Shanghai–Nantong Railway

Shanghai–Nantong Railway, abbreviated as Hutong Railway (Chinese: 沪通铁路; pinyin: Hù-Tōng tiělù, "Hu" and "Tong" being the abbreviations for Shanghai and Nantong, respectively) is a future railway in China's Yangtze River Delta area. It will connect the region's main city, Shanghai, located south of the Yangtze, with Nantong, north of the river.

Construction work on the railway began in March 2014, and is expected to take five and a half years.[1]

The railway will be designed for running speeds of up to 200 km/h.[1]

Routing

The railway will include 137 km of new tracks, from Pingdong Station (平东站) on the Nanjing–Qidong Railway northwest of downtown Nantong to Anting Station on the Beijing–Shanghai Railway, in the northwestern part of Shanghai City. Anting being within 20 km from Shanghai Railway Station, the total railway distance from Nantong to Shanghai will be under 160 km. It is expected that the travel time between the two cities will be around 1 hour.[1]

The railway will cross the Yangtze River over a new railway bridge to be constructed on the western outskirts of Nantong. This will be the easternmost railway crossing of the Yangtze. Presently, the closest railway crossing over the Yangtze is the freight-only rail ferry on the Xinyi–Changxing Railway, between Jingjiang and Jiangyin, some 30 km upstream; the closest railway bridge is the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge, over 200 km upstream. The new bridge thus will greatly improve 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 will serve a number of communities on the southern bank of the Yangtze that presently lack railway service, such as Zhangjiagang, Changshu, and Taicang.[1]

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.