Sungai Buloh–Kajang MRT line

Sungai Buloh–Kajang Line
 9 
Rapid KL (brand)

MRT SBK Semantan Platform 1 viewing Kuala Lumpur city centre at the background.

A Siemens Inspiro EMU stock designed by BMW Group Designworks leaving SBK14 Semantan station.
Overview
Native name MRT Laluan Sungai Buloh–Kajang
Type Rapid transit
System

Rapid KL-

KVMRT Line 1 (MRT1)
Status Fully operational
Termini  SBK01  Sungai Buloh
 SBK35  Kajang
Stations 31 + 3 reserved stations
Services Sungai BulohSemantan (16 Dec 2016)
Muzium NegaraKajang (17 July 2017)
Daily ridership 400,000 daily (expected)
Line number  9  (green)
Website myrapid.com.my
Operation
Opened Phase 1
16 December 2016 (2016-12-16)[1]
Sungai Buloh - Semantan
Phase 2
17 July 2017 (2017-07-17)
Muzium Negara - Kajang
Owner Mass Rapid Transit Corporation Sdn Bhd
Operator(s) Rapid Rail Sdn Bhd (Prasarana Malaysia Berhad)
Conduction system Automated and driverless
Depot(s) Sungai Buloh Depot and Kajang Depot
Rolling stock Siemens Inspiro
58 four-car trainsets
Width: 3.1 m (10 ft)
Length: 89.56 m (293.8 ft)
Technical
Line length 51 km (32 mi)
Elevated: 41.5 km (25.8 mi)
Underground: 9.5 km (5.9 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification Third rail, 750 VDC
Route map

The MRT Sungai Buloh–Kajang line is the ninth rail transit line and the second fully automated and driverless rail system in the Klang Valley area, Malaysia after the Kelana Jaya Line. It is a part of Greater KL/Klang Valley Integrated Transit System. The line is numbered 9 and coloured green on the official transit map.

It is one of three planned rail lines under Klang Valley Mass Rapid Transit Project by MRT Corp. The Phase 1 between Sungai Buloh and Semantan commenced service on 16 December 2016.[2] Phase 2 between Muzium Negara and Kajang was opened on 17 July 2017, as a free shuttle service, by Malaysian Prime Minister Dato' Seri Najib Tun Razak in a ceremony at the Tun Razak Exchange station. Full revenue service between Sungai Buloh and Kajang began the following day.[3][4][5]

Background

MRT SBK real time passenger information display system (PIDS)
The elevated stations along the entire stretch were retrofitted with platform edge doors (PED) similar to SBK14 Semantan station.
SBK05 Kwasa Damansara station is the one of interchange station between the MRT lines.
SBK05 Kwasa Damansara level & platform signage. Showing Platform 3 & 4 dedicated for Sungai Buloh–Serdang–Putrajaya Line.

The MRT Sungai Buloh–Kajang line is the first of the three planned Klang Valley Mass Rapid Transit lines to be constructed, with estimated contract value of MYR36 billion.[6]

The line starts from Sungai Buloh which is located to the north-west of Kuala Lumpur, runs through the city centre of Kuala Lumpur, and ends in Kajang, a fast developing town located to the south-east of Kuala Lumpur. The line serves a corridor with an estimated population of 1.2 million people.[6]

Phase One of the MRT Sungai Buloh–Kajang line from Sungai Buloh to Semantan had become operational at the end of 2016 while Phase Two from Semantan to Kajang will become operational by July 2017, allowing trains to serve the entire line.[6] Part of Phase one, between Sungai Buloh and Semantan, commenced service in December 2016.[2]

Announced in 2006, the line was initially planned as a LRT at 43 km in length, linking the densely populated areas of Damansara in the northwest and Cheras in the southeast, through the central business district of Kuala Lumpur city.The government then decided to extend the alignment at both ends to Sungai Buloh and Kajang respectively, adding 8 km to the line for a total of 51 km. In addition, the line was changed to an MRT system, with higher capacity trains.[7]

The line is operated by a subsidiary of Prasarana Malaysia Berhad, Rapid Rail Sdn Bhd, which already runs the Ampang Line, the Kelana Jaya Line and KL Monorail. [8]

Line information

Alignment

The first MRT line covers a span of 51 kilometres from Sungai Buloh to the Kajang, passing the Kuala Lumpur city centre where the alignment goes underground. The line will be serving a corridor with 1.2 million residents within the Klang Valley region from north-west to the south-east of Kuala Lumpur. According to MRT Corp, the four-car train sets with the capacity of 1,200 passengers will be in place to serve some 400,000 passengers per day, with a headway of 3.5 minutes.[9]

Amendments after public display

After the MRT project was formally launched on 8 July 2011, the following amendments have been made to the original proposed alignment following the public display exercise between March and May 2011:[10]-

Stations

Sungai Buloh–Kajang line comprises 31 stations, with 7 stations located along a 9.5 kilometre underground railway system.[9][12][13]

The stations announced by MRT Corp on its official website are listed as below in order. The working names of the stations are also shown in this list.

Code Final Name Working Name Platform type Position Park n Ride Interchange/Notes
 SBK01  KA08 Sungai BulohSungai BulohIslandElevatedExit paid area station to KTM Sungai Buloh Station for Port Klang Line and KTM ETS services.

Once the Integrated Cashless Payment System (ICPS) is implemented by July 2017, the ICPS solution will provide commuters with a single integrated journey fare throughout different rail system by zone charge. Currently, commuters will be charged multiple fare journey if using the connecting stations. This method of out of station or exit paid area has been common in the Malaysian train fare system since 1995.

 SBK02 Kampung SelamatKampung Baru Sungai Buloh Side Elevated
 SBK03 RRI Side ElevatedReserved station
 SBK04 Kwasa DamansaraKota DamansaraStacked island
cross-platform interchange
(Terminus)
ElevatedKwasa Damansara station, currently built as part of the SBK MRT Line, will be the terminal station of the SBK line replacing Sungai Buloh, once the SSP MRT Line commences operations in 2021. Kampung Selamat and Sungai Buloh stations will hence be lost to the SSP Line, while Kwasa Damansara will serves as an one of two interchange stations between the SBK and SSP lines (the other interchange being Tun Razak Exchange).
 SBK05 Kwasa SentralTaman Industri Sungai BulohSide Elevated
 SBK05A Teknologi Side ElevatedReserved station
 SBK06 Kota DamansaraPJU5 Side Elevated Located nearby SEGi University Kota Damansara.
 SBK07 SurianDataran Sunway Side ElevatedLocated near Sunway Giza shopping centre. Feeder Bus T807 to Lembah Subang for Kelana Jaya Line.
 SBK08 Mutiara DamansaraThe Curve Side ElevatedLocated near The Curve shopping centre & IKEA Mutiara Damansara.
 SBK09  BK1 Bandar Utama1 Utama Side ElevatedInterchange station to proposed LRT3 - Bandar Utama–Klang Line towards Johan Setia. Currently linked to 1PowerHouse via Exit A. Pedestrian walkway to One World Hotel and 1 Utama via Exit B is currently under construction.
 SBK10 TTDITTDI Side ElevatedThere is a Family Mart store integrated with this station.[14]
 SBK11 Phileo DamansaraSeksyen 16Island Elevated
 SBK12 Bukit Kiara Side ElevatedReserved station
 SBK13 Pavilion Damansara Heights-Pusat Bandar DamansaraPusat Bandar Damansara Side ElevatedFeeder bus T817 to Mid Valley South Gate and bus T819 to Hilton Hotel providing a walking distance to  KJ15  KL Sentral station.
 SBK14 Manulife-SemantanSemantan Side Elevated
 SBK15  KJ15  KA01  KE01  KT01  MR1 Muzium NegaraKL Sentral Island UndergroundConnecting station to KL Sentral for Seremban Line, Port Klang Line, Kelana Jaya Line, KLIA Ekspres, KL Monorail, KLIA Transit and KL Monorail. The station is located near the National Museum (Muzium Negara) and linked to the KL Sentral transport hub by 600 meter pedestrian walkway.
Theme: Transition, History of Kuala Lumpur's Public Transportation
 SBK16  KJ14 Pasar SeniPasar Seni Island UndergroundInterchange station to Kelana Jaya Line. Walking distance to Pos Malaysia Berhad building and Kuala Lumpur railway station for Seremban Line and Port Klang Line. There are also bus hubs above this station which connects buses from Kuala Lumpur to Petaling Jaya, Puchong, Subang, Subang Jaya (USJ) and Shah Alam. This station is connected to the Central Market (Pasar Seni) and located next to Pasar Seni LRT Station.
Theme: Confluence Between Two Rivers
 SBK17  AG8  SP8  MerdekaMerdeka Island UndergroundInterchange station to Ampang Line and Sri Petaling Line via paid-to-paid linkway to  AG8  SP8  Plaza Rakyat station.[15] Located near the historic Stadium Merdeka, and a proposed skyscraper named Warisan Merdeka, set to be the tallest building in Malaysia when completed.
Theme: Independence, Spirit of Nationhood
 SBK18A Pavilion KL-Bukit BintangBukit Bintang CentralSplit UndergroundConnecting station to KL Monorail at  MR6 Bukit Bintang Monorail station.[16] An underground pedestrian walkway were built to connect some iconic building in the region including Sungei Wang Plaza, Lot 10, Pavilion KL, Starhill Gallery and Fahrenheit 88 shopping malls.[17]
Theme: Dynamic
 SBK20  SSP23 Tun Razak ExchangePasar Rakyat Stacked island
cross-platform interchange
UndergroundLocated nearby the proposed Kuala Lumpur International Financial District (KLIFD)[18]
Provisions for cross-platform interchange with Sungai Buloh–Serdang–Putrajaya Line.
Theme: Islamic Corporate
 SBK21 CochraneCochrane Island UndergroundNear IKEA Cheras. Pedestrian link to up-coming MyTOWN Shopping Centre.
Theme: Urban Living
 SBK22  AG13 AEON-MaluriMaluri Island UndergroundInterchange station to Ampang Line. Pedestrian links to AEON Taman Maluri as well as Sunway Velocity.
Theme: New Generation
 SBK23 Taman PertamaTaman Bukit RiaSideElevated
 SBK24 Taman MidahTaman Bukit MewahSideElevated
 SBK25 Taman MutiaraLeisure MallSideElevatedLocated near Cheras Leisure Mall shopping centre.
 SBK26 Taman ConnaughtPlaza PhoenixSideElevated
Located opposite Cheras Sentral shopping centre. Feeder bus T410 to Bandar Tasik Selatan station.
 SBK27 Taman SuntexTaman SuntexIslandElevated
 SBK28 Sri RayaTaman CuepacsSideElevated
 SBK29 Bandar Tun Hussein OnnBandar Tun Hussein OnnSideElevated
 SBK30 Batu 11 Cheras1. Balakong
2. Bukit Dukung
SideElevated
 SBK31 Bukit Dukung1. Taman Koperasi
2. Taman Koperasi Cuepacs
SideElevated
 SBK33 Sungai Jernih1. Saujana Impian
2. Sungai Kantan
SideElevated
 SBK34 Stadium KajangBandar KajangSideElevatedLocated nearby Sate Kajang Haji Samuri Bangunan Dato' Nazir.
 SBK35  KB06 KajangKajangTerminusElevatedExit paid area station to Seremban Line.

Rolling stock

The rolling stock is manufactured by Siemens/CSR Nanjing Puzhen in a partnership with SMH Rail Consortium Sdn Bhd. The trains will be driverless with a capacity of 1,200 passengers in a 4-car trainsets formation. The Siemens Inspiro rolling stock will be supplied with the same configuration as the trainsets supplied for Warsaw Metro M1.[19]

Car length (over coupler): 18.6 m to 20.1 m

Number of passenger doors per car side / door width: 4 / 1400 mm

Traction power supply: 750 VDC, 3rd rail

The 4-car trainsets are maintained at 2 purpose built facilities, Sungai Buloh and Kajang depots, located nearby Kwasa Damansara and Sungai Jernih stations respectively.[20]

History

Chronology

See also

References

  1. Rapid Rail to take over SBK line ops from Dec 15
  2. 1 2 Ruban, A. (Dec 16, 2016). "A quiet start to Malaysia’s first MRT, but commuters happy". The Malay Mail Online. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  3. "Najib launches Phase 2 of Sungai Buloh-Kajang MRT line". The Star Online. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  4. "PM picks ‘17-7-2017’ start date for MRT phase two". The Malay Mail. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
  5. "Phase 2 of Sg Buloh-Kajang MRT to be launched on July 17". Free Malaysia Today. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
  6. 1 2 3 "MRT". Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  7. "NU Sentral Set To Improve Urban Transportation, Says Najib". Bernama. 11 August 2009.
  8. "Government goes with Prasarana to operate Sg Buloh-Kajang MRT line". The Malaysian Insider. 16 June 2014.
  9. 1 2 http://www.mymrt.com.my/aboutMRT.html
  10. transitmy. "MRT Update: MyRapidTransit launching & public viewing on 8 July 2011 at KL Convention Centre". Malaysian Transit. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  11. Achariam, Noel (30 May 2011). "Proposed TTDI MRT station shifted". New Straits Times. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
  12. "Route Map". MRT Corp. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  13. http://www.mymrt.com.my/stations.html
  14. http://familymart.com.my/our-stores.html
  15. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d62grQs_2I4
  16. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=J_9QkoLV8FQ#t=207s
  17. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=J_9QkoLV8FQ#t=222s
  18. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=kXdbG7I7_dQ#t=31s
  19. MRT Corp. "MRT CORP AWARDS RM3.474 BILLION WORTH OF CONTRACTS" (PDF). MRT Corp. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  20. Progress Report (PDF). MRT Corp. 2012. p. 13.
  21. "Rail Travel Expansion". The Star. 30 August 2006.
  22. "Putting The Best Route Forward". The Star. 24 September 2006.
  23. "New LRT Lines Approved". The Star. 7 July 2007.
  24. "LRT Projects Set For Next Year". The Star. 20 April 2007.
  25. "Kota Damansara-Cheras Rail Line Right on Track". The Star. 15 June 2008.
  26. "Laluan LRT Bawah Tanah Baru Di KL" (PDF). Utusan. 5 September 2008.
  27. "Govt May Invite Tenders For LRT Extension in 3 Months". TheEdgeDaily. 21 May 2009.
  28. "RM6-7 billion for LRT extensions". TheEdgeDaily. 14 September 2009.
  29. "Additional routes for Cheras-Kota Damansara line". TheEdgeDaily. 9 April 2010.
  30. "KL to have MRT system, say sources". The Edge. 7 June 2010.
  31. "LRT, MRT, what's next? Bullet Train?". The Edge (OSK). 7 June 2010.
  32. "RM30b MRT plan". The New Straits Times. 8 June 2010.
  33. "Putrajaya mulls multi-billion rail deals". The Malaysian Insider. 8 June 2010.
  34. Loo Foon Fong (18 December 2010). The Star http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/12/18/nation/20101218144937&sec=nation. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  35. Loh Foon Fong (19 December 2010). "RM36b MRT project to be broken down to nine parcels for open tender". The Star.
  36. Chooi, Clara. "Najib launches MRT project at glitzy do". Malaysian Insider. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  37. "Putrajaya puts MRT under new project owners". Malaysian Insider. 19 August 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  38. "KL shortlists bidders for RM7b rail works". Business Times, New Straits Times. 21 October 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  39. "Klang Bus Stand to cease operations". Star Metro. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  40. "MRT project moves into active construction phase". The Star. 2 August 2012.
  41. http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/12/21/business/12488225&sec=business
  42. http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v6/newsindex.php?id=919546
  43. Syed Umar Ariff (31 May 2013). "MRT project on track, says PM". New Straits Times.
  44. MRT Corp. "MRT Newsletter" (PDF). MRT Corp.
  45. Adrian Lai (18 Dec 2016). "MRT Corp says Rafizi got it wrong, RM21bil for both Phase 1 and 2 of SBK Line". New Straits Times.
  46. http://m.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/pm-picks-17-7-2017-start-date-for-mrt-phase-two
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