Tag Archive 'transportation'

Oct 13 2008

New Traffic Measures: Fines, Extended Subway Hours and More Buses

Published by admin under Beijing Today

New traffic measures that will see up to 800,000 cars taken off Beijing’s road every working day, come into effect today.  All cars with license plates ending with either a 1 or 6 are not permitted to be driven within the Fifth Ring Road between 6am to 9pm this evening. Announced in late September, see our earlier post here, the plan is to have cars with number plates ending with certain digits banned from the roads within the Fifth Ring Road one day a week. In the past few days Beijing authorities have released more detailed information about the plan:

Fines
For the first month of implementation drivers caught taking their vehicles to the road on restricted days will get off with a verbal warning. After this initial period, those caught flaunting the ban will be fined RMB 100. However, no points will be deducted from the driver’s license.

Extended Subway Hours
In order to support the new car restriction measures, the Beijing Subway Company has announced that they will extend the operating hours of the city’s subway lines starting this week, though details of the new running times have still not been released. In a related move, public transport authorities will also increase the number of bus lines servicing the first/final stops on the various subway lines.

More Buses
Starting from today, the city’s transport bureau will increase the number of buses on Beijing’s streets by 10% to 18,000 vehicles. The bureau has also announced that 10 of the 34 Olympic bus lines will be retained indefinitely and that these services will now operate from 6am daily. They’ve also increased the number of evening services by 3 lines so that there are now 15 lines operating overnight. They’ve also extended the operating hours of other bus lines.

Varied Office and Business Hours
The office hours of various unspecified industries and work units scattered across the city have been staggered to start at 8.30, 9 and 9.30am to help relieve peak hour traffic congestion. The office  hours of national government bodies, Beijing government offices and schools remain the same. Business hours of most of Beijing’s large department stores have been set as 10am-10pm. Most stores we’re already operating on this time frame but some department stores have been forced to push back the time they open by half and hour.

An Added Layer of Complexity
Like the rules of a complex card game, the new regulations state that each month the days that certain cars are forced to remain in the garage will change. So although cars with registration plates ending in 1 or 6 won’t be able to drive on Monday’s for the whole month, come November they’ll be off the road on some other day of the week. The traffic bureau will announce the measures a week before the start of every month.

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Sep 27 2008

Beijing West Station begin the passenger flow peak

Published by admin under Beijing Today

On September 27th, Just before one day of the National Holiday in China. As this holiday is the longest holiday except the Spring Festival holiday, most people will go home or have a travel during the holiday. This is the last ” golden week” after the holiday system was changed this year.

So the transpotation will face the passenger flow. Beijing West Station begin the passenger flow peak today.

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Jul 18 2008

Beijing open three more metro, rail lines open at weekend

Published by admin under Beijing Today

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The new subway Line 10, with air-conditioned and spacious compartments, will open this weekend.

 

 

A 4.3-km length of the Olympic line and a shuttle train between Dongzhimen and the airport terminals will also open for test runs at the same time. They will extend Beijing’s underground railway to 200 km.

“The new lines will directly serve the huge crowds during the Olympics,” Zhou Zhengyu, spokesman for the Beijing municipal committee of communications, said Thursday.

Beijing is expecting 21 million commuters each day during the Aug 8-24 Games’ period, and up to 5.85 million passengers will use the city’s subway during that period, more than one quarter of the total commuters using public transport.

The 15.5 billion yuan ($2.27 billion) Line 10 links Zhongguancun, Beijing’s IT hub in the northwest, with the city’s central business district in the east. The journey time is 45 minutes.

However, the Olympic subway line, part of the planned Line 8, will not be open to passengers without tickets or accreditation.

Special zones will be set up at each subway station to separate Games ticket holders and accredited personnel, who will enjoy free public transport.

The airport express will operate from 6 am till the last flight arrives at the newly built Terminal 3. The trip from Dongzhimen to the airport will take 20 minutes, with 15-minute intervals.

Six more subway lines are being built, and the next one to open next year is Line 4, which will cross the populated west part of Beijing.

Construction of new lines is on schedule despite the delayed opening of Line 10, which had been scheduled to open early last month, Liu Hongtao, deputy director of the local railway transportation construction corporation, said.

By 2015, Beijing’s subway network will stretch more than 561 km and have 420 stations. The cost of developing each kilometer of subway is 500 million yuan.

The municipal government has an annual budget of about 1 billion yuan for public transport.

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