Nanjing Metro


The Nanjing Metro is a rapid transit system serving the urban and suburban districts of Nanjing, the capital city of Jiangsu Province in the People's Republic of China. The system has ten lines and 159 stations running on of track. It is operated and maintained by the Nanjing Metro Group Company. The total length of the system ranks fourth in China, after Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou. In 2017, the metro system carried a total of 977.4 million annual riders.
Proposals for a metro system serving Nanjing first began in 1984, with approval by the State Planning Commission granted in 1994. Construction began on the initial 16-station Line 1 in 1999, and opened in 2005. Future expansion plans include three lines set to open within the next few years, with several more awaiting approval to begin construction.

History

Early proposals

In 1984 the first serious proposal for construction of a subway appeared in the Municipal People's Congress. In April 1986, the Nanjing Integrated Transport Planning group was established to research on how to implement a subway system in Nanjing. On December 1986 the team published the "Nanjing Metro Initial Phase". The phase consists of a north–south line, east–west line and a diagonal Northwest to Southeast line. The three lines meet in the city center forming a triangle. A revision of the "Nanjing City Master Plan" in 1993 added another line through the urban core, and three light metro lines connecting Nanjing's suburbs in Pukou and the at time proposed new airport. In addition a suburban railway to Longtan was proposed. A 1999 report on "Nanjing city rapid rail transit network planning" further proposed six subway lines, two subway extensions and three light metro lines.
In 1994, the State Planning Commission approved the preparatory work for the subway only to have the entire metro project postponed in 1995 amid a national freeze on new metro projects.
Major changes were made to "Nanjing Urban Rail Transit Network Planning" in 2003. The new master plan consisted of 13 lines, of which nine are subway lines and four are light metro lines. The new Line 6 will be a loop line connecting all the urban radial lines. The plan retained the original lines 1, 2 and 3 from the previous plan. According to the new plan, the initial phase would consist of the completion of Metro Line 1 and 2 by 2010. Together the two lines will form a basic "cross" network. By 2020 the completion of Lines 1, 2, 3, and 4 was to form a more robust "pound" shaped network. Longer term plans include the construction of a loop line connecting all existing lines. The plan also identified four subway lines crossing the Yangtze river.

First line

The initial section of Line 1 from Maigaoqiao to Xiaohang received final official approval in 1999. In May 2000, the Experimental Station resumed construction with the entire Line 1 project in full construction in December.
A western extension of Line 1 from Xiaohang to a newly built stadium was fast tracked after Nanjing won hosting the National Games. Line 1's initial section and the western extension started trial operations in September 3, 2005, running from Maigaoqiao to Olympic Stadium with 16 stations and a total length of. The opening of the Nanjing Metro Line 1 gave Nanjing the sixth metro system in the Chinese mainland after Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen.

Current system

Line 1

Line 1 runs mainly in a north–south direction. The line starts at Maigaoqiao in the north, heading southwards to CPU. The construction of Line 1 began in the year 2000 and was inaugurated on September 3, 2005, with 16 stations and a length of. On May 28, 2010, Line 1's long south extension entered into operation. Thus, before the transfer of Line 1's Olympic Sport Center Branch to Line 10, Line 1 was long with 31 stations. The Olympic Sport Center branch line broke away from Line 1 and formed parts of Line 10, when the latter's construction finished and entered operation in July 1, 2014. Currently, Line 1 is long and has 27 stations.

Line 2

Line 2 is long and has 26 stations. It runs mainly in an east–west direction, from Youfangqiao in the southwest to Jingtianlu in the northeast. It entered into operation on May 28, 2010.

Line 3

Groundbreaking work for Line 3 started in January 2010. This line, with a north–south orientation, started operation on April 1, 2015 and is in length with 29 stations.

Line 4

Construction of east-west Line 4 was begun in late 2012 and the first phase entered operation on January 18, 2017. The completed portion is in length. The line is known as A Zi as the branding for the line and the train color is purple, the first of which were delivered in April 2015. The line started operation on January 18, 2017.

Line 10

Line 10 is a western extension from Line 1's Olympic Stadium branch line, which broke away from Line 1 and formed part of Line 10 when the new line was completed. Construction started in February 2012, finished in 2014. The line is approximately long with 14 stations, and entered operation in July 1, 2014.

Line S1

Line S1 acts as Nanjing's airport express line, connecting Nanjing South Railway Station to Gaochun District via Nanjing Lukou International Airport. The entire line was planned to be long with 13 stations. The first phase from Nanjing South to Lukou International Airport started construction in December 27, 2011, and finished in 2014. The first phase opened in July 1, 2014 in time for the Nanjing 2014 Summer Youth Olympics. It is long with 8 stations. The second phase extension later became Line S9.

Line S3

Line S3 opened on 6 December 2017. It starts from Nanjing South Railway Station and heads west, crossing the Yangtze River on the cantilever along the edge of Dashengguan Yangzte River bridge together with high-speed rail trains, before terminating at the Gaojiachong station in Qiaolin, southwest of Pukou District. Originally planned as Metro Line 12 or the Ninghe Intercity Rail Line, the route started construction in late 2011. Besides Nanjing South Railway Station in which passengers can transfer to Lines 1, 3, or S1, Youfangqiao station is also a transfer station between Line S3 and Line 2. Phase one is long with 19 stations and connects Nanjing South Railway Station to Jiangbei New Area in Pukou. Phase 2 is now still being planned, which might extends further southwest from phase 1 to Hexian county in the far future.

Line S7

Line S7 opened on 26 May 2018. It is an extension of Line S1 further southeast, starting at Konggangxinchengjiangning station, ending at Wuxiangshan station in South Lishui District. Some Line S1 trains continue to operate into Line S7.

Line S8

Line S8 is a suburban metro line connects Luhe District to Pukou District. The line is long, of the line is elevated. The line features 17 stations including 6 underground stations and 11 elevated ones. It uses B size trains in 4 car sets that are capable of running up to. Construction of the line started on June 21, 2012 and it was officially opened on August 1, 2014.

Line S9

Line S9 starts from Xiangyulunan station, the 6th station from Nanjing South Railway Station on Line S1, and extends further south to Gaochun District for a total length of. Upon opening on December 30, 2017, Nanjing became the first city in mainland China where every district is accessible by metro.

Under-construction projects

Line 1

The line will be extended to Nanjing second Yangtze River Bridge Park Station.

Line 2

The line will be extended west with 4 new stations to Yuzui Park Station.

Line 5

Line 5 received approval on 14 January 2015. Before the relocation in 2017, the line is projected to be long, containing 30 stations and to cover a route from Fangjiaying station in Gulou District to Jiyindadao station in Jiangning District.

Line 6

Line 6 is a 32.4 km fully underground line with 19 stations. Construction started on 28 December 2019.

Line 7

Line 7 is a north-south line roughly following the south bank of the Yangtze River with 26 stations. A southern section has been under construction since November 2017. The rest of the line started construction in November 2018 with the line being scheduled to be opened 2021.

Line S4

Line S4 or the Nanjing-Chuzhou Intercity Railway is a connecting suburban Nanjing with neighboring Lai'an and Chuzhou of Anhui. The line will feature passing loops at select stations to allow for distinct express and local services. The line is planned to open by 2022.It is reported to have two branches :north and south.

Line S6

Line S6 or the Nanjing-Jurong Intercity Railway is a connecting suburban Nanjing with neighboring Jurong, Jiangsu. The line will feature passing loops at select stations to allow for distinct express and local services. The line is planned to open by 2023.

Line S8 South Extension

The line will be extended south to Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge Station.

Ticket system

Like many metro systems in the world, fares on the Nanjing Subway are distance-based. Fares range from 2 yuan for journeys under 8 stations, to 4 yuan for longer journeys. There is a 5% discount for users of the Nanjing Public Utility IC Card. Fares can also be paid using Alipay.

Single tickets

Single journey tickets can be purchased from the ticket vending machine or at a ticket window. The ticket vending machine accepts both coins and bills.

Transit card

Apart from one-way tickets, fares can be paid with the Nanjing Public Utility IC Card, or Jinlingtong. It can be purchased for a refundable fee of 25 yuan and refilled at ticket booths inside the metro stations as well as many collaborative convenience stores throughout the city. The card can be used to pay for other means of public transportation, such as the city taxi and the city bus.
This transit card is similar to Beijing's Yikatong, and the Octopus card of Hong Kong's MTR.

Rolling stock

For Line 1, Siemens Transportation Systems was awarded the supply contract in November 2002.
For Line 2, Siemens Transportation Systems and its local partner Nanjing Research Institute of Electronic Technology have been awarded to supply the signaling system after signing a contract. Technologies used include Trainguard MT, Vicos OC 501, Sicas ECC and Az S 350 U axle counting system.

Gallery