Jiajing Railway
View of the Jiajing Railway cutting through the 14th-century Great Wall of China in Jiayuguan City
Overview
Other name(s)Jingtieshan Branch Line
Native name嘉镜铁路
LocaleGansu, China
Termini
  • Jiayuguan Railway Station
  • Jingtieshan Railway Station
Stations6
History
Opened1965
Technical
Track length69 km (43 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)

The Jiajing Railway (Chinese: 嘉镜铁路, shortened form of Jiayuguan–Jingtieshan Railway; Chinese: 嘉峪关镜铁山铁路), officially the Jingtieshan Branch Line (Chinese: 镜铁山支线), is a 69 km (43 mi)-long branch line of the Lanxin Railway in Gansu Province, China.[1] The railway line mostly runs through rural Sunan County and connects Jiayuguan City with the Jingtieshan iron mine in the Qilian Mountains south of Jiayuguan. The route follows the course of the Beida River (Chinese: 北大河) through the Qilian Mountains before reaching the Gobi Desert outside of Jiayuguan.[2]

Construction on the Jiajing Railway began in 1958 and was completed in 1965. Construction of the line involved multiple tunnels and bridges to navigate through the mountains, and the line crosses the Beida a total of 8 times. Originally serving only the Jingtieshan mine operated by Jiuquan Iron and Steel Group Company, the line now also serves the Xigou mine via a short spur. In addition to the transport of goods, the railway serves as a passenger line primarily for mine workers from Jiayuguan.[1]

Stations

Station

Number

Station Location Distance Connections
1 Jiayuguan Xiongguan Subdistrict, Jiayuguan City 0 km (0 mi) Lanzhou–Xinjiang railway;

Jiayuguan–Ceke railway

2 Chunfeng Wenshu Town, Jiayuguan City 7 km (4.3 mi)
3 Qiaoxi Wenshu Town, Jiayuguan City 14 km (8.7 mi)
4 Langweishan Sunan Yugur Autonomous County, Zhangye City 49 km (30 mi)
5 Dongshuixia Jingtieshan Mining Area, Sunan Yugur Autonomous County, Zhangye City 65 km (40 mi)
6 Jingtieshan Jingtieshan Mining Area, Sunan Yugur Autonomous County, Zhangye City 69 km (43 mi)

References

  1. 1 2 "镜—木铁路, 我们在期待着! 几代人的梦想" (in Chinese). Jiayuguan Municipal Committee of the CPPCC. 8 May 2009. Archived from the original on 2 May 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  2. Gansu Sheng Dituce. Beijing, China: Star Map Press. 2012. ISBN 9787547107287.
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