Transport in Beijing
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Transport in the capital is overseen by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Transport.[1]
Road network
Ring roads
The city is served by five completed ring roads. From the centre of the city outward, they are:
- 2nd Ring Road
- 3rd Ring Road
- 4th Ring Road
- 5th Ring Road
- 6th Ring Road
The "1st Ring" of Beijing refers to the historic tram route (now demolished) through Xidan, Ping'anli, Di'anmen, Beixinqiao, Dongdan and Tiananmen. No ring roads are built on this route but it is still called "1st Ring". From that on, ring road built on Beijing's historic city limit is called 2nd Ring.
Expressways
- Main topic: Expressways of Beijing
Nine toll expressways link Beijing to its suburbs, outlying regions, and other cities; these are:
- Yanqing District)
- Jingcheng Expressway(Connects Beijing to Chengde in Hebei province)
- Airport Expressway (Sanyuanqiao to Beijing Capital International Airport)
- Tongzhou District)
- Jingha Expressway(Beiguan Roundabout – Yanjiao in Hebei province)
- Jingshen Expressway(Sifang Bridge – Shenyang)
- Jinghu Expressway(Runs from Beijing to Shanghai)
- Jingkai Expressway(Yuquanying–Yufa)
- Jingshi Expressway (Liuliqiao–Shijiazhuang)[2]
China National Highways
Eleven
- China National Highway 101 (Dongzhimen–Chengde–Shenyang)
- China National Highway 102 (Chaoyangmen–Harbin)
- Tanggu)
- China National Highway 104 (Yongdingmen–Fuzhou)
- China National Highway 105 (Yongdingmen–Zhuhai–Macau)
- China National Highway 106 (Yuquanying–Guangzhou)
- China National Highway 107 (Guang'anmen–Shenzhen)
- China National Highway 108 (Fuxingmen–Kunming)
- China National Highway 109 (Fuchengmen–Lhasa)
- China National Highway 110 (Deshengmen–Yinchuan)
- China National Highway 111 (Dongzhimen–Heilongjiang province)
Traffic congestion
This section needs to be updated.(May 2018) |
Beijing as of 2011 has an estimated 5 million registered cars on its roads, so traffic congestion is widespread. Traffic in the city centre is often gridlocked and is only predicted to get worse as the number of vehicles on Beijing's roads increase. It is predicted by 2016 Beijing will have over 6 million cars on its roads.[3] To combat congestion the local government has rapidly been building the subway system adding more lines and working towards doubling the length of the subway system by 2015. In addition to this they have decreased the cost of fares in an attempt to encourage more people to use public transport. In 2008 Beijing introduced restrictions on the number of cars on its roads in attempt to reduce congestion and pollution during the Olympic games period. They did this by adopting odd-even traffic restriction on alternative days. Cars with number plates ending with odd numbers were restricted one day and the next day cars with number plates ending with even numbers were restricted. Drivers who were unable to use their cars did not have to pay road or vehicle taxes, costing the city around 1.3 billion yuan.[4] On Feb 21, 2022, Beijing experienced its worst traffic in five years due to the beginning of school and reserved Olympic lanes remaining closed to the public.[5]
Urban public transportation
Beijing has an extensive public transportation network of buses, trolleybuses, suburban rail and a rapidly expanding subway system. In 2021, 76.5% of commuters used public transit in Beijing.[6]
Beijing Subway
The Beijing Subway now has 23 lines, 678.2 km (421.4 mi) of lines and 394 stations in operation. Subway travel is generally fast, clean, economical and during peak periods congested. Currently about 12 million journeys are made on the subway every day. By 2020, the city predicts daily ridership will increase to over 18.5 million journeys a day.[7] A ¥3 minimum fare that rises according to the distance travelled applies to all lines, except the Capital Airport Express (¥25) and the Daxing Airport Express (¥10 - ¥35). The electronic commuter fare card, Yikatong is accepted on all lines.
Beijing Suburban Railway
The Beijing Suburban Railway, a suburban commuter train service, is managed separately from the Beijing Subway. The two systems, although complementary, are not related to each other operationally. Beijing Suburban Railway is run as part of the China Railway Beijing Group.
There are 4 suburban railway lines currently in operation:
.Bus, Trolleybus and BRT
The Beijing Public Transport Holdings, Ltd. ("BPT") is the main bus and
Bus pass
The BPT offered month-long bus passes until 2006.
Bus enquiry services
The BPT provides enquiry services via both its official website http://www.bjbus.com and a helpline: +86-10-96166.
Taxi
Taxi fares depend on the vehicle type: these start at
There are also many illegal cabs known as 黑车 (heiche, meaning 'Black Cabs' as in "black market" or "illegal"), which operate via a pre-negotiated fare.
Taxi-like services, including Pedicabs, are also widely used. A motorized or manual bicycle is probably the most commonly seen form, although pedicabs are still available in certain parts of the city. These quaint modes of transport also employ the pre-negotiated fare system
In 1999, the environmentally unsound "bread cars" (
Intercity transportation
Air
Beijing Capital International Airport
Beijing has two of the world's largest airports. Beijing Capital International Airport (
Beijing Daxing International Airport
Beijing Daxing International Airport (IATA: PKX) located 46 kilometres (29 mi) south of the city in
Other airports
With the opening of the Daxing Airport in September 2019, the
Visa requirements for air passengers
As of 1 January 2013[update], tourists from 45 countries are permitted a 72-hour visa-free stay in Beijing. The 45 countries include Singapore, Japan, the United States, Canada, all EU and EEA countries (except Norway and Liechtenstein), Switzerland, Brazil, Argentina and Australia. The programme benefits transit and business travellers[15] with the 72 hours calculated starting from the moment visitors receive their transit stay permits rather than the time of their plane's arrival. Foreign visitors are not permitted to leave Beijing for other Chinese cities during the 72 hours.[16]
Trains
Stations
Beijing has four main railway stations: Beijing railway station, Beijing North railway station, Beijing West railway station, Beijing South railway station. The latter two are among the biggest railway stations in the world. Beijing Chaoyang railway station is a station for high-speed trains from the northeast. Other railway stations in urban Beijing include: Beijing East, Beijing Fengtai, Guang'anmen, Changping North. The Hepingli railway station is no longer in service.
Several more stations are under construction. Beijing Fengtai railway station will be a very large station in southwest Beijing with both high-speed and conventional services calling at it. Beijing Sub-Center railway station is situated in Tongzhou District and will be both a terminus and an intermediate station on multiple intercity lines.
Railways
Beijing is a major railway hub in China's railway network. The following eight major
- Jinghu Railway, to Shanghai
- Jingqin Railway), to Harbin, Heilongjiang
- Jingbao Railway, to Baotou, Inner Mongolia
- Jingtong Railway, to Tongliao, Inner Mongolia
- Yuanping, Shanxi
- across the border).
The city also hosts a number of high speed railway lines:
- Beijing-Tianjin Intercity Railway, to Tianjin
- Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway, to Shanghai
- , opening late 2012.
Further high speed connections being proposed include links to Shenyang, Tangshan, Zhangjiakou, Kowloon, Taipei, and Taiyuan.
International trains departing from Beijing
There are a number of cross-border international trains departing from Beijing to neighbouring countries. The Trans-Siberian train to Ulaanbaatar (Mongolia) and then onto Moscow (Russia) departs from Beijing. There are also trains to Pyongyang (North Korea) and Hanoi (Vietnam) which depart from Beijing. The trains also stop at other cities and towns along the route. International trains currently depart from Beijing West Railway Station and Beijing Railway Station.[17] The following is a guide to the international services which depart Beijing.
- K3/4: Beijing to Moscow via Ulaanbaatar: Departs from Beijing Railway Station every Wednesday at 7:45 a.m.
- Z5/6: Beijing to Hanoi via Nanning: Departs from Beijing West Railway Station every Thursday and Friday at 4:08 p.m.
- K19/20: Beijing to Moscow: Departs from Beijing Railway Station every Saturday at 11:00 p.m.
- K23/24: Beijing to Ulaanbaatar: Departs from Beijing Railway Station every Saturday at 7:45 a.m.
- K27/28: Beijing to Pyongyang: Departs from Beijing Railway Station every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday at 5:30 p.m.
- T97B/98B: Beijing to special administrative region of the People's Republic of China. To cross the boundary between mainland China and Hong Kong, passengers have to go through immigration and customs checks, like international trains.)
See also
- Grand Canal of China
- Transport in the People's Republic of China
References
- ^ "Beijing Municipal Committee of Communication". Archived from the original on 2014-05-27. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
- ^ "Beijing Expressway Guide - Get in and out Beijing by car". www.beijing-travels.com.
- ^ "Beijing car ownership exceeds 5 mln". Archived from the original on February 7, 2013.
- ^ Mulvenney, Nick (19 Jun 2008). "Beijing to launch Olympic odd-even car ban in July". Reuters. Retrieved 2018-03-19.
- ^ irenelovesya (2022-02-21). "Beijing Experienced Its Worst Traffic In Five Years Today". www.thebeijinger.com. Retrieved 2023-01-30.
- ^ a b "北京"十四五"交通规划出炉 多条地铁将实现跨线运营-新华网". www.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved 2022-06-13.
- ^ 李松. "Beijing's subway is going full bore - China - Chinadaily.com.cn". www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
- ^ "Statistics" bjbus.com Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2011-02-03
- ^ "北京快速公交1号线今年"梳起大辫子"-新华网". www.xinhuanet.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2018. Retrieved 2019-01-25.
- ^ "Year to date Passenger Traffic". Airports Council International. 23 June 2014. Archived from the original on 29 January 2017. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
- ^ "Beijing Capital International Airport Expansion, Chaoyang District - Airport Technology". Airport Technology. Retrieved 2018-03-19.
- ^ 新华社 (2019-09-25). "北京大兴国际机场正式投运". 新浪网. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
- ^ 首都新机场跑道呈三纵一横分布 规划7条跑道. news.carnoc.com. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
- ^ "China plans to build world's biggest airport near Beijing". In.news.yahoo.com. 10 September 2011. Archived from the original on 19 May 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
- ^ "Beijing grants three-day visa-free access". TTGmice. 6 December 2012. Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
- ^ "Beijing 72-hour Visa-free" ChinaTour.Net Archived 18 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 6 June 2014
- ^ "China - International Trains". Archived from the original on 2010-02-19.