Beijing Railway Station

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Beijing Station
北京站
China Railway
China Railway High-speed
Beijing-Railway-Station-2014.jpg
Beijing Station
Location Beijingzhan Jie, Dongcheng District, Beijing
China
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Operated by China Railway Corporation
Line(s) <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Platforms 14 (6 island platforms, 2 side platforms)
Connections <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
History
Opened 1959
Services
Preceding station   China Railways.svg China Railway   Following station
Terminus Beijing–Shanghai Railway
towards Shanghai
Terminus Beijing–Harbin Railway
towards Harbin
Terminus Beijing–Chengde Railway
towards Chengde

Beijing Railway Station (simplified Chinese: 北京火车站; traditional Chinese: 北京火車站; pinyin: Běijīng Huǒchēzhàn), or simply Beijing Station (Chinese: 北京站; pinyin: Běijīngzhàn), is a passenger railway station in Dongcheng District, Beijing. The station is located just southeast of the city centre inside the Second Ring Road with Beijing Station Street to the north and the remnants of the city wall between Chongwenmen and Dongbianmen to the south. The Beijing Railway Station opened in 1959 and was the largest train station in China at the time. Though superseded by the larger Beijing West and Beijing South Stations, this station remains the only one located inside the old walled city. Trains entering and leaving the station pass by the Dongbianmen corner tower. With gilded eaves and soaring clock towers, the architecture of the railway blends traditional Chinese and socialist realist influence.

Generally, trains for northeast China (Shenyang, Dalian, Harbin) on the Beijing-Harbin Railway, for Shandong (Jinan, Qingdao) and the Yangtze River Delta (Shanghai, Nanjing and Hangzhou) on the Beijing-Shanghai Railway and some for Inner and Outer Mongolia depart from this station. Some international lines (notably the railway line linking Beijing to Moscow, Pyongyang, North Korea (DPRK), amongst others), also depart from this station.

The Beijing Subway's first line used to terminate at Beijing Railway Station from 1969 to 1981. The subway station is now a stop on Line 2. More than 30 Beijing bus and Beijing trolleybus routes stop at or near the railway station.

History

Predecessor station

The Beijing Railway Station's predecessor was the Zhengyangmen Railway Station, also called the Beijing Station, which was located 2.5 km (1.6 mi) due west, just outside Zhengyangmen (also known as Qianmen), a gate in the city wall directly south of Tiananmen Square. The Zhengyangmen Railway Station was built in 1901 and served as the terminus of the Kaiping Tramway and Imperial Railways of North China, also known as the Beijing-Shanhaiguan Railway until 1959 when the station closed after the opening of the current Beijing Railway Station and has become part of the China Railway Museum.

The facade of the newly built Beijing Railway Station in 1959.
Aerial view of the Beijing Railway Station in 1959.
An NY1 diesel locomotive hauling a passenger train out of the Beijing Railway Station in 1959.
The Beijing Railway Station at night in 2008 after the station's English sign was added in advance of the 2008 Summer Olympic Games.
The Beijing Railway Station in 2012, after the electrification of the tracks.

Design and construction

To commemorate the Tenth Anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in 1958 began the planning and construction of ten large-scale projects, known as the "Ten Great Buildings" to showcase the new outlook of the country and the Beijing Railway Station was amongst the projects undertaken.

In late October 1958, according to the early 1950 Beijing municipal government's construction and planning records, the design arrangements for the new railway station was commenced. The station's design was assigned to the Ministry of Railway Institute's third department (now the Third Railway Survey and Design Institute Group Co. Ltd) with the station house building chaired by then renowned architects Yang Tingbao (杨廷宝) and Chen Deng-Ao (陈登鏊), the National Building and Industry Department and the Nanjing Institute of Architectural Design were to cooperate in the design tasks. The station's design progressed rapidly and by early December the same year, the whole design proposal was completed. On December 10, the design proposal was approved by the Central Committee. The then Premier Zhou Enlai was also very concerned about the design and construction of the new Beijing Railway Station, and dealt with aspects concerning the direction and positioning of station names to the layout of the VIP room environment.[1] In determining the design program proposal, Zhou Enlai proposed that turrets be built on each of the two wings of the main building and this suggestion was adopted.[2]

On January 20, 1959 the construction of the new station commenced with the number of construction workers reaching up to two million people during the peak stage and project investment amounted to 57.82 million yuan. Soviet Union experts were also hired to give technical guidance at the construction sites. In just over seven months, the project was completed on September 10, 1959. The new Beijing Railway Station covered an area of two hundred and fifty thousand square meters, the Station House Building site covered an area of 46,700 square meters, the station plaza comprised an area of forty thousand square meters. Chairman Mao Zedong wrote the calligraphic characters in the station sign.[3]

The Beijing Railway Station was one of the largest construction projects in mainland China during that time with modern facilities and it was also China's first large modern railway terminal. At the time of completion, the station has a twelve tracks and six railway platforms with canopies attached to them. The Station house building faced south and the architecture included both a Chinese traditional style and the Soviet Stalinist architecture[4]。The twelve passenger waiting rooms comprised a total area of fourteen thousand square meters and was able to accommodate 14,000 waiting passengers. The inner complex of the Main Station Building contained a passenger waiting room, mother and child waiting room, movie theater, recreation hall, visitors' restaurants, post office, clinic and other facilities. Installed on the roof of the Station House were two marble clock faces and every morning from 7am to 9pm the bell sounded punctually and "The East Is Red song is played out.

The Beijing station equipment was considered to be relatively advanced at its -time with four AC2-59 type escalators installed in the interior; the joint design and production of the escalators were coordinated by the Shanghai Jiaotong University and Shanghai Elevator Company.[5] The four sets of escalators were replaced during the 1980 and again during 1990; the most recent replacement of the elevators occurred in early2005 - the design being a product of Otis Company.[6]

Operation

After the completion of the new Beijing Railway Station, its transport capacity far exceeded the formerly used East Railway Station and it played an increasing role in heavy transport tasks, and today it is still Beijing's most important Passenger Railway Station, and has the largest station traffic in China. The number of trains and traffic hs also increased year by year: In 1959 there were 33 train lines; in 1966 there were forty train lines; in 1978 there were sixty-one train lines; in 1985 there were seventy-eight train lines; and by 1993 there were eighty-two train lines. During the late 1950, the amount of passengers using the railway transportation system were six million people a year, in the late 1960 it was eight million people a year, in the late 1970 it reached fifteen million a year, and after the Chinese economic reform period, the usage soared to more than thirty million people.[2] To alleviate the transport pressure on the Beijing Railway Station, the Beijing Municipal Government and the Ministry of Railways in 1980 started the planning and construction of Beijing's second passenger station and hence the Beijing West Railway Station was completed in 1996, which provided transportation links for the Beijing-Kowloon Line and the Beijing-Guangzhou Line and helped alleviate pressure on the Beijing Railway Station - this led to a reduction in passenger traffic for the Beijing Railway Station to twenty million people[2]

Since 1976, the Beijing Railway Station had begun a series of upgrades to the passenger service facilities, for example a computer system had been set up for processing tickets, a TV monitoring screen, wireless communication, automatic broadcasting system, and extensions made to the railway platform expanded its length from 497 to 603 metres in order to meet the needs of the expanding transportation flow. In 1988, the Shanghai Electric Clock Factory installed China's first large screen display system in the Beijing Railway Station Square.[7] Between May 1998 and September 1999, the Ministry of Railways implemented a seismic strengthening project to the Beijing Railway Station and also introduced new passenger features such as a central air conditioning system, passenger guidance system, multi-functional radio broadcasting system.[8] Since June 18, 2003, the Beijing Railway Station began an expansion of two new sites, comprising an area of 20,513 square meters and includes a specialized large parcel luggage line.,[9] renovations included the removal of the concrete canopy, alterations to the steel arch station pole, and alterations to the original site raised it from 1 to 1.2 meters,.[10]

In June 2008, in order to meet the needs of the Beijing Olympic Games, bilingual signs were created at the Beijing Railway Station to facilitate an overall increase in foreign tourists travelling to the games, in addition to putting up the "Beijing Railway Station", several other signs were also erected at station entrances, exits and ticket booths[11][12]

Station platform Layout

Beijing Railway Station inside.jpg
Beijing Railway Station Platform #7.
North Platform #1
Train Lines(Line 1)
Train Lines(Line 2)
Platform #2
Train Lines(Line 3)
Train Lines(Line 4)
Platform #3
Train Lines (Line 5)
Headshunt(Line 6)
Train Lines (Line 7)
Platform #4
Train Lines (Line 8)
Train Lines (Line 9)
Platform #5
Train Lines (Line 10)
Train Lines (Line 11)
Platform #6
Train Lines (Line 12)
Train Lines (Line 13)
Platform #7
Train Lines (Line 14)
Headshunt(Line 15)
Train Lines (Line 16)
south Platform #8

Beijing Subway

Beijing Railway
北京
Beijing Subway
20110803133 Beijing Railway Station Subway.jpg
Entrance D of the subway station on the plaza north of the Beijing Railway Station
Location Beijingzhan Jie, Dongcheng District, Beijing
China
Operated by Beijing Mass Transit Railway Operation Corp., Ltd.
Line(s) Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Platforms 2 (1 island platform)
Services
Preceding station   Beijing Subway   Following station
towards Fuxingmen
Line 2
towards Dongzhimen
Satellite image of Subway Station of Beijing Railway Station in construction. (1967-09-20)

The Beijing Railway Station is a transportation hub in Beijing.

  • Beijing Subway: Line 2 stops at the Beijing Railway Station, with Entrance D on the station plaza.
  • Beijing Bus routes and stops near the station:
    • Beijing Station East (北京站东) 250 m east of the station plaza: 9, 10, 20, 25, 29, 39, 52, 59, 122, 203, 204, 209, 403, 420, 434, 637, 638, 639, 666, 668, 673, 674, 729, 804, 805, 827, 829, 938, 957
    • Beijing Station West (北京站西) 280 m west of the station plaza: 103, 104, 208, 209, 211, 673
    • Beijing Station Street (北京站前街) 290 m north of the station plaza: 9, 24, 204, 673, 674, 729, 804, 特2
    • Beijing Station Intersection East (北京站口东) on Chang'an Avenue, 600 m north of the station plaza: 1, 52, 90, 99, 120, 126, 205, 208, 420, 637, 666, 728, 特2
    • Jianguomen South (建国门桥南) 900 m east of the station plaza on the Second Ring Road: 25, 39, 43, 44, 52, 122, 434, 637, 638, 750, 特2
  • Beijing Airport Bus Route 3 has a terminus located about 300 m east of the station plaza.

Bus route numbers in bold denotes bus terminus.

Sister Stations

Notes

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  3. E. Perry Link, The Uses of Literature: Life in the Socialist Chinese Literary System Princeton University Press, 2000, pg. 6
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See also