All News articles – Page 304

  • News

    Passenger News in Brief

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    Ascom has supplied disposable contactless ticketing for RATP to use on the Orlyval airport peoplemover link in Paris.The TranSys consortium has installed 50 ’Queuebuster’ credit and debit card ticket vending machines at London Underground stations in a £4m contract.On April 5 VIA Rail announced it was prepared to continue operation ...

  • News

    Branch concessions

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    Spoornet has started to lease out lines with limited traffic, as part of a strategy to restore its General Freight Business to profitability. GFB accounts for around 70% of the company’s annual revenues. According to CEO Zandile Jakavula, a task force has been set up to look at the viability ...

  • News

    Theme park branch opens

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    A DOUBLE-TRACK branch 15·3 km in length between Pinto and San Martín de la Vega south of Madrid has been officially opened by Alberto Ruiz Gallardón, President of the regional government. Forming Route C-3a of Renfe’s Madrid suburban network, the new electrified line has cost €85m to build, including one ...

  • News

    Euregiobahn pushes the boundaries

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    TECHNICAL, political and administrative frontiers are also barriers to the success of international passenger services. So it is interesting to follow the progress of German Railway subsidiary Regionalbahn Rheinland GmbH. The company has teamed up with several partners in the Rhein-Maas region to develop a network of local services, linking ...

  • News

    Rails start to go boldly

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    What NASA describes as the ’first space railroad’ has been installed on the International Space Station. An initial 13m section of track was delivered by the shuttle Atlantis in April, and a further 100m is due to be added during the next two years.A transport vehicle runs along the ISS’s ...

  • News

    Smart wagon bogies

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    BY THE end of the year the first prototype lightweight ’Leila’ bogies should be on test. With financial support from Germany’s Federal Ministry of Research, Berlin Technical University is developing a new bogie design for smart freight wagons. Weighing around 4 tonnes, the bogies are being developed in conjunction with ...

  • News

    Costa Blanca LRT

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    VALENCIA regional government in Spain has awarded two contracts to upgrade and electrify 10 km of FGV’s Alacant - Dénia route between Finca Adoc and Salesianos, as part of a project to introduce dual-mode LRT services as far as Altea (RG 2.02 p66). A consortium of Azvisa, Contra and Mancobra ...

  • News

    Bilbao grows

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    REVENUE services were launched on the first section of Bilbao Metro Line 2 on April 13. Running from a junction with Line 1 at San Inazio to Urbinaga, the 5·8 km initial section of Line 2 tunnels under the Nervión river to reach the intermediate stations at Gurutzeta Cruces, Ansio, ...

  • News

    Perpignan - Figueres bids

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL Commission developing the cross-border rail link between France and Spain has confirmed that all six shortlisted consortia had submitted bids by April 2 for the concession to finance, build and operate the45 km link. The six were shortlisted on November 30 2001 (RG 1.02 p6).Meeting in Madrid on ...

  • News

    US high speed bidding starts

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    FLORIDA Department of Transportation has received 10 responses to its Invitation to Prequalify for a public-private partnership to develop a high speed railway connecting the state’s major cities. No public funding has yet been allocated for the project, although voters passed a constitutional amendment in November 2000 mandating that the ...

  • News

    Victoria regauging begins

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    WORK IS to start this month on the first projects to regauge around 2000 km of freight lines in the Australian state of Victoria. The state government has allocated A$96m towards the five-year programme costing A$140m, which was announced a year ago (RG 6.01 p367), and formally approved last September. ...

  • News

    Base tunnel progress

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    A CONSORTIUM of Eiffage TP, GRA and Condotte d’Acqua has been awarded an €82m contract to dig a 4 km pilot bore from Villarodin-Bourget near Modane, which will be used to gain access to worksites on the Mont Cenis base tunnel between France and Italy. Blasted out of the rock, ...

  • News

    Mole cuts ballast faster

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    infrastructure maintenance contractor Jarvis Rail has introduced a 44 tonne self-propelled excavator able to cut a swathe of ballast up to 3800mm wide and 600mm deep in one pass. Supplied by mining equipment manufacturer DBT, the Mole has been adapted for rail use by Jarvis Rail’s On-Track Machines division. The ...

  • News

    Sharon backs IR ’new deal’

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    ISRAEL is planning to invest US$4bn in rail over the next five years, according to Transport Minister Dr Efrayim Sne. He announced in mid-March that Prime Minister Ariel Sharon had approved in principle the 2002-06 plan which will be funded by a mix of public and private investment. A seven-year ...

  • News

    More French tram projects backed

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    CONSTRUCTION of three more light rail lines is to go ahead in southeast France, following the approval of five-year regional spending plans in Lyon and Grenoble. Work is expected to start next year on the 13·5 km Line C in Grenoble, as part of a €732m transport package proposed by ...

  • News

    Back from the brink

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    HAVING instigated a game of ’chicken’ with Congress over funding for its long-distance trains, it was Amtrak that blinked first. George Warrington, who is stepping down as President to join New Jersey Transit, announced on April 5 that he would not, after all, file the required 180-day notice for withdrawal ...

  • News

    Wagon suppliers await upturn

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    EUROPE’S rail freight business is in trouble - and yet politicians continue to predict a huge rise in traffic. We have no quarrel with the assessment that the potential is huge, but progress to date is shamefully slow. Elsewhere in this issue we offer some insight into the issues that ...

  • News

    Bay Area projects boom

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    CONSTRUCTION of the planned 35 km BART extension from Fremont to Warm Springs and San Jose moved a step closer on April 4, when the California Transportation Commission approved a grant of $717m as part of a state-wide traffic congestion relief programme. Financial support has also been promised by Alameda ...

  • News

    Freight trains running on Alameda Corridor

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    SECRETARY of Transportation Norman Mineta and California Governor Gray Davies joined ceremonies in Los Angeles on April 12 to mark the formal opening of the Alameda Corridor. Around 1000 guests, including Mayor of Los Angeles James Hahn and his counterpart from Long Beach Beverly O’Neill, watched as senior project executives ...

  • News

    AEAT Rail grows

    2002-05-01T10:00:00Z

    IN WHAT IT describes as ’the largest single-office letting in Derby for more than 25 years’, AEA Technology Rail will move its head office to Jubilee House this month. The 6500m2 building will house over 400 staff out of a total complement that has grown from 300 to over 900 ...