Circular Line (KMRT)
Circular Line | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
CAF Urbos trams parked at C3 Station | |||
Overview | |||
Type | Light Rail | ||
Locale | Kaohsiung, Taiwan | ||
Termini |
C1 (Near Yisin Rd.) C14 (Near Kaohsiung Harbor Station) | ||
Stations |
14 (under construction), 36 (total planned) | ||
Operation | |||
Operator(s) | Kaohsiung Mass Rapid Transit | ||
Character | At-Grade/Elevated | ||
Depot(s) | Cianjhen Depot | ||
Rolling stock | CAF Urbos[1] | ||
Events | |||
Status | Under construction | ||
Operation will start | Late-2016 | ||
Technical | |||
Line length | 22.1 km (13.7 mi) | ||
Number of tracks | 2 | ||
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) | ||
Electrification | ACR (rapid charge accumulator) | ||
Operating speed | 70 km/h maximum[2] |
The Circular Line (Chinese: 環狀輕軌; Wade–Giles: Huan2 chuang4 Ch'ing1 kuei3; literally Circular Light Rail) is a 22.1-kilometer (13.7 mi) circular light rail line currently under construction in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.[3] The south part of this LRT line makes use of the defunct railroad of TRA Kaohsiung Harbor Line.
Estimated to 16.5 billion TWD, it will be the world's first light rail vehicle system on a fully catenary-free route.[4][5]
Phase I construction consists of a section of line from Station C1 to Station C14, where Stations C3 and C14 are the transfer stations to Kaohsiung Mass Rapid Transit system's Red Line and Orange Line, respectively. Construction of Phase I began on June 4, 2013.[6] The section C1 – C8 (Perhaps C1 – C10) is scheduled to be tested from August 2015 (riding on the trams is open to the public for free[7]) and fully operational by late-2016.[8][9][10] As of March 30, 2015, the civil construction part of Stations C1, C2 and C3 has been finished. The CAF Urbos trams used in this line parked at or passed by these stations for demonstrations and tests in several events from November 2014 to March 2015.
Phase II construction will not start until the Kaohsiung urban railway is relocated underground in 2017. It is scheduled to be completed in 2019.[4]
Stations
Code | Station Name | Section | Connection | Location | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
English | Chinese | |||||
— ↑ Loop line towards Depot ↑ — | ||||||
C1 | Lizihnei | 籬仔內 | Phase I | Cianjhen | Kaohsiung | |
C2 | Kaisyuan Rueitian | 凱旋瑞田 | ||||
C3 | Cianjhen Star | 前鎮之星 | Red via Kaisyuan (R6) | |||
C4 | Kaisyuan Jhonghua | 凱旋中華 | ||||
C5 | Dream Mall | 夢時代 | ||||
C6 | Commerce and Trade Park | 經貿園區 | ||||
C7 | Software Technology Park | 軟體園區 | ||||
C8 | Kaohsiung Exhibition Center | 高雄展覽館 | ||||
C9 | Cruise Terminal | 旅運中心 | Lingya | |||
C10 | Glory Pier | 光榮碼頭 | ||||
C11 | Love Pier | 真愛碼頭 | Yancheng | |||
C12 | Dayi Pier-2 | 駁二大義 | ||||
C13 | Penglai Pier-2 | 駁二蓬萊 | Gushan | |||
C14 | Hamasen | 哈瑪星 | Orange via Sizihwan (O1) | |||
C15 | Wufu 4th Rd. | 五福四路 | Phase II | |||
C16 | Dagong Rd. | 大公路 | ||||
C17 | Singlong Rd. | 興隆路 | ||||
C18 | Gushan | 鼓山 | Western [2017] | |||
C19 | Jiouru 4th Rd. | 九如四路 | ||||
C20 | Fine Arts Museum | 美術館 | Western via Fine Arts Museum [2017] | |||
C21 | Art Park | 美術園區 | ||||
C22 | Kaohsiung Municipal United Hospital | 聯合醫院 | ||||
C23 | Longde Rd. | 龍德路 | ||||
C24 | Kaohsiung City Hall | 新市政中心 | Red via Aozihdi (R13) | |||
C25 | Longhua Junior High School | 龍華國中 | Zuoying | |||
C26 | President New Century | 大統新世紀 | Sanmin | |||
C27 | Dingshan | 鼎山 | ||||
C28 | Wanzihnei | 灣子內 | ||||
C29 | Jiansing Rd. | 建興路 | ||||
C30 | Dashun Jiouru | 大順九如 | Western via National Science And Technology Museum [2017] | |||
C31 | Universal Cinemas | 環球影城 | Orange via Cultural Center (O7) Wukuaicuo (O8) | Lingya | ||
C32 | Rainbow Park | 彩虹公園 | Orange via Cultural Center (O7) Wukuaicuo (O8) | |||
C33 | Minsheng Hospital | 民生醫院 | ||||
C34 | Kuochi Vocational High School | 國際商工 | ||||
C35 | Wuchang Rd. | 武昌路 | Cianjhen | |||
C36 | Ersheng Rd. | 二聖路 | ||||
C37 | Depot | 機廠 | ||||
— ↓ Loop line towards Lizihnei ↓ — | ||||||
Rolling stock
The line's fleet will consist of nine CAF Urbos trams that will operate catenary-free.[5] The tramcars will be 34-meter-long (112 ft), and will be able to transport a total of 250 passengers (seated, and standing).[4]
Previous light rail demonstration project
In 2004, the Kaohsiung City Government and Siemens built a temporary two-station circular light rail line in Central Park, operated by a single trainset, in order to demonstrate the feasibility of building a light rail system in Kaohsiung City. It was meant to alleviate some residents' concerns that light rail would negatively impact their surroundings by producing excessive noise and hindering normal traffic flow. This Siemens Combino vehicle would later become the D2 Class operated in Melbourne, Australia.
See also
References
- ↑ "Kaohsiung picks CAF to build catenary-free trams". Railway Gazette International. 2013-01-07. Retrieved 2013-07-23.
- ↑ "KAOHSIUNG LRV". CAF. Retrieved 2013-07-23.
- ↑ "Light Rail System - Project Content". Mass Rapid Transit Bureau, Kaohsiung City. 2012-08-17. Retrieved 2013-07-23.
- 1 2 3 "Trams: Kaohsiung Launches Taiwan's First Light Rail Service". Kaohsiung City Government. 2015-01-08. Retrieved 2015-01-25.
- 1 2 "Trams: KAOHSIUNG TRAMWAY". CAF. Retrieved 2014-03-20.
- ↑ "Kaohsiung begins circular light rail construction". Focus Taiwan News Channel. 2013-06-04. Retrieved 2013-07-23.
- ↑ Tim Berge (2015-10-16). "Kaohsiung LRT Opens to Public". ICRT FM.100. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
- ↑ "First stage of light rail system ready to kick off". Noodls. 2014-04-29. Retrieved 2014-06-20.
- ↑ "About Taiwan". Info Taiwan. 2014-03-17. Retrieved 2014-03-20.
- ↑ James Chuang (2015-06-08). "Kaohsiung light rail line set to go full circle". International Railway Journal. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kaohsiung LRT Circular Line. |
- Kaohsiung Future LRT Network Map
- Kaohsiung LRT Project(Phase I) Project Brief
- LRT Pages in Kaohsiung Metro Construction Bureau
- The newest Kaohsiung LRT proposal clip
- Older Kaohsiung LRT proposal clip