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A ticket of train 6461 in new layout, which was bought from the official ticketing website. Since July 12, 2011, the e-ticket system has been firstly adopted on Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway. Since December 23, 2011, all tickets can be bought at the official ticket website (12306.cn) except for trains due to depart in less than two hours.
Beijing–Shanghai: Jinghu line 1454 km [59] 3 CRH1E CRH2E Hangzhou–Ningbo: Xiaoyong line 149 km [60] 50 CRH1A/B/E CRH2A/B/E Hangzhou–Nanchang: Hukun line 644 km [61] 1 CRH2A Nanchang–Changsha: Hukun line 419 km [62] 2 CRH1A CRH2A Wuhan–Nanchang: Wujiu line & Changjiu PDL 337 km [63] 16 CRH1A CRH2A Xi'an–Baoji: Longhai line 173 km [64 ...
The Nantong–Suzhou–Jiaxing–Ningbo high-speed railway or Tongsujiayong high-speed railway (Chinese: 通苏嘉甬铁路; pinyin: Tōng-Sū-Jiā-Yǒng tiělù, "Tong", "Su", "Jia" and "Yong" being the abbreviations for Nantong, Suzhou, Jiaxing and Ningbo, respectively) is a high-speed railway line between Nantong and Ningbo in China. It is ...
Hù and Níng are shorthand Chinese names for Shanghai and Nanjing, respectively. The Huning intercity high-speed railway largely follows the route of the preexisting Nanjing-Shanghai section of the conventional Beijing–Shanghai railway and the Beijing–Shanghai high-speed railway. Construction of this high-speed railway began in July 2008.
The "S"-numbered suburban rail lines are managed by the Ningbo Intercity Railway Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of CR Shanghai, part of the national railway company and partially owned by Ningbo Rail Transit Co., Ltd., the municipal company that operates the metro. There are 1 suburban railway line currently in operation: Ningbo–Yuyao or Yongyu (S1).
The Shanghai–Hangzhou high-speed railway (Chinese: 沪杭客运专线 or 沪杭高速铁路), also known as the Huhang high-speed railway or Huhang passenger railway is a high-speed rail line in China between Shanghai and Hangzhou, Zhejiang. The line is 202 km (126 mi) in length and designed for commercial train service at 350 km/h (215 mph).
The oldest section on the Xiaoyong railway is the 18.19 kilometres (11.30 mi) section between Ningbo and Cicheng, which opened in December 1912. The Ningbo to Cao'e section, 78 kilometres (48 mi) in length, followed in June 1914, and the Xiaoshan to Cao'e section was completed in October 1936. [2]
The opening of the short-lived Woosung Road, the first railway in China, between Shanghai and Wusong in 1876. The first recorded railway track to be laid in China was a 600-metre (1,969 ft) long miniature gauge demonstration line that a British merchant assembled outside the Xuanwumen city gate at Beijing in 1865 to demonstrate rail technology. [14]