Madrid–Seville high-speed rail line

Madrid–Seville high-speed rail line
Technical
Line length 471,8 km
Track gauge 1435 mm
Minimum radius Standard: 4000 m; Absolute: 3250 m
Electrification 25 kV, 50 Hz
Operating speed 300 km/h
Maximum incline Standard: 12,5 ; Absolute: 13,25
Route map
Legend
0 Madrid Atocha
Madrid-Barcelona high-speed rail line
12,300 Valdemingomez, a bypass Sevilla-Barcelona
14,272 Los Gavilanes
24,418 Parla
28 Cuenca, València/Albacete
35,311 Yeles
53,727 Passing station La Sagra, towards Toledo
63,4 Tajo 704 m
73,724 Ablates
89,535 Switches Mora
104,882 Los Yébenes
119,746 Switches Urda
130,136 El Emperador
149,621 Malagón
170,748 Ciudad Real
171 Ciudad Real 929 m
196,476 Switches Calatrava
209,761 Puertollano
225,426 Brazatortas
244,488 Switches Venta la Inés
267,343 Switches Conquista
Guadalmez 798 m
285,193 Switches Villanueva de Córdoba
293,950 Arroyo del Valle
300 Piedras de la Sal 2569 m
304,8 Churretes Bajos
317,796 Adamuz
Guadalquivir
345,184 Córdoba
Gauge conversion towards Málaga (not in service)
Guadalquivir
358,006 Córdoba-Málaga high-speed rail line
362,958 Almodovar del Río
387,149 Switch Hornachuelos
408,927 Peñaflor
426,144 Switches Guadajoz
Guadalquivir
442.719 Switches Cantillana
460.461 Majarabique
Gauge conversion Majarabique
Seville Santa Justa

The Madrid-Sevilla high speed line (NAFA or Nuevo Acceso Ferroviario a Andalucía) is a 472 kilometers (293 mi) Spanish railway line for high speed traffic between Madrid and Seville. The first Spanish high-speed rail connection has been in use since 21 April 1992 at speeds up to 300 km/h (186 mph). Travel time between the two end points was reduced by over half.

At Córdoba the Madrid-Málaga high-speed rail line leaves the line from Madrid.

Contents

Routing

The line starts at Madrid-Atocha and runs over 31 bridges (total length 9,845 meters (32,300 ft)) and through 17 tunnels (total length 16.03 kilometers (9.96 mi),[1] crossing the plains of Castile. It climbs south of Toledo as well as when crossing the Sierra Morena to an altitude of 800 meters, and then descends to around sea level as it approaches Seville. End point of the line is the new railway station Santa Justa in Seville.

Technical details

The high speed line was constructed at standard gauge, in contrast with the rest of the Spanish railway network. Voltage is 25 kV AC instead of 3000 V DC. Twelve transformers feed the overhead wires. Some 8 kilometers (5.0 mi) before the start and end points of the line, the line merges with local DC tracks.

The line was equipped with signalling standards that had been developed in the 80s for the German Hanover-Würzburg high-speed rail line and the Mannheim-Stuttgart high-speed rail line.

At the end of 2006, Spanish governmental agency ADIF ordered technical changes to the safety systems along the line for an amount of 12.6 million Euros, so that in the future, trains of the RENFE-type 104 will be able to run at 200 instead of 180 km/h. A further amount of 4.1 million Euros has been spent on changes to the ASFA train safety system.[2]

Between the railway stations along the line, passing stations and emergency stations are located (in Spanish: Puesto de adelantamiento y estacionamiento de trenes, abbr. PEAT). These allow faster trains to overtake slower trains, and the parking of rescue trains. In addition, most of these stations have basic platforms that can be used to let passengers descend and change to buses in case of emergency.

Trains travel along the line at 300 km/h during the sections of the track close to Madrid. They travel at 200 km/h through the Sierra Morena region, possibly because the S/100 trains aren't pressure-sealed and this section includes many tunnels and also because of the tight curvatures in the Sierra Morena (occasionally dipping as low as 2300m[3]). According to the HS2 website,[4] a 200 km/h track needs a curvature of 1800m and a 400 km/h track needs a curvature of 7200m. As the necessary curvature increases in proportion to the square of the maximum velocity, the maximum safe speed for a curvature of 2300m would be 226 km/h, assuming no tilting technology: - only the AVE Class 100, AVE Class 102 and AVE Class 103 run through the Sierra Nevada section, of which only the AVE Class 102 has tilting technology. The trains travel at a top speed of 250 km/h between Córdoba and Seville, possibly on account of the AVANT services that also use the line, whose trains are limited to 250 km/h. On most journeys, the trains spend a very small proportion of the journey travelling above 250 km/h, although most of the Málaga branch is done at 300 km/h (save for station approaches and the Gobantes and Abdalajís tunnels). The trains slow down to approximately 160 km/h when travelling through Ciudad Real station. They also have to slow down to 70 km/h when travelling through Puertollano station because of the lack of a bypass route and tight curvatures in the station.

History

On 11 October 1986 the Spanish government decided to build a new railway between Madrid and Seville. On 25 February 1988, the international tender for the acquisition of 24 high-speed trains AVE followed; these trains were ordered by 23 December 1988. The first train, based on the third generation of TGVs, was delivered on 10 October 1991.

In December 1988 it was decided to build the new line in standard gauge. Construction was ordered on 16 March 1989, and it lasted for 33 months; actual construction activity lasted only 24 months. Commercial use of the line commenced on 21 April 1992. In the first weeks, over 23 thousand passengers used the new trains - an occupancy rate of 81%.

On 20 April 1992, services started between Madrid and Seville. Non-stop travel time between the two cities were 2:45 hrs; with stops at Ciudad Real, Puertollano and Córdoba it was 2:55 hrs. In 1992, tickets cost around 50-70 euros in second class, in first class over 100 euros.

The line later received branches in Andalusia.

Impact

The new railway line radically changed the modal split between Madrid and Seville. The share of air traffic decreased between 1991 and 1994 from 40% to 13%; the combined share of car and bus decreased from 44% to 36%. The share of railway traffic increased from 16% to 51%, while total traffic increased by 35%.[5]

In 1997, some 4.4 million passengers travelled along the line; in 1998, 4.75 million. By 1999, trains transported over 4 times as many passengers as planes between Seville and Madrid.[1]

See also

Source

This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.

References

  1. ^ a b Spanish To Build More High-Speed Lines. International Railway Journal, Sept. 1999.
  2. ^ High speed advances in Spain. In: Railway Gazette International. 163, nr. 1, 2007, ISSN 0373-5346, page 4
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ http://www.hs2.org.uk/about-hsr
  5. ^ Moshe Givoni: Development and Impact of the Modern High-speed Train: A Review. In: Transport Reviews. 26, Nr. 5, Jahr, ISSN 0144-1647, S. 593–611

External links