Beijing–Shanghai Railway

This article is about the lower-speed rail line between Beijing and Shanghai. For the new high-speed line, see Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway.
Beijing–Shanghai Railway

The Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge, an important part of the railway, was opened for traffic in 1968
Overview
Type Heavy rail
System China Railways
Status In operation
Locale People's Republic of China
Termini Beijing
Shanghai
Operation
Opened 1912
Operator(s) China Railways
Technical
Line length 1,462 km (908 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Operating speed 160–200 km/h (99–124 mph)
Route map (selected stations)
Legend
km
0 Beijing
73 Langfang
Yangcun
136 Tianjing West
Jinghai
Qingxian
251 Cangzhou
Botou
Dongguang
Wuqiao
366 Dezhou
Jinan Yellow River New Bridge
484 Jinan
556 Taishan
Ciyao
640 Yanzhou
Zoucheng
Tengzhou
Zoucheng
735 Zaozhuang West
803 Xuzhou
877 Suzhou
Bengbu Huai River Bridge
968 Bengbu
Chuzhou North
Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge
1150 Nanjing
Qixia Mountain Tunnel
1214 Zhenjiang
Danyang
1286 Changzhou
1325 Wuxi
1368 Suzhou
1402 Kunshan
1451 Shanghai

The Beijing–Shanghai Railway or Jinghu railway (simplified Chinese: 铁路; traditional Chinese: 京滬鐵路; pinyin: Jīng tiĕ) is a railway line in China between Beijing and Shanghai.

The line has a total length of 1,462 kilometres[1] and connects the municipalities of Beijing, Tianjin, and Shanghai, as well as the provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Anhui and Jiangsu. It is commonly referred to as the Jinghu Railway, taking on the abbreviated names of the two terminal cities. In Chinese, Jing means "capital" and refers to Beijing, and Hu is the abbreviated name for Shanghai.

History

The BeijingShanghai railway is composed of three sections. These three sections are some of the earliest railways in China, built before 1910 during the Qing dynasty. The first section is from Beijing to Tianjin, constructed as part of the Imperial Railways of Northern China between 1897 and 1900.

The second section is from Tianjin to Pukou  a suburb of Nanjing  and used to be called the Tianjin–Pukou Railway.

The third section is from Nanjing to Shanghai, built between 1905 and 1908. This section is called ShanghaiNanjing Railway. During 19271949, however, when China's capital was Nanjing, this section alone was called the "Jinghu" railway.

Between Pukou and Xiaguan, the railway crosses the Yangtze River. Before the completion of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge in 1968, the trains were ferried across car-by-car.[1] Passengers could also disembark at Nanjing North (Pukou), take a passenger ferry, and take a train again at the then Nanjing main station south of the river (now known as Nanjing West).

After the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge was completed in 1968, these three sections were linked together and renamed as a single BeijingShanghai or Jinghu Railway.

Current status

The railway line is the principal line between Beijing and Shanghai and along with the Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway, it serves as one of the busiest rail corridors in China. It has dual tracks between Beijing and Shanghai, and the full length of the railway has been electrified. The line has been upgraded for High-speed rail services during the Sixth Speed Up Campaign. Passenger rail service now offers non-stop overnight service on CRH Sleepers (D-series trains).

D type express day bullet and overnight sleeper bullet trains have now commenced operation between Beijing and Shanghai. There are currently 1 day and 5 overnight D bullet trains. Overnight Bullet trains take between 9 hours, 59 minutes and 10 hours, 4 minutes to complete the trip and are Soft sleeper only.

On June 30, 2011, the Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway opened and runs roughly parallel to the Beijing–Shanghai Railway. The opening of the high-speed railway relieved the Beijing–Shanghai Railway from overcrowding, and it's increasingly shifted to freight traffic. As of early 2015, 5 regular trains per day go full way from Beijing to Shanghai on the old line, although hundreds of trains still use selected sections of it.

See also

References

External links

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