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Husutong Railway
Yangtze River Bridge on Husutong railway under construction, March 2016
Overview
Native nameæČȘè‹é€šé“è·Ż
Termini
Stations9
Service
Type Higher-speed rail
Heavy rail
Technical
Line length137.28 km (85.30 mi)
Number of tracks2
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Operating speed200 km/h (120 mph)
Signalling Automatic block signaling
Maximum incline0.6%
Route map

Nantong West
Zhangjiagang
Changshu
Taicang
Anting West
Anting
to Fengbang
& Shanghai Hongqiao
Xuhang
Shanghai Baoshan
Waigaoqiao
Caolu
Shanghai East
Situan

Shanghai–Suzhou–Nantong railway, abbreviated as Husutong railway [1] ( Chinese: æČȘè‹é€šé“è·Ż; pinyin: HĂč-SĆ«-Tƍng tiělĂč, "Hu", "Su" and "Tong" being the abbreviations for Shanghai, Suzhou and Nantong, respectively) is a higher-speed railway in China's Yangtze River Delta area, connecting Shanghai, the region's main city located south of the Yangtze, with Nantong in Jiangsu province, north of the river.

The railway is 143 kilometres (89 mi) in length and traverses several county-level cities in Suzhou Municipality of Jiangsu along the south bank of the Yangtze including Zhangjiagang, Changshu and Taicang. [2] [3] The railway is also called the Shanghai–Suzhou–Nantong railway or the Husutong railway. The railway is designed to accommodate maximum train speeds of 200 km/h (120 mph), [4] the operation of electric traction hauled double-stack container trains [5] [6] [7] and has reduced train travel time from Nantong to Shanghai to just over one hour. [4]

History

Initially proposed as the Shanghai–Nantong railway (Abbreviated as Hutong railway), [8] construction works began on the first phase of the project in March 2014, and was expected to take five and a half years. [4] The railway began operation on July 1, 2020. [2] [3]

The second phase of the railway, from Taicang to Situan, was approved in September 2021. [9]

Route

The railway includes 137 kilometres (85 mi) of new tracks, from Zhaodian railway station (蔔甞站) on the Nanjing–Qidong railway northwest of downtown Nantong to Huangdu railway station on the Beijing–Shanghai railway, in the northwestern part of Shanghai City. Anting being within 20 km (12 mi) of Shanghai railway station, the total railway distance from Nantong to Shanghai is under 160 kilometres (100 mi).

The railway crosses the Yangtze River over the new Hutong Yangtze River Bridge between Nantong and Zhangjiagang, a double-deck bridge with a 4-track railway on the lower deck and a six-lane roadway on the upper deck. The bridge is the world's longest span (1,092 metres (3,583 ft)) cable-stayed road-rail bridge with the highest (325 metres (1,066 ft)) piers of a cable-stayed road-rail bridge. [10] The bridge is the easternmost railway crossing of the Yangtze. Previously, the only railway crossing in the Yangtze Delta region was a freight-only rail ferry on the Xinyi–Changxing railway, between Jingjiang and Jiangyin, some 30 kilometres (19 mi) upstream. The closest railway bridge is the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge, over 200 kilometres (120 mi) upstream. The new bridge thus greatly improves the railway connections between the Central Jiangsu (the region north of the Yangtze) and the Jiangnan, in particular Shanghai.

On its way between the new bridge and Anting, the railway has brought rail service for the first time to prosperous communities on the southern bank of the Yangtze such as Zhangjiagang, Changshu, and Taicang which had no railway connection. [4]

Railway Stations

Station Chinese Distance
(km)
County-level city / District Prefecture-level city Province Metro transfers
Nantong ć—é€šç«™ (13) Chongchuan Nantong Jiangsu
Zhaodian 蔔甞站 0 Tongzhou Nantong Jiangsu
Nantong West ć—é€šè„żç«™ 6 Tongzhou Nantong Jiangsu
Zhangjiagang North ćŒ ćź¶æžŻćŒ—ç«™ 32 Zhangjiagang Suzhou Jiangsu
Zhangjiagang ćŒ ćź¶æžŻç«™ 34 Zhangjiagang Suzhou Jiangsu
Changshu ćžžç†Ÿç«™ 52 Changshu Suzhou Jiangsu
Taicanggang (freight station) ć€Șä»“æžŻç«™ Taicang Suzhou Jiangsu
Taicang ć€Ș仓站 100 Taicang Suzhou Jiangsu
Taicang South ć€Șä»“ć—ç«™ 114 Taicang Suzhou Jiangsu
Anting West 漉äș­è„żç«™ 129 Jiading Shanghai Shanghai
Huangdu é»„æžĄç«™ Jiading Shanghai Shanghai
Xuhang (branch) ćŸèĄŒç«™ Jiading Shanghai Shanghai
Shanghai Baoshan (branch) äžŠæ”·ćźć±±ç«™ Baoshan Shanghai Shanghai
Waigaoqiao (freight station, branch) ć€–é«˜æĄ„ç«™ Pudong Shanghai Shanghai
Caolu (branch) æ›čè·Żç«™ Pudong Shanghai Shanghai
Shanghai East (branch) 䞊攷䞜站 Pudong Shanghai Shanghai
Situan (branch) 曛曹站 Pudong Shanghai Shanghai

Notes

  1. ^ "æČȘè‹é€šé“è·Ż7月1æ—„ćŒ€é€šèżè„ ćŠ©æŽšé•żäž‰è§’ćŒșćŸŸäž€äœ“ćŒ–ć‘ć±•". China Railway. 2020-06-30. Archived from the original on 2021-02-22. äžŠæ”·è‡łè‹ć·žè‡łć—é€šé“è·ŻïŒˆä»„äž‹çź€ç§°æČȘè‹é€šé“è·ŻïŒ‰ć°†äșŽ7月1æ—„ćŒ€é€šèżè„ïŒŒćŠ©æŽšé•żæ±Ÿäž‰è§’æŽČćŒșćŸŸäž€äœ“ćŒ–ć‘ć±•ïŒŒäžŠæ”·è‡łć—é€šæœ€ćż«æ—…èĄŒæ—¶é—ŽćŽ‹çŒ©è‡ł1ć°æ—¶6戆钟。
  2. ^ a b (Chinese) æž—ć°æ˜­, "æČȘè‹é€šé“è·Żä»ŠćŒ€é€šïŒŒäžŠæ”·ć€§éƒœćž‚ćœˆèżŽćŠ ćż«ć‘ć±•æ–°ć„‘æœș" çŹŹäž€èŽąç» 2020-07-01
  3. ^ a b (Chinese) "æČȘè‹é€šé“è·ŻćŒ€é€šïŒæ±Ÿè‹ć—é€šæ­ŁćŒćŠ ć…„é•żäž‰è§’1ć°æ—¶ç»æ”Žćœˆ" ć€źè§†æ–°é—» 2020-07-01
  4. ^ a b c d "æČȘé€šé“è·Ż2013ćčŽæ­ŁćŒćŒ€ć»ș ć—é€šćˆ°äžŠæ”·ä»…éœ€äž€ć°æ—¶" [Construction work on the Hu-Tong Railway will officially start in 2013. It will take just an hour to travel from Nantong to Shanghai] (in Chinese). December 24, 2012.
  5. ^ sina_mobile (2017-01-21). "äž­ć›œè·šćșŠæœ€ć€§ć…Źé“äž€ç”šé’ąæ‹±æĄ„ćˆéŸ™(ć›Ÿ)". news.sina.cn. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  6. ^ "「通æČȘé“è·Ż7æœˆèżè„ïŒŒćźćŻ-通æČȘè·ŻćąžćŒ€ćŠšèœŠç»„38ćŻč」- ć—é€šæˆżäș§è¶…ćž‚". nt.fccs.com. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  7. ^ "äžŠæ”·é“è·Żć±€ïŒšćźćŻé“è·Ż4月11æ—„è”·èż›èĄŒćŠšæ€æŁ€æ”‹". inews.ifeng.com. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  8. ^ "æČȘé€šé“è·Żæ”č損äžș通æČȘé“è·Ż 侚憅:æˆ–äžŽé“è·Żć‘œćæ–čćŒæœ‰ć…ł". æ‰Źć­æ™šæŠ„. 2020-04-14.
  9. ^ "æČȘè‹é€šé“è·ŻäșŒæœŸæ‰čäș†ïŒ". 高铁眑. 2021-09-09. Retrieved 2021-09-09.
  10. ^ Lin Kai (1 March 2014). "Work starts on the dual-use Shanghai-Taiwan Yangtze River". Xinhuanet. Archived from the original on March 30, 2014.