Warsaw–Gdańsk railway

The Warsaw–Gdańsk railway is a Polish 323-kilometre long railway line, that connects Warsaw with Iława, Malbork, Tczew, Gdańsk and further along the coast to Gdynia.

Warsaw–Gdańsk railway
Overview
TypeHeavy rail
Statusin use
LocalePoland
TerminiWarsaw
Gdańsk
Operation
Opened1852 (1852)
Technical
Line length323.393 km (200.947 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification3000 V DC
Operating speed160 km/h (99 mph)
Route number9
Route map
Warsaw Cross-City Line
to Warszawa Zachodnia
Warszawa Wschodnia
Warsaw–Dorohusk railway to Pilawa
& Warsaw–Terespol railway
Warszawa Praga
Warszawa Żerań
Warszawa Toruńska
Warszawa Płudy
Warszawa Choszczówka
Legionowo
Legionowo–Tłuszcz railway
to Tłuszcz
Legionowo Przystanek
Chotomów
Janówek
Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki
Modlin
Freight line
to Modlin Airport
Pomiechówek
Brody Warszawskie
Studzianki Nowe
Legionowo–Nasielsk railway
to Legionowo Piaski
Nasielsk
Nasielsk–Toruń railway
to Sierpc
Kątne
Jackowo Dworskie
Świercze
Kałęczyn
Gąsocin
Gołotczyzna
Ciechanów Przemysłowy
Ciechanów
Czeruchy
Krośnice Mazowieckie
Konopki
Stupsk Mazowiecki
Wyszyny
Mława Miasto
Mława
Iłowo
Narzym
Działdowo
Działdowo–Chojnice railway
& Działdowo–Olsztyn railway
Burkat
Turza Wielka
Turza Wielka–Samborowo railway
to Samborowo
Gralewo
Żabiny
Tuczki
Rybno Pomorskie
Jeglia
Hartowiec
Montowo
Zajączkowo Lubawskie–Nowe
Miasto Lubawskie railway
Zajączkowo Lubawskie
Zajączkowo Lubawskie–Lubawa railway
to Lubawa
Rakowice
Smolniki
Poznań–Skandawa railway
← to Toruń│to Poznań/Skandawa
Iława Główna
Poznań–Skandawa railway
to Olsztyn
Iława Miasto
Ząbrowo
Redaki
Susz
Myślice–Szlachta railway
to Myślice
Jabłonowo Pomorskie–Prabuty railway
to Jabłonowo Pomorskie
Prabuty
Myślice–Szlachta railway
to Kwidzyn
Gdakowo
Mikołajki Pomorskie
Mleczewo
Dąbrówka Malborska
Gronajny
Toruń–Malbork railway
← to Toruń│to Malbork
Malbork–Braniewo railway
to Elblag
Malbork
Malbork Kałdowo
Szymankowo–Nowy Dwór Gdański railway
to Nowy Dwór Gdański
Stogi Malborskie
Szymankowo
Lisewo
Chorzów–Tczew railway
to Bydgoszcz
Tczew
Tczew–Kostrzyn railway
to Chojnice
Miłobądz
Pszczółki
Pszczółki–Kościerzyna railway
to Kościerzyna
Skowarcz
Różyny
Pruszcz Gdański–Łeba railway
to Stara Piła and Łeba
Pruszcz Gdański
Gdańsk Święty Wojciech
Pruszcz Gdański–Gdańsk Port Północny railway
to Gdańsk Port Północny
Gdańsk Lipce
Gdańsk Orunia
Gdańsk Południowy–Motława Most railway
to Gdańsk Port Północny
Gdańsk Główny
Gdańsk–Stargard railway
to Gdynia

Opening

The line was opened in stages between 1852 and 1877. Today's Line 9 was created separately in the Russian zone and German zone. It was built as part of the Prussian Eastern Railway linking Berlin with Königsberg (today's Kaliningrad).

DateSection
6 August 1852Gdańsk - Tczew
12 October 1857Tczew - Malbork
1 September 1876Malbork - Iława
1877Iława - Warsaw

The line is double track throughout. The last single-track section between Mikolajki Pomorskie and Malbork was doubled to two tracks in 1967.[1]

Electrification

Electrification took place in six stages between 1969 and 1985:

  • 1969 - electrification of section Gdańsk - Tczew
  • 1972 - electrification of section Warsaw - Nasielsk
  • 1983-1985 - electrification of section of Nasielsk - Tczew [2]

Modernisation

Between 2006 and 2014 the line was completely modernised and made suitable for passenger trains to travel at 200 km/h (160 km/h for trains without ETCS) and 120 km/h for freight trains with axle load of 22.5 tonnes. Before modernisation speed on the line was between 80 and 120 km/h. The cost of modernisation cost about PLN 10 billion,[3][4] which gives an approximate cost of PLN 31 million per kilometer of the route.

Usage

The line sees trains of various categories (EuroCity, Express InterCity, Intercity, TLK and regional services).

  • EuroCity services from Gdynia to Vienna
  • Intercity Premium, Express Intercity, Intercity and TLK services along the whole route
  • Regional services

See also

References

Media related to Railway line 9 (Poland) at Wikimedia Commons


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