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Trams in Kharkiv

The Kharkiv tram (Ukrainian: Харкiвський трамвай) is part of the public transport system of the second largest city of Ukraine. The tram system has a "Russian Standard" track gauge of 1,524 mm (5 ft). The tram network is built almost exclusively on the streets of Kharkiv, making it a traditional tram system. The network consists almost exclusively of double track. In most parts the tracks are separated from other road traffic, whereas elsewhere tracks lie on lanes that cars and buses may also use.

Kharkiv Tramline
Overview
Native nameХарківський трамвай
OwnerCity of Kharkiv
Area servedKholodnohirskyi District, Shevchenkivskyi District, Kyivskyi District, Saltivskyi District, Nemyshlyanskyi District, Industrialnyi District, Slobidskyi District, Osnovianskyi District, Novobavarskyi District
LocaleKharkiv, Ukraine
Number of lines9
Annual ridership103,818,300 (2016)
Websitehttp://gortransport.kharkov.ua
Operation
Began operationSeptember 24, 1882 (horse-drawn tram)
July 3, 1906 (electric tram)[1]
Operator(s)KP Miskelektrotransservis
KP Saltivske tramvaine depo
Number of vehicles276
Technical
System length217.6 kilometres (135.2 mi) (2017)
Track gauge1,524 mm (5 ft)
(1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) Russian gauge)
System map

History edit

The history of the horse tram edit

 
Horse-drawn tram on Mykolayivska Square

Beginning in 1871, people and companies began to apply to the Kharkov Duma with projects for the construction of a horse-drawn tram in Kharkiv. On March 2, 1881, French businessmen P.-K. Bonnie and E. Otlie appealed to the Duma with their rationale for the construction of a horse-drawn railway in Kharkiv, which was accepted. On May 31, 1882, a contract was signed with them for the construction of a road for passenger and goods traffic with a length of 17.5 versts. The first horse railway line was built on September 12, 1882 and belonged to a private Belgian company. The first route was from the station of the Azov-Kursk Railway (now the Kharkiv railway station) to the stock exchange on Mykolayivska Square. Over time, 3 tram lines were opened in the city center.

The fare was set at 5 kopecks per passenger for the entire journey with an additional charge of 2 kopecks in case of transfer to another line. The horse-drawn tram worked an average of 14–15 hours a day: from 07:00 to 23:00 in summer (until 22:00 in winter).

The first horse depot was built in 1885. On September 16, 1917, the City Duma considered the issue of stopping the horse-drawn tram. On March 23, 1919, the horse tram ceased to exist.

In July 1920, horse-drawn tram service was temporarily resumed on the section from the station to Rosa Luxemburg Square. But already in June 1921, this line was electrified — an electric tram began to run along it. In November 1922, the line on Moskalyovka was electrified, and in October 1923, the line along 1 Travnia and Staro-Moskovska Streets to the Chervonozavod Theater was electrified. The routes of the horse-drawn tram along Sumsky and Kinnaya Streets were canceled, and the lines were dismantled. The carriages of the horse-drawn tram were operated until the end of the 20s of the 20th century - due to the lack of rolling stock, they were used as trailer carriages for the electric tram. But in connection with the transition of all tram lines to broad gauge at the end of the 20s, the narrow-gauge carriages of the former horse-drawn tram were finally scrapped.

The history of the electric tram edit

 
Tram on Serhievska Square

The first 12 carriages, in 1906, were built at Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg AG.[1]

The track width was 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) (the current track width is 1,524 mm (5 ft)).[1]

Electric tram service was launched on the following routes: "Pavlivskyi Maidan - Balashovskyi Vokzal" along the street. Petinsky (now Georgiya Tarasenko St.), St. Zmiivska (now Gagarina Ave.), str. Netechenska, prov. Podilskyi, prov. Kostyurinskyi (now part of Podilskyi Prov.). In the same year, the Petynsky tram park was built, which was located at the Craft School. From the very beginning, it belonged to the city and was exploited by the city authorities, which caused conflicts with a private Belgian horse. There were fights between hired people and workers who laid tram lines.

Current times edit

 
One-time ticket for travel in the city tram. The price is 6 hryvnias.

In October 2016, extensive sections of the track are in poor condition, even unsafe. Sleepers are rotten in parts, fishplates unbolted, pointwork derelict, some rails have sunk some 8 cm (3.1 in) below the road surface, overhead voltage supply is poorly regulated. Speeds are low.

In October 2018, the line beyond Children's Park was back in service, though the track is in poor condition, especially at the balloon loops at the terminus and Children's Park. The line through the city center - previously unused except for specials - now sees regular services, but the line from near Children's Park past the cemetery and down to the valley is not in service. The line to the station is in bad condition. A section between the station and the river has been rebuilt, apparently now omitting any connections to former car barns and/or workshops.

In October 2021 the Stadler Metelitsa tram was making test runs on the Kharkiv tram system.[2][3] On 24 September 2021 acting mayor of Kharkiv Ihor Terekhov stated that his city's tram fleet would be completely renewed in four years.[3]

 
Tatra T6A5 destroyed by Russians in the bombardment of the Saltivka depot

Following the start of the ongoing Russian assault on Kharkiv since February 24, 2022 in the invasion of Ukraine all traffic has been suspended on February 28. The tram depot in Saltivka has been destroyed by Russian bombardment early in March.[4] On May 4 the City Council announced it will be impossible to restore the system as all electrical substations and rolling stock have been destroyed by the enemy.[5]

A number of European cities, including Brno,[6] Ostrava and Prague, have offered to donate surplus tram cars for restoration of the system.

On May 19, 2022, Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov announced that four light rail lines would restart service, due to the improving security situation in the city.[7]

Rolling stock edit

The Kharkiv tram system uses many different tram cars and types, with some being designed in Moscow and manufactured in Riga, some being manufactured by the ČKD Tatra company in Prague. The following data incorporates only some tram cars used by the system.

Current edit

Picture Manufacturer Model Quantity Since
    ČKD Tatra

  RVR

T3SU (3 doors)

T3VPA

T3SUCS

T3M

T3

T3A

89

3

61

15

5

30

1966

2009

2011

2011

2012

2013

    ČKD Tatra T6B5SU 22 1988
    UKVZ KTM-5

71-619

1

9

1975

2007

    ČKD Tatra

  KhVRZ

VPNP 3 2017
    Stadler Rail Metelitsa 1 2021

Historical edit

Picture Manufacturer Model Quantity Years
    MAN 12 1906–1930
  MMBP 74

28

1910–1949

1910–1965

    UKVZ Kh

M

236

163

1927–1969

1927–1969

  UKVZ KTM/KTP-1

KTM/KTP-2

49

140

1949–1974

1961–1980

    RVR MTV-82 49 1953–1977
  RVR RVZ-6 167 1961–1984
  ČKD Tatra Tatra K2 40 1970–1991
    UKVZ KTM-5 136 1975–2004

Service rolling stock edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c (in Russian) Kharkiv tram - from and to (photo), SQ (24 July 2021)
  2. ^ (in Russian) A new Swiss tram will run in Kharkiv, Status Quo (1 October 2021)
  3. ^ a b (in English) Swiss-based Stadler to build two factories in Kharkiv - acting mayor, Interfax-Ukraine (24 September 2021)
  4. ^ "Зруйнований Харків. Кадри розгромленого окупантами трамвайного депо".
  5. ^ "Наслідки "русского мира": у Харкові більше немає трамваїв, метро запустять після війни".
  6. ^ "Brno daruje partnerskému Charkovu šest starších trolejbusů a dvě tramvaje".
  7. ^ Beaubien, Jason (2022-05-19). "Kharkiv's mayor says it's time to move out of the city's subway stations". NPR. Retrieved 2022-05-19.

External links edit

trams, kharkiv, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, ukrainian, february, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Ukrainian February 2023 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Ukrainian Wikipedia article at uk Harkivskij tramvaj see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated uk Harkivskij tramvaj to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Trams in Kharkiv news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Kharkiv tram Ukrainian Harkivskij tramvaj is part of the public transport system of the second largest city of Ukraine The tram system has a Russian Standard track gauge of 1 524 mm 5 ft The tram network is built almost exclusively on the streets of Kharkiv making it a traditional tram system The network consists almost exclusively of double track In most parts the tracks are separated from other road traffic whereas elsewhere tracks lie on lanes that cars and buses may also use Kharkiv TramlineOverviewNative nameHarkivskij tramvajOwnerCity of KharkivArea servedKholodnohirskyi District Shevchenkivskyi District Kyivskyi District Saltivskyi District Nemyshlyanskyi District Industrialnyi District Slobidskyi District Osnovianskyi District Novobavarskyi DistrictLocaleKharkiv UkraineNumber of lines9Annual ridership103 818 300 2016 Websitehttp gortransport kharkov uaOperationBegan operationSeptember 24 1882 horse drawn tram July 3 1906 electric tram 1 Operator s KP Miskelektrotransservis KP Saltivske tramvaine depoNumber of vehicles276TechnicalSystem length217 6 kilometres 135 2 mi 2017 Track gauge1 524 mm 5 ft 1 520 mm 4 ft 11 27 32 in Russian gauge System map Contents 1 History 1 1 The history of the horse tram 1 2 The history of the electric tram 2 Current times 3 Rolling stock 3 1 Current 3 2 Historical 3 3 Service rolling stock 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe history of the horse tram edit nbsp Horse drawn tram on Mykolayivska SquareBeginning in 1871 people and companies began to apply to the Kharkov Duma with projects for the construction of a horse drawn tram in Kharkiv On March 2 1881 French businessmen P K Bonnie and E Otlie appealed to the Duma with their rationale for the construction of a horse drawn railway in Kharkiv which was accepted On May 31 1882 a contract was signed with them for the construction of a road for passenger and goods traffic with a length of 17 5 versts The first horse railway line was built on September 12 1882 and belonged to a private Belgian company The first route was from the station of the Azov Kursk Railway now the Kharkiv railway station to the stock exchange on Mykolayivska Square Over time 3 tram lines were opened in the city center The fare was set at 5 kopecks per passenger for the entire journey with an additional charge of 2 kopecks in case of transfer to another line The horse drawn tram worked an average of 14 15 hours a day from 07 00 to 23 00 in summer until 22 00 in winter The first horse depot was built in 1885 On September 16 1917 the City Duma considered the issue of stopping the horse drawn tram On March 23 1919 the horse tram ceased to exist In July 1920 horse drawn tram service was temporarily resumed on the section from the station to Rosa Luxemburg Square But already in June 1921 this line was electrified an electric tram began to run along it In November 1922 the line on Moskalyovka was electrified and in October 1923 the line along 1 Travnia and Staro Moskovska Streets to the Chervonozavod Theater was electrified The routes of the horse drawn tram along Sumsky and Kinnaya Streets were canceled and the lines were dismantled The carriages of the horse drawn tram were operated until the end of the 20s of the 20th century due to the lack of rolling stock they were used as trailer carriages for the electric tram But in connection with the transition of all tram lines to broad gauge at the end of the 20s the narrow gauge carriages of the former horse drawn tram were finally scrapped The history of the electric tram edit nbsp Tram on Serhievska SquareThe first 12 carriages in 1906 were built at Maschinenfabrik Augsburg Nurnberg AG 1 The track width was 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in the current track width is 1 524 mm 5 ft 1 Electric tram service was launched on the following routes Pavlivskyi Maidan Balashovskyi Vokzal along the street Petinsky now Georgiya Tarasenko St St Zmiivska now Gagarina Ave str Netechenska prov Podilskyi prov Kostyurinskyi now part of Podilskyi Prov In the same year the Petynsky tram park was built which was located at the Craft School From the very beginning it belonged to the city and was exploited by the city authorities which caused conflicts with a private Belgian horse There were fights between hired people and workers who laid tram lines Current times edit nbsp One time ticket for travel in the city tram The price is 6 hryvnias In October 2016 extensive sections of the track are in poor condition even unsafe Sleepers are rotten in parts fishplates unbolted pointwork derelict some rails have sunk some 8 cm 3 1 in below the road surface overhead voltage supply is poorly regulated Speeds are low In October 2018 the line beyond Children s Park was back in service though the track is in poor condition especially at the balloon loops at the terminus and Children s Park The line through the city center previously unused except for specials now sees regular services but the line from near Children s Park past the cemetery and down to the valley is not in service The line to the station is in bad condition A section between the station and the river has been rebuilt apparently now omitting any connections to former car barns and or workshops In October 2021 the Stadler Metelitsa tram was making test runs on the Kharkiv tram system 2 3 On 24 September 2021 acting mayor of Kharkiv Ihor Terekhov stated that his city s tram fleet would be completely renewed in four years 3 nbsp Tatra T6A5 destroyed by Russians in the bombardment of the Saltivka depotFollowing the start of the ongoing Russian assault on Kharkiv since February 24 2022 in the invasion of Ukraine all traffic has been suspended on February 28 The tram depot in Saltivka has been destroyed by Russian bombardment early in March 4 On May 4 the City Council announced it will be impossible to restore the system as all electrical substations and rolling stock have been destroyed by the enemy 5 A number of European cities including Brno 6 Ostrava and Prague have offered to donate surplus tram cars for restoration of the system On May 19 2022 Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov announced that four light rail lines would restart service due to the improving security situation in the city 7 Rolling stock editThe Kharkiv tram system uses many different tram cars and types with some being designed in Moscow and manufactured in Riga some being manufactured by the CKD Tatra company in Prague The following data incorporates only some tram cars used by the system Current edit Picture Manufacturer Model Quantity Since nbsp nbsp CKD Tatra nbsp RVR T3SU 3 doors T3VPAT3SUCST3MT3T3A 89 36115530 1966 20092011201120122013 nbsp nbsp CKD Tatra T6B5SU 22 1988 nbsp nbsp UKVZ KTM 5 71 619 1 9 1975 2007 nbsp nbsp CKD Tatra nbsp KhVRZ VPNP 3 2017 nbsp nbsp Stadler Rail Metelitsa 1 2021Historical edit Picture Manufacturer Model Quantity Years nbsp nbsp MAN 12 1906 1930 nbsp MMBP 74 28 1910 1949 1910 1965 nbsp nbsp UKVZ Kh M 236 163 1927 1969 1927 1969 nbsp UKVZ KTM KTP 1 KTM KTP 2 49 140 1949 1974 1961 1980 nbsp nbsp RVR MTV 82 49 1953 1977 nbsp RVR RVZ 6 167 1961 1984 nbsp CKD Tatra Tatra K2 40 1970 1991 nbsp nbsp UKVZ KTM 5 136 1975 2004Service rolling stock edit nbsp MGP 152 motorized cargo platform nbsp MGP 153 motorized cargo platform nbsp VT 1 tractor unit based on KTV 57 nbsp VTP 3See also editKharkiv Metro Kharkiv railway stationReferences edit a b c in Russian Kharkiv tram from and to photo SQ 24 July 2021 in Russian A new Swiss tram will run in Kharkiv Status Quo 1 October 2021 a b in English Swiss based Stadler to build two factories in Kharkiv acting mayor Interfax Ukraine 24 September 2021 Zrujnovanij Harkiv Kadri rozgromlenogo okupantami tramvajnogo depo Naslidki russkogo mira u Harkovi bilshe nemaye tramvayiv metro zapustyat pislya vijni Brno daruje partnerskemu Charkovu sest starsich trolejbusu a dve tramvaje Beaubien Jason 2022 05 19 Kharkiv s mayor says it s time to move out of the city s subway stations NPR Retrieved 2022 05 19 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tram transport in Kharkiv Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trams in Kharkiv amp oldid 1205246685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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