Lanzhou–Urumqi High-Speed Railway

Lanzhou–Urumqi High-Speed Railway
兰新铁路第二双线
Overview
Type High-speed rail
Status Under construction
Locale China
Termini Lanzhou
Urumqi
Stations 31
Operation
Opened December 2013
Operator(s) China Railway High-speed
Technical
Line length 1,776 km (1,104 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) Standard gauge
Minimum radius 7,000 meters
Operating speed 350 km/h (217 mph)
Maximum incline 20‰
Route map
Lanzhou-Urumqi High-Speed Railway
Line length: 1,776 km (1,104 mi)
Track gauge: 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Maximum speed: 350 km/h (217 mph)
Stations and structures
(final station names yet to be determined)
Legend
Lanzhou West
Gaojiashan Tunnel
Yellow River Bridge
Minhe
Ledu
Ping'an Huangshuihe Bridge
Ping'an
Xining
Datong West
Dabanshan Tunnel
Datonghe Bridge
Menyuan
Qilianshan Tunnel
Jiyaoling Tunnel
Junmachang
Minle
Bridge over G045 expressway
Zhangye South
Linze South
Gaotai South
Qingshui North
Jiuquan South
Jiayuguan South
Jiayuguan Tunnel
Qingquan South
Yumenzhen
Bridge over Lanxin railway
Liugou South
Shibandun South
Liuyuan South
Hongliuhe South
Hongliuhe Bridge
Yandun East
Tudun No. 2 Interchange Bridge
Hami Interchange Bridge
Hami
Liushuquan South
Shisanjianfang Bridge
Hongceng South
Tuha
Shanshan North
Turpan North
Daheyan
Dabancheng Tunnel
Dabancheng Wetland Bridge
Yanhu West
Urumqi
Urumqi Ergong

The Lanzhou–Urumqi High-Speed Railway, also known as Lanxin Second Railway, is a high-speed rail under construction in northwestern China. It will connect Lanzhou in Gansu Province and Ürümqi in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

Construction work began on November 4, 2009. The 1,776-kilometre (1,104 mi) railway will take four years to complete, of which, 795 kilometres (494 mi) is in Gansu, 268 kilometres (167 mi) in Qinghai and 713 kilometres (443 mi) in Xinjiang. 31 stations will be built along the line. The project costs 143.5 billion yuan.[1] Upon its completion, an overnight sleeper train is expected to connect Beijing to Urumqi, 3,450 km apart, in less than 12 hours.[2]

Unlike the existing Lanxin railway, which runs entirely in Gansu and Xinjiang, the new high-speed rail will be routed from Lanzhou to Qinghai Province to Xining before heading northwest across the Qilian Mountains into the Hexi Corridor at Zhangye. The rail tracks in the section near Qilianshan Tunnel will be at 3,858 meters above sea level[3], making it the highest high-speed rail track in the world. Trains will run at 350 kilometres per hour on the line.[4][5]

Wind shed

Near Shanshan, the railway will go through the hundred-li wind zone, where desert wind constantly blows most days of a year. In 2007, strong wind overturned a train on the southern branch of Lanxin Railway, and four people were killed.[6] A 67-kilometre long wind-protection gallery will be built in this region.

References