Anhui–Jiangxi railway

The Anhui–Jiangxi railway or Wan'gan railway (simplified Chinese: 皖赣铁路; traditional Chinese: 皖贛鐵路; pinyin: wǎn gàn tiělù), is a single-track railroad in eastern China between Wuhu in southern Anhui Province and Guixi in northern Jiangxi Province. The line is 551 km (342 mi) long and was built between 1905 and 1985. Cities along route include Wuhu, Xuancheng, Ningguo, Jixi, She County, Huangshan City, Xiuning, Yi County, and Qimen in Anhui Province and Jingdezhen, Leping, Wannian and Guixi in Jiangxi Province.

Anhui–Jiangxi railway
皖赣铁路
Between Jingdezhen and Fuliang
Overview
Other name(s)Wan'gan railway
StatusOperational
Locale People's Republic of China
Termini
  • Wuhu
  • Yingtan
Stations24
Service
TypeHeavy rail
System China Railway
Technical
Line length570 km (354 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Operating speed120 km/h (75 mph)
Route map

km
Huainan railway from Huainan
Wan'gan railway from Shangqiu
Ningtong railway to Nanjing
0
Wuhu
Qingyijiang
Huolonggang
Ningtong railway to Tongling West
Taoxin
Wanzhi
Shanghang HSR
Sanyuan
Xiangkouqiao
Shanghang HSR from Shangqiu
64
Xuancheng
Xuanhang railway to Hangzhou
Shanghang HSR to Hangzhou East
Sunjiabu
Shuidong
Gangkouzhen
Ningguo
Zhufeng
Xiaxi
Fuzhu
Jialu
Hule
Jinsha
Huangtukeng
Jikengkou
Langjiaxi
196
Jixixian
Linxi
Sankun
224
Shexian
Yansi
Huangdun
246
Huangshan
Jincun
264
Xiuning
Yanqian
Yixian
Beikeng
Jinzipai
312
Qimen
Houtan
Xinhongguang
Rongkou
Daohu
Fangjiawu
Yingli
Zhitan
Xiamingxi
Fugang
Hankeng
Fuliang
413
Jingdezhen
Jingdezhen South
Nianyushan
Ciyi
Taqian
461
Lepingshi
Kuqian
Gantang
Hanmeiling
493
Wannian
Gejiadian
Huaqiao
Yingshiling
Zhongcun
Guixi North
Hukun railway from Shanghai
550
Guixi
Tongjia
Yingxia railway from Xiamen
570
Yingtan
Hukun railway to Kunming

The railway, known in Chinese as the Wan'gan line, is named after the Chinese shorthand names for the two provinces through which it traverses, Wan for Anhui and Gan for Jiangxi. Points of interest along the line include UNESCO World Heritage Sites Huangshan and the ancient villages of Hongcun and Xidi of southern Anhui as well as China's porcelain capital, Jingdezhen.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.