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The operating hours for most Shanghai metro stations starts between 5:00 to 6:00 in the morning and ends between 22:30 to 23:00 CST. The current timetable is available on the Shanghai metro website. The interval of trains during peak hours differ between 1 minutes and 50 seconds on line 9 and 6 minutes on line 18.
Shanghai Pudong Airport APM is a People Mover opened on September 16, 2019, using A-type metro train system with four cars, runs inside Shanghai Pudong International Airport, including the East Line and the West Line. The operating section of the East Line is 1.65 km (1.03 mi) long, connecting Terminal 2 and Satellite 2, and the operating ...
Shentong Metro Group is a subsidiary of Shanghai Jiushi Group (Chinese: 上海久事(集团)有限公司) (for 66.57% stake), a state-owned enterprise. [a] The minority interests (33.43% stake) was owned by another Shanghai state-owned enterprise Shanghai Municipal Investment Group (Chinese: 上海城投(集团)有限公司) (also known as Shanghai Chengtou (Group) Co., Ltd. (Chinese ...
When 70 RMB is used on the same card or QR code account on the Shanghai Metro within one calendar month, further metro fares are discounted 10%. This discount is applied after the Interchange discount, i.e. when both discounts are applied to a 4-RMB metro trip, the cost will be 2.7 RMB (The metro fare is 3 RMB after 1 RMB Interchange discount ...
This article lists the stations of the Shanghai Metro, a rapid transit system serving Shanghai, China and one of the fastest-growing metro systems in the world. The first section opened in 1993, and the system currently has 802 kilometres (498 mi) of track in operation, making it one of the world's largest rapid transit system by route length ...
The 05C01 train (formerly known as AC11) is a current rolling stock built by Alstom for Line 5 of Shanghai Metro. A total of 68 cars (17 sets) were built. Entering service between 2003 and 2004. They commonly run service on Xinzhuang station - Minhang Development Zone station section. [1] In 2014, AC11s were renamed 05C01s. [2]
Shanghai (population of 25 million) has over four million cars on the road, the fifth-largest number of any Chinese city. [4] Despite this the city remains plagued by congestion and vehicle pollution. The coverage of operating costs from the ticket revenue of Shanghai metro lines 1 and 2 was over 100% in the years 2000 to 2003. [5]
Shanghai Railway Station (simplified Chinese: 上海火车站; traditional Chinese: 上海火車站; pinyin: Shànghǎi Huǒchēzhàn) is an interchange station between lines 1, 3 and 4 on the Shanghai Metro. [6] It is one of the stations where Line 3 and Line 4 share the same tracks and elevated platforms.