Shijiazhuang railway station

The Shijiazhuang railway station (simplified Chinese: 石家庄站; traditional Chinese: 石家莊站; pinyin: Shíjiāzhuāng zhàn) is the main railway station of Shijiazhuang, the capital of Hebei Province of China. Over the city's history, the name has been applied to several different facilities located in the main Beijing-Guangzhou railway corridor. The current Shijiazhuang railway station was opened in December 2012; it is one of the very few stations in this railway corridor that serve both the ("conventional") Beijing–Guangzhou railway and the new Beijing–Guangzhou high-speed railway.

Shijiazhuang

石家庄
China Railway
China Railway High-speed
New Shijiazhuang railway station, which was completed in 2012.
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese石家庄站
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShíjiāzhuāng zhàn
General information
LocationZhanqian Road
Qiaoxi District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei
China
Coordinates38°00′35.0″N 114°28′42.6″E / 38.009722°N 114.478500°E / 38.009722; 114.478500
Operated byChina Railway CR Beijing
Line(s)
Platforms24
Connections
Other information
Station code
  • 20372 (TMIS code)
  • SJP (telegraph code)
  • SJZ (Pinyin code)
ClassificationTop Class station (特等站)
History
Opened1903 (former), 2012 (current)
Closed2012 (former)
Services
Preceding station China Railway Following station
Zhengding
towards Beijing West
Beijing–Guangzhou railway Yuanshi
towards Guangzhou
Preceding station China Railway High-speed China Railway High-speed Following station
Zhengding Airport
towards Beijing West
Beijing–Shijiazhuang high-speed railway Terminus
Terminus Shijiazhuang–Wuhan high-speed railway Gaoyi West
towards Wuhan
Location
Shijiazhuang is located in Shijiazhuang
Shijiazhuang
Shijiazhuang
Location of the station
Shijiazhuang is located in Hebei
Shijiazhuang
Shijiazhuang
Shijiazhuang (Hebei)
Shijiazhuang is located in China
Shijiazhuang
Shijiazhuang
Shijiazhuang (China)

Besides trains running along the two north-south Beijing-Guangzhou lines, Shijiazhuang railway station is also served by many (but not all) trains going east or west, along the Qingdao-Jinan-Dezhou-Shijiazhuang-Taiyuan corridor, which includes both a conventional railway and the Shijiazhuang–Taiyuan high-speed railway. However, some of the trains in the east-west corridor do not stop at Shijiazhuang railway station; instead bypassing the city center, stopping at the smaller Shijiazhuang North railway station.

In January 2013, a typical daily schedule listed 265 trains originating, terminating, or passing through Shijiazhuang railway station.[1]

Shijiazhuang railway station is by far the busiest train station in Hebei's capital region. E.g., during the 4-day holiday period from December 31, 2012 through January 3, 2013, 198,000 passengers departed from this station, out of the 279,000 passengers that departed from all station of the Greater Shijiazhuang taken together.[2]

History

edit
 
Shijiazhuang railway station (1987-2012)

The first railway station at what was to become the city of Shijiazhuang opened in 1903.[3]

Between 1987 and 2012, the name "Shijiazhuang railway station" was applied to the facility located in downtown Shijiazhuang, at 38°2′27″N 114°29′3″E / 38.04083°N 114.48417°E / 38.04083; 114.48417. Administratively, the site is in the city's Qiaoxi District, on the border with Qiaodong District. (The border between the two districts runs along the railway). This station was closed on December 20, 2012, simultaneously with the opening of the new Shijiazhuang railway station. (See 石家庄站 (1987-2012年))

The construction of the present-day Shijiazhuang railway station started in June 2010.;[4] it was opened on December 21, 2012, just in time for the opening of the Beijing–Shijiazhuang and Shijiazhuang–Zhengzhou sections of the Beijing–Guangzhou high-speed railway.

To avoid confusion between the pre- and post-2012 stations of the same name, they are sometimes referred to as the "Old (老) Shijiazhuang Station" and the "New (新) Shijiazhuang Station".

Unlike most other cities along the Beijing–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway, where the high-speed line is routed away from city centers, and high-speed train stations are separate (and, usually, quite distant) from the cities' conventional railway stations,[5] in Shijiazhuang a decision was made to construct a common station for the high-speed and conventional rail lines. This required extensive tunneling, with a 5-km long 6-track tunnel constructed under the city.[6] [7] [8] This was the first time tunneling (instead of e.g. constructing an elevated line) was used to run a high-speed railway through a city in China.[9]

The new Shijiazhuang railway station is located about 3 km south of the old station, just within the city's Second Ring Road (南二环).[citation needed] This site is also near the border of Qiaoxi and Qiaodong Districts.

The stations is currently served by the Shijiazhuang Metro Line 2 and Line 3.[4]

References

edit
  1. ^ Shijiazhuang Railway Station schedule (in Chinese)
  2. ^ 石家庄火车站发送旅客27.9万人 (279,000 passengers departed from Shijiazhuang's stations), 2013-01-05. (in Chinese) (According to the article, the second busiest station of the city was Shijiazhuang North railway station, with 37,000 passengers departing over the same 4-day period)
  3. ^ 在“小村庄”上建起来的特等站 Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine (in Chinese)
  4. ^ a b 石家庄新客站:西站房将于明年底投入使用 (The new Shijiazhuang passenger station: the western section will be opened by the end of the next year), 2010-08-30 (in Chinese)
  5. ^ Hung, Wing-tat; Brunello, Lara; Bunker, Jonathan, Critical Issues of High Speed Rail Development in China (PDF), p. 4[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ 写在京广高铁全线开通运营之际 (The entire Jing-Guang High-Speed Railway is opened), 2012-12-27
  7. ^ Newly-build high-speed railway line Beijing-Wuhan (China) - Shijiazhuang City Tunnel[permanent dead link] (Baugeologisches Büro Bauer)
  8. ^ Meyer, Anna-Maria; Frühauf, Johannes; Gao, Jinfa (2011), "Inner-city construction of a new high-speed railway line in China - Shijiazhuang City Tunnel and new Terminal as part of the Beijing-Shijiazhuang-Wuhan PDL", Geotechnik, 34 (4): 285–290, doi:10.1002/gete.201100014
  9. ^ Chinese high speed: in the wake of Wenzhou, by Han Qiao, 2012-07-01