Yilan Line
Overview
Native name宜蘭線
OwnerTaiwan Railways Administration
Termini
Stations27
Service
TypePassenger/freight rail
Operator(s)Taiwan Railways Administration
History
Opened1924-11-30
Technical
Line length93.6 km (58.2 mi)
Number of tracks2
Track gauge3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Electrification25 kV/60 Hz Catenary
Operating speed150 km/h (93 mph)
Route map

km
Station
Connecting to the Western Line
0.0
Badu
1.6
Nuannuan
3.9
Sijiaoting
8.9
Ruifang
Connecting to the Shenao Line
13.5
Houtong
16.0
Sandiaoling
Connecting to the Pingxi Line
19.6
Mudan
22.9
Shuangxi
28.3
Gongliao
32.0
Fulong
37.4
Shicheng
40.1
Dali
44.8
Daxi
49.4
Guishan
53.0
Wai-ao
56.6
Toucheng
58.8
Dingpu
62.9
Jiaoxi
67.6
Sicheng
71.3
Yilan
77.1
Erjie
78.3
Zhongli
80.1
Luodong
85.1
Dongshan
89.3
Xinma
90.2
Su-aoxin
Connecting to the North-Link Line
93.6
Su-ao
特等站, Special Station
一等站, Level 1 Station
二等站, Level 2 Station
三等站, Level 3 Station
簡易站, Simple Station
招呼站, "Called on" Station

The Yilan Line (Chinese: 宜蘭線; pinyin: Yilán Xiàn; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gî-lân Soàⁿ) is the northern section of the Eastern Line of the Taiwan Railways Administration in Taiwan. It has a length of 95 km.

History

This railroad was completed in 1924 as the Giran-sen during Imperial Japanese rule over Taiwan. It was expanded to two tracks in the early 1980s. In 2000, it was electrified between Badu and Luodong, while the remaining part was completed in 2003. On 4 December 2020, a landslide buried a section of the line between Houtong and Ruifang Station in Ruifang District, resulting in the rail service disruption along the line.[1] Emergency work was then carried out to remove the 10,000 m3 debris and to restore the overhead line.[2] On 14 December, the line was fully reopened for service.[3]

Stations

Train passing through the rural Sandiaoling Station
NameChineseTaiwaneseHakkaTransfers and NotesLocation
Badu八堵Peh-tó͘Pat-tú Taiwan Railways Administration West Coast line NuannuanKeelung
Nuannuan暖暖Loán-loánNôn-nôn
Sijiaoting四腳亭Sì-kha-têngSi-kiok-thìn RuifangNew Taipei
Ruifang瑞芳Sūi-hongLui-fôngTaiwan Railways Administration Shen'ao line
Houtong猴硐Kâu-tôngHeù-thung
Sandiaoling三貂嶺Sam-tiau-niáSâm-tiau-liângTaiwan Railways Administration Pingxi line
Mudan牡丹Bó͘-tanMeú-Tân Shuangxi
Shuangxi雙溪Siang-kheSûng-hâi
Gongliao貢寮Kòng-liâuKung-liàu Gongliao
Fulong福隆Hok-liôngFuk-lùng
Shicheng石城Chio̍h-siâⁿSa̍k-sàng TouchengYilan
County
Dali大里Tāi-líThai-lî
Daxi大溪Tāi-kheThai-hâi
Guishan龜山Ku-soaⁿKûi-sân
Wai'ao外澳Goā-òNgoi-o
Toucheng頭城Thâu-siâⁿTheù-sàng
Dingpu頂埔Téng-po͘Táng-phû
Jiaoxi礁溪Ta-kheChiau-hâi Jiaoxi
Sicheng四城Sì-siâⁿSi-sàng
Yilan宜蘭Gî-lânNgì-làn Yilan
Erjie二結Jī-kiatNgi-kiet Wujie
Zhongli中里Tiong-líChûng-lî
Luodong羅東Lô-tongLò-tûng Luodong
Dongshan冬山Tang-soaⁿTûng-sân Dongshan
Xinma新馬Sin-máSîn-mâ Su'ao
Su'aoxin蘇澳新So͘-ò SinSû-o Sîn Taiwan Railways Administration North-link line
Su'ao蘇澳So͘-òSû-o
  • The Shen'ao Line runs for both freight and passenger service.

See also

References

  1. Cheng, Wei-chi; Chung, Jake (6 December 2020). "Landslide disrupts travel in the north". Taipei Times. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  2. Liao, George (6 December 2020). "Reopening of landslide-hit railway in northern Taiwan delayed". Taiwan News. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  3. Cheng, Ching-tse (14 December 2020). "New Taipei railway line damaged by landslide reopens". Taiwan News. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.