Box Width: | auto |
Madrid–Barcelona (- Figueres) high-speed rail line | |
Type: | High-speed rail |
Status: | Operational |
Locale: | Spain (Community of Madrid, Castilla-La Mancha, Aragon, Catalonia) |
Start: | Madrid Puerta de Atocha |
End: | Barcelona Sants/Figueres Vilafant |
Ridership2: | 4.4 million (2019)[1] |
Open: | 2008 (first section in 2003) |
Owner: | Adif |
Operator: | Renfe Operadora, SNCF (Ouigo), Trenitalia (Iryo) |
Stock: | AVE Class 103, 100, and 112 |
Linelength: | 620.9km (385.8miles) (as far as Barcelona) 748.9km (465.3miles) (as far as Figueres) |
Tracks: | Double track |
Electrification: | |
Map State: | collapsed |
The Madrid–Barcelona high-speed rail line is a 621km (386miles) standard gauge railway line inaugurated on 20 February 2008. Designed for speeds of 350abbr=onNaNabbr=on and compatibility with neighbouring countries' rail systems, it connects the cities of Madrid and Barcelona in 2 hours 30 minutes. In Barcelona the line is connected with the Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed rail line leading into France which connects it to the European high speed network.
Trains are operated by the national railway Renfe under the AVE and Avlo brands, and by private competitors Ouigo España and Iryo.
In 2003 construction of the first phase of a new standard gauge line from Madrid to the French border (Madrid–Zaragoza–Lleida) was completed and on 11 October of that year commercial service began. This service also stopped at Guadalajara–Yebes and Calatayud. The service began running at only 200km/h. On 19 May 2006, after two years of operation, speed was increased to 250km/h when the Spanish ASFA signalling system was replaced with level 1 of the new European ETCS/ERTMS system. On 16 October 2006 the trains on this line increased their operating speed to 280km/h.
On 18 December 2006 the AVE started operating to Camp de Tarragona, and on 7 May 2007 the service increased its speed to the maximum allowable for the line, 300km/h. This puts Tarragona at 30 minutes from Lleida. The extension to Barcelona was delayed various times due to technical problems; the Ministerio de Fomento having originally forecast the AVE's arrival in Barcelona by the end of 2007.[2]
The complete line was opened February 2008. As of 2012, seventeen trains now run every day between the hours of 6 am and 9 pm, covering the distance between the two cities in just 2 hours 30 minutes for the direct trains, and in 3 hours and 10 minutes for those calling at all intermediate stations. Before the high-speed line was built, the journey between the two cities took more than six hours.
It was originally forecast that, after reaching Barcelona in 2004, the line would run at 350km/h, the maximum capable speed of the new Siemens AVE trains S103 which have replaced the Talgo Bombardier AVE S102, after the installation of level 2 of the ETCS/ERTMS. But on the AVE's first day of operating at 300km/h to Tarragona the Minister of Public Works, Magdalena Álvarez, stated that the maximum commercial operating speeds of the AVE on all lines would be 300km/h.[3]
On 11 December 2011, the speed was raised to on a section of the railway (between km 64.4, near Guadalajara, and km 124.4), with plans to further increase the speed to on a sub-section (from km 81.0 to km 105.24) and plans to rapidly extend the speed throughout the Spanish high-speed network.[4] [5] [6] Nevertheless, after almost 5 years of operation with S103 trains running at up to on this section, the speed was decreased back to on 17 August 2016. The tests performed by ADIF had revealed that, at speeds exceeding 300km/h, the air which the trains were moving underneath was causing some stones of the ballast to rise, hitting the trains and causing damage of various kinds (the Spanish high-speed railways follow the French high-speed rail model of laying the rails on a bed of stones known as ballast, instead of laying the tracks on concrete plates, as is done for high-speed rail in Germany).[7] Due to this technical limitation and the substantial increase in costs and power necessary to break the 300km/h barrier, the AVE in Spain abandoned prospects of operating at speeds over 300km/h in the short or medium term.[7]
It was forecast that the AVE would substantially replace air traffic on the Barcelona – Madrid route (in the same way that the Eurostar has on the London-Paris/London-Brussels routes and France's TGV has on the Paris-Lyon route). Indeed, by the end of 2017, the line had already taken 63% of the traffic, taking most of it from aircraft.[8] A few years before the Madrid-Barcelona route was the world's busiest passenger air route in 2007 with 971 scheduled flights per week (both directions).[9] Similarly more than 80% of travelers between Madrid and Seville use the AVE, with fewer than 20% traveling by air.[10]
There was criticism during the construction of the Madrid-Barcelona line. A critical report by the consulting firm KPMG, commissioned by ADIF (Administrador de Infraestructuras Ferroviarias) at the behest of the Ministry for Public Works (Spanish; Castilian: Ministerio de Fomento) on 23 June 2004, pointed to a lack of in-depth studies and over-hasty execution of works as the most important reasons for the problems that dogged construction of the AVE line. For example, during the construction of the AVE tunnel near Barcelona, a number of nearby buildings suffered damage from a sinkhole that appeared near a commuter rail station, damaging one of its platforms. The construction committee of Barcelona's famed Sagrada Familia church lobbied for a re-routing of the tunnel – it passes within metres of the massive church's foundations. It also passes equally near the UNESCO-recognized Casa Milà also designed by Antoni Gaudí.
Furthermore, until 2005 both Siemens and Talgo/Bombardier train sets failed to meet scheduled speed targets, although in a test run during the homologation tests of the new S102 trains of RENFE, a train-set Talgo 350 (AVE S-102) reached a speed of 365km/h on the night of the 25/26 June 2006, and in July 2006 a Siemens Velaro train-set (AVE S-103) reached the highest top speed ever in Spain: 403.7km/h. At this time, it was a record for railed vehicles in Spain and a world record for unmodified commercial service trainsets, as the earlier TGV and ICE records were achieved with specially modified and shortened trainsets, and the 1996 Shinkansen record of 443km/h was using a test (non-commercial) trainset.
See main article: Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed rail line.
Originally planned to open in 2009, the extension of some Madrid-Barcelona routes to Figueres–Vilafant railway station via Girona, opened on 9 January 2013.[11] This made possible upon the completion of the 1311NaN1 Barcelona-Figueres section of the Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed rail line that connected for the first time the Spanish AVE high-speed network with the French TGV high-speed network.[12] There have been delays in building a four kilometre tunnel in Girona, the first phase of which was finished in September 2010,[13] and controversy over the route between Sants and Sagrera stations in Barcelona.[14] there are eight trains a day running from Madrid, connecting at Figueres Vilafant with two TGV services to Paris.[15]
This is an international high speed rail section between France and Spain. The section connects two cities on opposite sides of the border, Perpignan in Occitanie, France, and Figueres in Catalonia, Spain. It consists of a 44.41NaN1 railway which crosses the French–Spanish border via the Perthus Tunnel, an 8.31NaN1 tunnel bored under the Perthus Pass.[16] The section is open to high speed trains and freight. Construction was completed in February 2009, although services did not run until a station was built on the line at Figueres. As of March 2015, a daily TGV service connects Paris to Barcelona Sants via Perpignan-Figueres with 2 pairs of trips, plus other connections involving Lyon, Marseille, and Toulouse.[17]