Eleven subway or above-ground rail lines will be under
construction this year in Beijing and two will be completed before
the Olympic Games in August, according to officials
at the municipal Development and Reform Commission.
These projects will add 270 kilometers to the municipal rail
system's track length, nearly doubling its current size.
The two, which are scheduled to open before July, are an
elevated line connecting the airport with the transport hub of
Dongzhimen in Beijing and the first phase of the No. 10 subway.
When these facilities open, the track length of Beijing's metro
system will be about 200 km, said Wang Haiping, deputy director of
the commission.
"With the completion of the two lines, Beijing's subways can
meet the traffic demand during the Olympics," Wang said.
Work will start this year on two new subways. These are the No.
7 line, which terminates at Beijing's main railway station, and the
42-km No. 14 line, which will be the longest single subway line in
Beijing with terminals at Lugou Bridge in the southwest and
Wangjing in the northeast.
Seven other subways are also under construction this year.
"The running distance of the rail network will amount to 561
kilometers by 2015, which is expected to make Beijing's subways the
largest in the world, surpassing New York City," said Xu Xiaoyuan,
head of the infrastructure department of the commission.
Starting from this year, the municipal government will
appropriate 10 billion yuan (1.37 billion U.S. dollars) annually as
subway investment.
Beijing also plans to build low-cost or free parking facilities
near the fifth ring road (one of several highways encircling the
city) to encourage those living in satellite towns to use public
transportation for the final leg of their trip into the city
proper, the commission said.
(Xinhua News Agency January 8, 2008)