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  • Beijing Metro now longer than NYC's

  • General discussion of passenger rail systems not otherwise covered in the specific forums in this category, including high speed rail.
General discussion of passenger rail systems not otherwise covered in the specific forums in this category, including high speed rail.

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 #1304663  by lpetrich
 
Chinese metro boom shows no sign of abating | International Railway Journal
China is a relative newcomer to building metros in its major cities, and there was even a ban on new projects in 2002. However, since this policy was reversed in 2004 there has been an explosion in metro construction. As Hans-Ulrich Riedel reports, 23 cities in China have metros totalling 2735km, with a further 2853km under construction.
Most cities expand urban heavy-rail systems slowly, usually only one line at a time.
Not so in China where a staggering 370km of new line was brought into operation last year. This year a further 490km of new lines will open.
Like one New York City or London per year.
The biggest of these projects is in Nanjing where four new lines totalling 145.8km were due to open, although following an accident during construction, the opening of Line 3 has been postponed until 2015. Beijing is opening four extensions which will add 62.1km to its network, Wuxi opened its first 29.4km line in July and will inaugurate a second 26.3km line next month, while Chongqing will complete four extensions totalling 30.6km and Shanghai three totalling 38.2km. ... Shenzhen currently has a five-line metro totalling 178.9km but it is building another five lines which will almost double the size of the network between 2016 and 2018. Last year alone, Shenzhen invested $US 2.65bn in metro construction. In addition, construction has started of a separate light rail system in the northern district of Longhua.
The scale of the construction is breathtaking.
China also has the ability and resources to construct many very long lines at the same time. Metro lines ranging in length from 20 to 30km have been built in 19 cities simultaneously, and often within one or two years a second line of similar length is completed.

Metro construction is currently underway in 37 cities, four of which opened their first lines this year, and another three cities plan to start construction of their first metros this year. Nationally, 54 cities with a population of one million or more are planning to build metros although the actual number of cities in the planning phase is constantly changing. Cities usually plan to build at least two lines initially.
China is a very populous country, something that partially explains the massive scale of construction there. It is also catching up economically to the industrialized nations, and its cities have become choked with cars.
 #1310531  by lpetrich
 
Beijing's Incredible Subway Expansion In One GIF
The Beijing subway is a madhouse and a miracle, and the record-breaking system is expanding into new corners of the city. On Sunday, Beijing opened 37 new miles of track and instituted a fare hike, plowing ahead with a frenzied building boom that aims to stay one step ahead of the city’s exploding transportation needs.

Between 2007 and 2014, Beijing added 235 miles of new routes -- a length greater than the entire New York City subway system. Even with construction crews crews digging, burrowing and building new subway lines 24 hours a day, at rush hour passengers still have to claw and shove their way onto subway cars that appear ready to burst at the seams. And while transportation planners have spent a decade pushing through one of the greatest expansions of public transportation in history, Beijing’s roads remain gridlocked, its skies smog-choked and its transportation infrastructure pushed to the limit.
Then a nice animated GIF of the system's growth.

I'd love to see more such animations of rail systems' growth and some rail systems' decline, but they are hard for me to find. I've made some myself, for he high-speed-rail systems of France, Spain, Italy and Japan, and also for BART.
 #1310941  by Froggie
 
Wow, that gif really puts the growth in perspective! It's very cool, though I do remember when I was in Shanghai seeing evidence of how they're able to do such quick construction, i.e., just tearing down and/or hiding whatever was there before.
 #1310983  by BandA
 
Froggie wrote:Wow, that gif really puts the growth in perspective! It's very cool, though I do remember when I was in Shanghai seeing evidence of how they're able to do such quick construction, i.e., just tearing down and/or hiding whatever was there before.
Cut & cover is a standard construction technique. Are there accurate numbers on the the construction / operating costs? The US competes with China and needs to have competitive, or at least in the ballpark costs. If our costs are double, that might be acceptable. If it costs us 5-10x what China pays, that's a big problem.