Fengtai–Shacheng Railway

The K729 train from Ganzhou to Datong on the Fengsha Railway in Mentougou District of western Beijing.

The Fengtai–Shacheng Railway (simplified Chinese: 丰沙铁路; traditional Chinese: 豐沙鐵路; pinyin: Fēngshā Tiělù), also known as the Fengsha Railway, is a dual-track, electrified, railroad in northern China. The Fengtai–Shacheng Railway runs 105 km (65 mi) from Fengtai District in western Beijing Municipality to the town of Shacheng in Huailai County, Hebei Province.[1] The line passes through Beijing's Fengtai, Shijingshan and Mentougou Districts, and Huailai County in northern Hebei. The original single track line was built from 1952 to 1955.[1] The second track was added in 1972.[1] The line was electrified in 1984.[1]

Line description

A bridge across the Yongding River.

The Fengsha Railway runs up the Yongding River Valley from Fengtai District in southwest Beijing through the Taihang Mountains and across the Guanting Reservoir to Shacheng, on the Beijing–Baotou Railway.[1] The line crosses the Yongding River eight times through rugged terrain and has 67 tunnels and 81 bridges in all.[1] The shortest tunnel, No. 056, just 19.8 m (65 ft) in length, is the shortest standard gauge rail tunnel in China.

An 8K locomotive on the Fengsha Line at the Luopoling Station.

The famous late Qing Dynasty railway engineer Jeme Tien Yow considered routing the Beijing-Zhangjiakou Railway through the Yongding River Valley, but abandoned the approach due to high construction costs.[1][2] The line was built in 1952 as an alternative route to Beijing-Baotou Railway for the shipment of coal from Shanxi.[1] The Fengsha Railway avoids the steep incline at Nankou near Badaling on the Jingbao Line.[2] A marble stele by the entrance to Tunnel No. 1 near Liuliqu Village commemorates the 108 soldiers who died building the initial line.[1]

Rail connections

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fengtai–Shacheng Railway.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "丰沙铁路". Worlduc.com (in Chinese). 4 February 2012.
  2. 1 2 "丰沙铁路(1955)". China Digital Science and Technology Museum (in Chinese).
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