Beijing–Tongliao railway explained

Beijing–Tongliao Railway
Native Name:京通铁路
Native Name Lang:zh
Status:In operation
Start:Changping
End:Tongliao
Stations:63
Operator:China Railway
Depot:Huairou North locomotive depot (CR Beijing)
Tongliao locomotive depot (CR Shenyang)
Linelength Km:804
Tracks:1
Electrification:Overhead lines, AC 25 KV 50 Hz
(sections between Changping-Gubeikou, and between Chifeng South-Tongliao)
Speed Km/H:110
Map Name:map_name
Map State:uncollapsed

The Beijing–Tongliao or Jingtong railway, also known as the Shahe–Tongliao or Shatong railway, is a railroad in northern China between Beijing, the national capital, and Tongliao in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The line is 804km (500miles) long and runs northwest from Beijing Municipality through Hebei Province to southeastern Inner Mongolia.[1] The line was built between 1972 and 1977, and entered into operations in 1980.[1] Major cities and counties along route include Beijing, Luanping, Longhua, Chifeng and Tongliao.

History

The building of the Beijing–Tongliao railway began in October 1972 and was divided into three phases.[1] The construction planning phase took one and a half year.[1] The main construction took four years and was completed on December 12, 1977.[1] The final phase to prepare the line for commercial operation took another two and a half years.[1] The line officially opened on May 1, 1980.[1] At the height of construction, more than 200,000 workers participated in the project.[1]

At the time of its construction, the railway was notable for being the second rail line, after the Beijing–Harbin (Jingha) railway, to traverse the Great Wall and connect northern and northeastern China.[1] Whereas the Jingha Line skirts the coast, the Jingtong line runs inland through the rugged Yan Mountains. The Jingtong railway has 116 tunnels that are collectively in length, including the Red Flag Tunnel.[1] The line also has 450 bridges that are in total length, the longest of which, the Laoha River Grand Bridge in Chifeng, at set a record length in China.[1] In all bridges and tunnels account for 15% of the line's total length.[1]

Route

In Beijing, the Jingtong line begins at Changping North Railway Station, in suburban Changping District north of the city. At Changping North Station, the lines branches off of the Beijing–Baotou railway and then heads northeast through Huairou and Miyun Districts and leaves the city at Gubeikou Pass in the Yan Mountains. The line continues north through Luanping and Longhua counties of Hebei Province before reaching Chifeng in Inner Mongolia. From Chifeng, the line runs northeast following National Highway 111 across the Zhelimu Desert to Tongliao. The main line is 804km (500miles) long with 86 stations.[1] Including connection lines to the Beijing-Chengde and Shenyang-Chengde railways, the Beijing–Tongliao railway has a total track length of 870km (540miles).[1]

Rail Junctions

Beijing–Baotou railway

Jining–Tongliao railway; Tongliao–Ranghulu railway

See also

Notes and References

  1. (Chinese) "京通铁路" 2010-11-09