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Line 1 (Wuhan Metro)

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Line 1
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerWuhan
LocaleWuhan, China
Termini
Stations32
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemWuhan Metro
Services1
Operator(s)Wuhan Metro Group Co., Ltd.
Rolling stockCRRC Changchun Railway Vehicles Chinese Type B
CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive Chinese Type B
Daily ridership404,100 (Nov. 2018 daily average)
History
Opened28 July 2004; 20 years ago (2004-07-28)
Technical
Line length38 km (23.61 mi)
Number of tracks2
CharacterElevated
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
ElectrificationThird rail 750 V DC
Route map

The Line 1 of Wuhan Metro (Chinese: 武汉轨道交通一号线) is an elevated metro line in the city of Wuhan, Hubei. It is the longest continuous metro viaduct in the world. Line 1 opened on 28 July 2004,[1] making Wuhan the fifth city in mainland China to have a metro system after Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai and Guangzhou.[2] This is the first Metro line in China incorrectly referred to as a light rail (轻轨; qīngguǐ) line in Chinese terminology because it is elevated.[3] Originally a branch line was planned to cross the Yangtze to Wuchang District via the Second Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge.[4] The Second Wuhan River Bridge even had a provision in the central median where Line 1 trains would run in anticipation for the branch line when it opened in 1995. However, by 2003 the reservation was removed to allow for more traffic lanes when the bridge was undergoing renovation.[5]

Line 1
Hankou North depot
Hankou North
Shekou­xincheng
Tengzigang
Dijiao
Xinrong
Danshuichi
Xuzhou­xincun
Erqi Road
Toudao Street
Jiang'an depot (closed)
former connection to
China Railway lines
Huangpu Road  8 
Sanyang Road  7 
Dazhi Road  6 
Xunlimen  2 
Youyi Road
Liji North Road
Chongren Road
Qiaokou Road depot
Qiaokou Road
Taipingyang
Zongguan  3 
Hanxi 1st Road
Gutian 4th Road
Gutian 3rd Road
Gutian 2nd Road
Gutian 1st Road
Gutian depot
Duoluokou
Zhuyehai
Etouwan
Wuhuan Boulevard
Dongwu Boulevard
Matoutan Park  6 
Sandian
Jinghe

History

[edit]
Segment Commencement Length Station(s) Name
Huangpu Road — Zongguan 28 July 2004 9.769 km (6.07 mi) 10 Phase 1
Dijiao — Huangpu Road 29 July 2010 7.040 km (4.37 mi) 6 Phase 2
Zongguan — Dongwu Boulevard 11.454 km (7.12 mi) 9
Hankou North — Dijiao 28 May 2014 5.555 km (3.45 mi) 3 Hankou North extension
Zhuyehai 17 September 2014 Infill station 1
Dongwu Boulevard — Jinghe 26 December 2017 4.118 km (2.56 mi) 3 Jinghe North extension

Stations

[edit]

Phase 1 stations are (from west to east): Zongguan, Taipingyang, Qiaokoulu, Chongrenlu, Lijibeilu, Youyilu, Xunlimen (originally Jianghanlu, connection with future Line 2; not to confuse with the future Jianghanlu station of Line 2), Dazhilu, Sanyanglu, Huangpulu.

Line 1, Phase 2 stations from west to east are Jinshandadao (not open yet), Dongwudadao, Wuhuandadao, Etouwan, Zhuyehai, Duoluokou, Gutianyilu, Gutianerlu, Gutiansanlu, Gutiansilu and Hanxiyilu to the West of Zongguan and Toudaojie, Erqilu, Xuzhouxincun, Danshuichi, Xinrong (originally Chalukou) and Dijiao to the East of Huangpulu (station names changed according to official system map and schedule[7]).

Stations on Line 1 were originally without platform barriers of any type, contrary to most other metro lines in China today. However, at an unspecified interval, half height platform gates are now being installed gradually.

Station name Connections Distance
km
Location
English Chinese
Hankou North 汉口北 0.000 0.000 Huangpi
Shekou­xincheng 滠口新城 3.410 3.410
Tengzigang 滕子岗 1.120 4.530 Jiang'an
Dijiao 堤角 1.025 5.555
Xinrong 新荣  Yangluo  1.165 6.720
Danshuichi 丹水池 1.437 8.157
Xuzhou­xincun 徐州新村 1.525 9.682
Erqi Road 二七路 0.795 10.477
Toudao Street 头道街 0.915 11.392
Huangpu Road 黄浦路  8  1.203 12.595
Sanyang Road 三阳路  7  1.155 13.750
Dazhi Road 大智路  6  1.010 14.760
Xunlimen 循礼门  2  1.083 15.843
Youyi Road 友谊路 0.986 16.829 Jianghan
Liji North Road 利济北路 0.888 17.717 Qiaokou
Chongren Road 崇仁路 0.880 18.597
Qiaokou Road 硚口路 1.142 19.739
Taipingyang 太平洋 1.045 20.784
Zongguan 宗关  3  1.580 22.364
Hanxi 1st Road 汉西一路 0.921 23.285
Gutian 4th Road 古田四路 0.820 24.105
Gutian 3rd Road 古田三路 0.795 24.900
Gutian 2nd Road 古田二路 0.907 25.807
Gutian 1st Road 古田一路 1.518 27.325
Duoluokou 舵落口 1.435 28.760
Zhuyehai 竹叶海 0.807 29.567
Etouwan 额头湾 0.944 30.511
Wuhuan Boulevard 五环大道 1.655 32.166 Dongxihu
Dongwu Boulevard 东吴大道 1.652 33.818
Matoutan Park 码头潭公园  6  1.037 34.855
Sandian 三店 1.971 36.826
Jinghe 径河 1.110 37.936

All translation of station names are according to official translation.[11]

Operation

[edit]

Beginning May 28, 2014, every other train will reach Hankou North Station as the northern terminus; others will terminate at Dijiao Station.[12]

Rolling stock

[edit]
Left: Phase 2 rolling stock.
Right: Phase 1 rolling stock.
Type Time of manufacturing Lines operated Cars Assembly Notes
Type B 200?–2004 Line 1, Wuhan Metro 48 Tc M M Tc Manufactured by Changchun Railway Vehicles.[13]
Type B 2010–2011 Line 1, Wuhan Metro 84 Tc M M Tc Manufactured by Zhuzhou Electric Locomotive Co., Ltd.[14]

The rolling stock for Line 1 is a uses 4 car Type B trains, with 100 km/h (62 mph) of max speed, 80 km/h (50 mph) of operation max speed, and 36.6 km/h (23 mph) average speed. Traction power is provided by a third rail collected by bottom contact contact shoes on the train. A full train provides 176 seats, and can carry 1,276 passengers by Chinese regulation of 9 people per square meter.[15]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ 武汉轻轨今迎第1亿名乘客 (in Simplified Chinese). 荆楚网-楚天都市报. 2011-04-09. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-01-11.
  2. ^ (English) "Urbanrail—Wuhan Archived 2010-04-09 at the Wayback Machine Apr. 9, 2011
  3. ^ Wuhan, along with other three Chinese cities, has been the first batch to be approved to build so-called "light rail" system in China since 2000, see 2000年,国家批准长春、大连、武汉和重庆4个城市为首批轻轨建设示范城市. Archived from the original on 2014-01-08. Retrieved 2012-11-16.. However, Changchun built a true light-rail system, Dalian built a metro-style commuter rail system (and is referred to as 快轨; kuàiguǐ, not "轻轨 qīngguǐ"), and Chongqing opted for a monorail system, whereas Wuhan was the only one to build an elevated metro system. See "Urbanrail—Wuhan" Archived 2010-04-09 at the Wayback Machine and affiliated Wikipedia pages. See also a comment from He Jibin, an Urban Planning official from Wuhan Municipality: "Do not assume only underground lines are metro, Line 1 is also a type of metro..." (“不要认为地下的才是地铁,1号线也是地铁的一种方式……”何继斌开门见山地纠正概念,他是武汉市国土规划局交通市政处处长……) Li Fei (李斐) (March 2012). 那些年,我们一起追的地铁. 大武汉. 148: 33. Archived from the original on 2012-10-14.
  4. ^ 武汉规划网-武汉市规划研究院. www.whplan.cn. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  5. ^ 长江二桥:二千万元做“美容”. www.cnhubei.com. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  6. ^ "Wuhan light rail starts test run". China Daily. Retrieved 2010-07-31.
  7. ^ a b 武汉轻轨1号线开通 (in Chinese). Wuhan Metro. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
  8. ^ 武汉地铁1号线汉口北延长线明日开通. ycwb.com news. 2014-05-27. Archived from the original on 2016-01-05. Retrieved 2014-05-31.
  9. ^ 竹叶海站宜家联廊桥投入使用 [Zhuyehai Station opened]. Qiaokou District People's Government. 2014-09-17. Archived from the original on 2014-11-06. Retrieved 2014-09-18.
  10. ^ 武汉轻轨1号线向西延伸4公里 今年开工2013年通车_网易新闻. news.163.com. Archived from the original on 2014-05-27. Retrieved 2018-07-08.
  11. ^ "Official Map of Operation". Archived from the original on 2013-01-21. Retrieved 2012-12-27.
  12. ^ 记者体验轻轨汉口北延长线 半小时可达循礼门
  13. ^ changj (2009-10-27). 一号线一期工程车辆车体外表油漆涂装改造工程二次招标公告 (in Chinese). 武汉地铁. Retrieved 2010-01-31.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ 中国南车进入武汉地铁市场 株机公司中标84辆地铁 (in Chinese). 中国南车. 2008-11-17. Retrieved 2010-01-31.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ 武汉市轨道交通一号线车辆 (in Chinese). 长客轨道. 2010-02-04. Retrieved 2010-07-04.[permanent dead link]