the Korean railroads 58 59 60 The survey which had previously been obstructed by the Korean Demilitarized Zone s DMZ frontline guard posts and landmines located at the DMZ s Arrowhead Hill consists of a 400 kilometre 248 mile railroad section between Kaesong and Sinuiju that cuts through the North s central region and northeastern coast 61 The railway survey which involved the inspection of the Gyeongui Line concluded on December 5 2018 60 On December 8 2018 an inter Korean survey began in both Koreas for the Donghae Line 62 On December 13 2018 it was announced that the groundbreaking ceremony to symbolize the reconnection of the roads and railways in both Koreas will be held on December 26 2018 in Kaesong 63 64 On December 17 2018 the latest inter Korean railway survey which involved an 800 kilometer 500 mi rail from Kumgangsan near the inter Korean border to the Tumen River bordering Russia in the east was completed 65 A potential threat to the groundbreaking ceremony emerged after it was revealed that the North Korean railway was in poor condition 65 On December 21 2018 however the United States agreed to no longer obstruct plans by both Koreas to hold a groundbreaking ceremony 66 The same day a four day inter Korean road survey began when ten working level South Korean surveyors entered North Korea to work with ten North Korean surveyors on a three day survey of a 100 kilometer 62 mi long section on the eastern Donghae Line 67 On December 26 2018 a groundbreaking ceremony was held in the North Korean city of Kaesong to reconnect railroads and roads between both North and South Korea 68 However it was acknowledged that these reconnected North Korean railroads needed more inspection and construction in order to be active due to deterioration 68 Traffic volume EditKorail traffic volume by calendar year 69 Passenger volume number of journeys Passenger kilometers Freight volume tons Ton kilometers2016 136 541 105 23 989 379 034 32 555 441 8 414 121 7992017 136 815 092 21 935 189 633 31 669 610 8 229 194 8762018 134 784 809 23 108 145 611 30 914 733 7 877 511 7722019 139 531 121 23 590 036 002 28 663 738 7 357 429 858Railway lines EditThe principal and most used railway line is the Gyeongbu Line 경부선 which connects Seoul the capital and largest city with Busan the country s second largest city and largest seaport the second is the Honam Line 호남선 which branches off the Gyeongbu Line at Daejeon and ends at Gwangju or Mokpo 6 70 The following is a table of major railway lines in South Korea 71 72 Line name Hangul name Termini and major stationsGyeongbu Line 경부선 Seoul Suwon Daejeon Dongdaegu BusanGyeongbu HSR 경부고속선Honam Line 호남선 Seodaejeon Iksan Gwangju Songjeong MokpoHonam HSR 호남고속선 Osong Iksan Gwangju SongjeongSuseo Pyeongtaek HSR 수서평택고속선 Suseo Dongtan PyeongtaekJijeGyeongui Line 경의선 Seoul Ilsan DorasanGyeongwon Line 경원선 Cheongnyangni Dongducheon BaengmagojiChungbuk Line 충북선 Jochiwon Cheongju Chungju JecheonGyeongjeon Line 경전선 Samnangjin Masan Jinju Suncheon Gwangju SongjeongJanghang Line 장항선 Cheonan Onyangoncheon Hongseong IksanJeolla Line 전라선 Iksan Jeonju Suncheon Yeosu ExpoGyeongchun Line 경춘선 Mangu Gapyeong ChuncheonDonghae Line 동해선 Bujeon Taehwagang Gyeongju Pohang YeongdeokJungang Line 중앙선 Cheongnyangni Wonju Jecheon Yeongju Andong MoryangYeongdong Line 영동선 Yeongju Donghae GangneungGyeongbuk Line 경북선 Gimcheon Sangju YeongjuTaebaek Line 태백선 Jecheon Yeongwol TaebaekGyeonggang Line 경강선 Manjong Pyeongchang GangneungIncheon Int l Airport Line 인천국제공항선 Seoul Gimpo International Airport Incheon International Airport Terminal 2There is no railway service on Jeju Island Services EditFrequent service is provided on most routes with trains every 15 60 minutes connecting Seoul to all major South Korean cities High speed rail services Edit Main article High speed rail in South Korea KTX SRT high speed train service mapA high speed railroad by the name of the Korea Train Express KTX is in service between Seoul Busan Yeosu Jinju Donghae Gangneung and Mokpo 73 The railway uses French TGV LGV technology Service started on April 1 2004 using the completed high speed line sections and using upgraded conventional lines Another section of high speed line sped up Seoul Busan services from November 1 2010 Additional services on new routes will be introduced to Masan on the Gyeongjeon Line on December 15 2010 and to Yeosu on the Jeolla Line in April 2011 As of 2010 the top speed on dedicated high speed track is 305 kilometers per hour 190 mph A second operator of high speed trains SRT operates KTX style trains from southern Seoul s Suseo Terminal close to the Gangnam neighborhood to both Busan and Mokpo 74 KTX the high speed railway system takes passengers from downtown Seoul to downtown Busan faster than an airplane including check in time makes fewer stops and is more expensive than other trains KTX Eum is higher speed railway system with maximum speed 260 km h 160 mph It offers superior seats and standard seats SRT another high speed railway system operated by private company called SR It connects Gangnam of Seoul and Busan MokpoConventional rail services Edit ITX semi fast trains operates on selected lines ITX Cheongchun ITX 청춘 operates between Yongsan and Chuncheon via Cheongnyangni ITX Saemaul ITX 새마을 named after its predecessor replaced regular Saemaul ho service on electrified lines provides express service on Gyeongbu Honam Gyeongjeon Jeolla and Jungang Line 75 Mugunghwa ho 무궁화호 Rose of Sharon service which is the most popular stops at most stations and offers a mixture of reserved and unreserved seating 76 Nuriro 누리로 which will replace mid long distance Mugunghwa service in selected routes Currently operates Seoul Sinchang route and other lines 77 Excursion luxury cruise train Edit There is currently one all sleeper cruise train service in South Korea operated by Korail Rail Cruise Haerang 레일크루즈 해랑 Rail Cruise Haerang commenced operation in 2008 Currently the train operates itineraries which are curated monthly along three routes to southeastern Korea to southwestern Korea and a Grand Tour 78 The detail of travel plans changes seasonally and annually and there are special travel plans available in certain periods Eiji Mitooka indirectly implied that he referred to this train for the design of Seven Stars in Kyushu 79 The cost per person is here For Deluxe and Suite room two people For Family room three people 80 Travel itinerary Family Room Deluxe Room Suite Room2 day Off season approx KRW 646 700 KRW 800 000 KRW 965 0002 day Peak season approx KRW 691 700 KRW 845 000 KRW 1 010 0003 day Off season approx KRW 996 700 KRW 1 220 000 KRW 1 450 0003 day Peak season approx KRW 1 066 700 KRW 1 290 000 KRW 1 520 000Rapid transit Edit Main article Rapid transit in South Korea South Korea s six largest cities Seoul Busan Daegu Gwangju Daejeon and Incheon all have subway systems Seoul Metropolitan Subway is the oldest system in the country with the Seoul Station Cheongnyangni section of Line 1 opening in 1974 39 Rolling stock Edit A Korail Class 8000 locomotive the first electric locomotive in South Korea on the Jungang Line 21 July 1979 The first locomotives used in Korea were steam locomotives The locomotives used on the Gyeongin Railway when it opened on September 18 1899 were four 2 6 0T steam tank engines built by the American Brooks Locomotive Works They were delivered to Korea disassembled on June 17 1899 and assembled at a factory in Incheon Numbered 1 4 they eventually became the Chōsen Government Railway s Mogai class locomotives Steam locomotives remained the dominant motive power of South Korea s railways until the 1950s and the last steam engine was retired on August 31 1967 81 82 Diesel engines were introduced in 1955 81 The first diesel engines were four EMD SW8 later classified as Korail Class 2000 switcher locomotives manufactured in the United States by General Motors Electro Motive Division and General Motors Diesel donated to the Korean railways by United Nations Command in March 1955 These four locomotives were among 35 locomotives dispatched to Korea to be used by United Nations and American forces during the Korean War due to the dearth of Korean railroad equipment they arrived on Korean soil on July 15 1951 83 The first electric locomotives the Korail Class 8000 were introduced the same year the electrification of railway lines kicked off in 1972 84 The first 8000 trains were assembled by the 50 C S Group consisting of ACEC AEG Telefunken Alsthom Brown Boveri MTE and Siemens in Belgium and arrived in Korea on March 7 1972 After a successful test run on a section of the Taebaek Line on June 9 it entered into regular service on June 20 1973 on the Jungang Line Initially locomotives were mostly imported from abroad but domestic manufacturing of electric engines began in 1976 and diesel engines in 1980 10 85 As of 2019 Korail Commuter Diesel Cars such as the one in the picture are on average the oldest rail vehicles still in service in South Korea As of 2019 Korean rail companies owned 16 180 rail vehicles a decrease from the high of 20 100 in 1993 Of these 1530 were KTX and 100 SR Corporation high speed vehicles and 254 were diesel and 175 electric locomotives 2913 were multiple units with 2792 being electric multiple units The majority of all rail vehicles 10 359 units were railroad cars When it came to the average age of rail vehicles it ranged from an average of 7 years for certain higher speed electric multiple units to 10 and 19 years for electric and diesel locomotives respectively to 23 years for diesel multiple units 86 International service Edit View of the inoperative Donghae Bukbu line connecting North and South Korea through the Korean Demilitarized Zone North Korea Same gauge but not generally available Until the division of Korea following the end of the Second World War the Gyeongui Line and Gyeongwon Line extended into what is now North Korea The Gyeongui Line connected Seoul to Kaesong Pyongyang and Sinuiju on the Chinese border while the Gyeongwon Line served Wonsan on the east coast Another line the Geumgangsan Line connected the town of Cheorwon now on the border of North and South Korea on the Gyeongwon Line to Mt Geumgang now in the North 87 The Gyeongui Line is one of two lines whose southern and northern halves are now being reconnected the other being the Donghae Bukbu Line On 17 May 2007 two test trains ran on the reconnected lines one on the west line from Munsan to Kaesong the second on the east from Jejin to Kumgang 88 In December 2007 regular freight service started on the Gyeongui line from South Korea into the Kaesong Industrial Park in the north The service has been underused As reported in October 2008 on 150 out of 163 return trips that had been done so far the train carried no cargo The amount of cargo carried over this period had been merely 340 metric tons 330 long tons 370 short tons This absence of interest in the service has been explained by the customers companies operating in Kaesong preference for road transport 89 In November 2008 North Korea shut down the link On 26 June 2018 the two Koreas agreed to reconnect the Gyeongui Line and the Donghae Bukbu Line again 90 A Trans Korean Main Line spanning North Korea and connecting to Russian Railways is planned 91 Japan There s no railroad connection between South Korea and Japan But Korail and JR West have a joint rail pass 한일공동승차권 which includes discounted KTX and Shinkansen tickets with a Busan Shimonoseki Fukuoka ferry ticket A Korean Strait undersea tunnel has been proposed 92 but the project has not progressed beyond initial planning as studies in the early 2010s showed the development not to be economical 93 94 95 Timeline Edit 2008 Edit Map of 2015 vision 96 2018 Edit A groundbreaking ceremony is held to symbolize to reconnection of the North and South Korea railroads 68 See also Edit Railways portalRail transport in North Korea Transport in South Korea The Korea Transport InstituteReferences Edit a b c Im 2020 a b c d e f Korail 2020 p 7 a b c d e International Union of Railways 2021 Chang 2015 a b Lee 2004 a b Shin 2005 p 13 Lee amp Chung 2020 Gha 2021 International Union of Railways 2019 a b c Finger amp Montero 2020 p 138 Gil 2013 p 38 Valliant 1974 pp 154 Lee 2014 pp 13 14 a b Korea Railway Industry Information Center 2010 Valliant 1974 pp 158 159 Neff Robert 5 September 2010 The Failed Attempts of Korea s First Railroads The Korea Times Retrieved 19 August 2021 Lee 2014 pp 16 24 Sibul Eric Allan 2008 Forging Iron Horses and Iron Men Rail Transport in the Korean War and the Influence of the US Army Transportation Corps on the development of the Korean National Railroad Thesis University of York pp 59 65 United States Congressional Serial Set Volume 7987 Washington Government Printing Office 1922 p 31 Allen 1901 pp 34 41 Allen 1901 p 39 Lee 2014 p 16 Finger amp Montero 2020 p 132 Davis 2010 p 172 Sibul 2011 p 49 Roy Alexandre 2015 The Beginnings of Japan s Economic Hold over Colonial Korea 1900 1919 Cipango French Journal of Japanese Studies 4 doi 10 4000 cjs 1046 Retrieved 19 August 2021 Byun 1999 p 39 Byun 1999 p 1548 Rew 1962 pp 137 139 Kokubu 2007 p 69 Lee 2014 pp 27 Sibul 2011 p 51 Hwang amp Kim 2014 pp 144 145 Lee 2014 pp 37 38 Byun 1999 pp 213 218 Finger amp Montero 2020 p 137 Finger amp Montero 2020 pp 134 137 Savada amp Shaw 1992 pp 181 182 a b Lankov 2011 Tebay 2017 Finger amp Montero 2020 pp 134 135 Cho amp Chung 2008 pp 8 11 15 Kang et al 2014 pp 38 34 Bullet trains steal planes thunder joongangdaily joins com Retrieved 2010 01 05 Cho amp Chung 2008 pp 15 42 Suh Sunduck D 2000 Risk Management in a Large Scale New Railway Transport System Project Evaluation of Korean High Speed Railway Experience IATSS Research International Association of Traffic and Safety Sciences 24 2 doi 10 1016 S0386 1112 14 60029 7 ISSN 0386 1112 Park amp Mun 2014 p 52 Gil 2013 p i 대곡 소사 복선전철 민간투자시설사업 실시계획 변경 7차 in Korean Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport Retrieved 20 August 2021 Park amp Mun 2014 pp 14 16 Hahm 2003 pp 60 61 Pittman amp Choi 2013 Finger amp Montero 2020 pp 137 138 Lee Hyo sik January 12 2012 Gov t Korail clash over KTX privatization The Korea Times Shareholders srail or kr Seoul SR Co Ltd 2018 Archived from the original on January 20 2021 Retrieved August 21 2021 Pittman amp Choi 2013 p 6 Finger amp Montero 2020 pp 140 141 Koreas Survey Railway Tracks Cut Since the Korean War Voanews com 2018 11 30 Retrieved 2019 05 20 Koreas survey North s railways in hopes of joining networks the News Tribune Archived from the original on 2018 11 30 Retrieved 2018 12 26 a b Newsmaker Koreas in consultations for joint road inspection Koreaherald com 2018 12 05 Retrieved 2019 05 20 Gianluca Avagnina Video Producer 2018 11 30 First train in a decade departs South Korea for North Korea The Telegraph Telegraph co uk Retrieved 2019 05 20 Joint Inspection of N Korea s Eastern Rail Line Begins l KBS WORLD Radio World kbs co kr Retrieved 2019 05 20 3rd LD Koreas agree to hold groundbreaking ceremony for rail road reconnection on Dec 26 Yonhap News Agency En yna co kr 2018 12 13 Retrieved 2019 05 20 The Korea International Broadcasting Foundation News View The World On Arirang Arirang co kr Retrieved 2019 05 20 a b N Korea railway not in good condition inspection team Koreaherald com 2018 12 17 Retrieved 2019 05 20 US approves inter Korean railway groundbreaking ceremony North Korea News The Hankyoreh English hani co kr 2018 12 22 Retrieved 2019 05 20 Two Koreas Begin Joint Road Survey l KBS WORLD Radio World kbs co kr Retrieved 2019 05 20 a b c Koreas Hold Groundbreaking Ceremony for Railway Project Time Archived from the original on 2018 12 26 Retrieved 2018 12 26 Korail 2020 pp 6 7 Cho amp Chung 2008 pp 11 12 Kim Hyojin Sultan Selima May 2015 The impacts of high speed rail extensions on accessibility and spatial equity changes in South Korea from 2004 to 2018 Journal of Transport Geography 45 48 61 doi 10 1016 j jtrangeo 2015 04 007 Retrieved 20 August 2021 Railway Route Map in South Korea Korea Railway 21 June 2020 Retrieved 20 August 2021 KTX Seoul to Busan Daeju etc Train Reviews Photos amp Information trainreview com Retrieved 2020 10 20 SRT Suseo to Busan and Mokpo Train Reviews Photos amp Information trainreview com Retrieved 2020 10 20 Train Information Information on KORAIL s Conventional Trains ITX Saemaeul info korail com Daejeon Korail 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2021 Train Information Information on KORAIL s Conventional Trains Mugunghwa ho info korail com Daejeon Korail 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2021 Train Information Information on KORAIL s Conventional Trains Nuriro info korail com Daejeon Korail 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2021 Rail Cruise Haerang South Korea s Hotel on Wheels Reviews amp More trainreview com Retrieved 2020 10 20 日 관광열차 거장 세상에 하나뿐인 디자인이 중요 Yonhap News Agency Released on October 30 2016 Costs for Rail Cruise Haerang travel plans a b Lee 2014 p 34 Byun 1999 p 29 Byun 1999 p 85 Lee 2014 pp 11 37 Byun 1999 pp 213 214 218 Korail 2020 pp 410 413 Kokubu 2007 pp 83 89 90 Korean trains in historic link up BBC News 2007 05 17 Retrieved 2007 05 17 Richard Spencer 23 Oct 2008 Korean detente railway becomes ghost train The Daily Telegraph London Gov t Vows to Protect Public from H1N1 Influenza ㅣ KBS WORLD Radio World kbs co kr Retrieved 2019 05 20 Trans Korean Main Line Investment in the Future Russian Transport Daily Report 2010 10 29 Archived from the original on 2011 02 27 Retrieved 2010 10 30 South Korea mulls undersea tunnels to China Japan Reuters Seoul 20 September 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Seoul says undersea tunnels with Japan China economically infeasible Yonhap News Agency Seoul 4 January 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Political jousting escalates over N K nuke plant document sea tunnel proposal Yonhap News Agency Seoul 2 February 2021 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Kwon Ki jeong 4 February 2021 South Korea Japan Underwater Tunnel Surfaces as an Issue in the Busan Election Pro Japan DJ Promoted It Too Kyunghyang Shinmun Retrieved 18 August 2021 Railway Gazette International Aug 2008 p515Bibliography EditAllen Horace N 1901 A Chronological Index Some of the Chief Events in the Foreign Intercourse of Korea From the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Twentieth Century PDF Seoul Methodist Publishing House Byun Seong Woo August 1999 한국철도차량 100년사 철도차량기술검정단 한국철도차량 100년사 편찬위원회 편찬 100 Years of Korean Railway Vehicles Compilation of the 100 Year History of Korean Railroad Vehicles by the Railroad Vehicle Technology Inspection Group in Korean Seoul Railroad Vehicle Technology Inspection Team Chang Won joo June 24 2015 S Korea s longest rapid transit railway tunnel opens Wednesday Pulse by Maeil Business News Korea Maekyung Media Group Retrieved August 18 2021 Cho Nam Geon Chung Jin Kyu 2008 High Speed Rail Construction of Korea and Its Impact PDF Report KRIHS Special Report Vol 12 Sejong Korea Research Institute for Human Settlements ISBN 978 89 8182 566 9 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Davis Richard G ed 2010 U S Army and Irregular Warfare 1775 2007 Selected Papers From the 2007 Conference of Army Historians Selected Papers From the 2007 Conference of Army Historians Washington Government Publishing Office ISBN 978 0 16 081233 0 Finger Matthias Montero Juan eds 2020 Handbook on Railway Regulation Concepts and Practice Cheltenham Edward Elgar Publishing doi 10 4337 9781789901788 ISBN 978 1 78990 178 8 LCCN 2020942921 S2CID 226633315 Gha Hee sun June 6 2021 Herald Interview Chief of Korea National Railway maps out innovative future for railways in Korea The Korea Herald Seoul Herald Corporation Archived from the original on July 3 2021 Retrieved August 17 2021 Gil Byungwoo April 2013 A Study on the Optimal PPP Model for Transport The Case of Road and Rail in South Korea PDF Thesis University of Southampton Faculty of Engineering and the Environment School of Civil Engineering and the Environment Retrieved August 20 2021 Hahm Junglim August 1 2003 Private Participation in the Infrastructure Programme of the Republic of Korea PDF Transport and Communications Bulletin for Asia and the Pacific New York United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific Transport Division 72 57 75 ISBN 92 1 120182 9 ISSN 0252 4392 Retrieved August 21 2021 Hwang Sang kyu Kim Gunyoung eds 2014 50 Praxes for Better Transport in Korea PDF Goyang The Korea Transport Institute ISBN 978 89 5503 657 2 Retrieved August 22 2021 Im Jeong Hwan September 9 2020 철도시설공단 16년만에 국가철도공단으로 새출발 New Daily in Korean Seoul New Daily Co Ltd Retrieved August 22 2021 International Union of Railways 2019 Railisa UIC Statistics Paris International Union of Railways Retrieved August 17 2021 International Union of Railways 2021 Railway Statistics Synopsis 2021 Edition PDF Report Paris International Union of Railways p 2 Retrieved August 17 2021 Kang Kee dong Kang Gil Hyun Lee Byung Seok Yoo Ho Shik Jung Young Wan 2014 Choi Jin Seok ed Korea s Best Practices in the Transport Sector Korea s High speed Rail Construction and Technology Advances PDF Report KOTI Knowledge Sharing Report Sejong The Korea Transport Institute ISBN 978 89 5503 626 8 Retrieved August 26 2021 Kokubu Hayato January 2007 Shōgun sama no Tetsudō Shogun s Railway Tokyo Shinchōsha ISBN 978 4 10 303731 6 Korail 2020 2019 철도통계연보 I 2019 Statistical Yearbook of Railroad I PDF Report Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport Administrative publication registration number 11 1510000 000002 10 Retrieved August 23 2021 Korea Railway Industry Information Center October 7 2010 철도사이야기 Railway History in Korean Daejon Korea Railway Industry Information Center Retrieved August 24 2021 Lankov Andrei February 13 2011 Seoul s first subway line opened in 1974 The Korea Times Archived from the original on January 27 2021 Retrieved August 18 2021 Lee Yong Sang 2004 The Current State of Railways in Korea and Reform Trends Japan Railway amp Transport Review Tokyo 37 35 41 Retrieved August 17 2021 Lee Jun ed 2014 The History of Korean Railway by Photographs PDF Report KOTI Knowledge Sharing Report Sejong The Korea Transport Institute ISBN 978 89 5503 654 1 Retrieved August 19 2021 Lee Minha Chung Suh Yong November 24 2020 Is Trans Korean Railway Solely a Symbol of Peace in the Korean Peninsula Sustainability 12 23 9815 doi 10 3390 su12239815 Retrieved August 17 2021 Park Jin Young Mun Jinsu 2014 Kim Gunyoung Moore Richard Andrew eds Korea s Railway PPP Public Private Partnership Projects PDF Report KOTI Knowledge Sharing Report Sejong 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Medical Railroading During the Korean War 1950 1953 PDF Railroad History Railway and Locomotive Historical Society 204 49 65 ISSN 0090 7847 Retrieved August 21 2021 Spoonley Dave 2023 Railways of Asia South Korea and Taiwan World Railways Series Vol 8 Stamford Lincs UK Key Publishing ISBN 9781802826395 Tebay Andy June 6 2017 Seoul Metro operators merge International Railway Journal Archived from the original on 22 September 2020 Retrieved August 19 2021 Valliant Robert Britton May 1974 Japan and the Trans Siberian Railroad 1885 1905 PDF Thesis University of Hawaii Retrieved August 19 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rail transport in South Korea amp oldid 1158037228, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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