Shanghai railway station
Shanghai 上海 Hanyu Pinyin | Shànghǎi Huǒchēzhàn | |
---|---|---|
Wu | ||
Shanghainese Romanization | Zånhae Hutsuzae |
Shanghai–Kunming railway
- Bus terminal
- 30671 (TMIS code)
- SHH (telegram code)
- SHA (Pinyin code)
Preceding station | China Railway | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Shanghai West towards Beijing
|
Beijing–Shanghai railway | Terminus | ||
Terminus | Shanghai–Kunming railway | Shanghai West towards Kunming
| ||
Preceding station | China Railway High-speed | Following station | ||
Terminus | Shanghai–Nanjing intercity railway | Shanghai West towards Nanjing
|
Preceding station | MTR | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Jinhua towards Hung Hom
|
Shanghai–Kowloon through train | Terminus |
Shanghai railway station (simplified Chinese: 上海火车站; traditional Chinese: 上海火車站; pinyin: Shànghǎi Huǒchēzhàn; Shanghainese: Zånhae Hutsuzae) is one of the four major railway stations in Shanghai, China, the others being Shanghai South, Shanghai Hongqiao, and Shanghai West (Shanghaixi).
The station is located on Moling Road,
History and development
Shanghai station is called "the new railway station" by locals since it replaced Shanghai North railway station (also known as "Old North railway station", or "Old North Station" - 老北站 by locals) as the city's main train station in 1987. In the late '80s, the old North railway station was inadequate to handle the increasing railway traffic in Shanghai. The government then decided to pull down the Shanghai East (freight) railway station and build a new railway station at the same place. On 28 December 1987, the North railway station was closed. At the same time, the new Shanghai railway station was built and started its operation.[1]
In 2006, some railway lines of the station were moved to the reopened Shanghai South railway station, which lessened the increasing pressure of passenger traffic. In August 2006, a decision was made to renovate the aging station and its surrounding area. Many new ticket machines were installed to increase efficiency.
In June 2008, in order to co-operate with the opening of World Expo Shanghai 2010, Shanghai Government and Zhabei District carried out a new renovation called the "Shanghai Railway Station North Plaza Comprehensive Transportation Hub Project" with a total investment over 4.1 billion RMB.
On May 29, 2010, the renovation was completed. It expanded the north building from 1,000 square meters (10,764 sq ft) to 15,560 square meters (167,486 sq ft), refurbished the south building and added a new designed wave-shaped roof over the platform.[2]
In late 2015, rumours of the demolition of the Shanghai railway station arose. Many locals had believed this because of the many residential developments and needlessness of the station as there are already the
Connections
Most long-haul, non high-speed trains bound for
It offers[1]
- T trains (special fast trains that only stop at main stations) to Dalian, Beijing, Ürümqi, Nanjing, Yangzhou, Hangzhou, Xian, Lanzhou, Jinan, Tongling, Tianjin, Taizhou and Ningbo in mainland China, as well as across the border to Kowloon in Hong Kong.
- K trains (fast) to Anyang, Guiyang, Changsha, Guangzhou, Kunming, Wuhan, Yinchuan, Xining, Nanchang, Zhanjiang, Fuzhou, Xiamen, Yichang, Chongqing, Fuyang, Shenyang, Shijiazhuang, Baotou, Qingdao, Tianjin, Taiyuan, Harbin, and Jilin.
In addition, a lot of pass-by trains from the north to the south of China also use Shanghai station as an intermediate stop.
Transportation
Shanghai station can be reached by taking
Gallery
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Shanghai station from the west (2010)
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The north plaza of the station (2010)
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A CR300AF leaves the station (2018)
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Trains at platforms 4 and 5 (2010)
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Trains at platforms 8 and 9 (2017)
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Ticket windows (2008)
See also
- Shanghai Hongqiao railway station
- Shanghai South railway station
- Shanghai West railway station
- Rapid transit in the People's Republic of China
References
- ^ a b "上海铁路局 上铁资讯 (Shanghai Railway Bureau Shanghai Railway Information)". Archived from the original on 2018-06-19.
- ^ "China Expat | Expat China | 外国人网 | Guides to 41 Chinese cities". eChinacities.com. Archived from the original on 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
External links
- Shanghai Train Guide - Timetables, tips, routes, and schedules