Line 1 (Shanghai Metro)

Coordinates: 31°16′09″N 121°27′25″E / 31.2692°N 121.4570°E / 31.2692; 121.4570
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Line 1
Line 1 AC06 trainset in November 2013
Overview
Other name(s)R1 (planned name)
Native name上海地铁1号线
StatusOperational; Extension to Chongming Island previously planned
OwnerShentong Metro Line 1 Development Co., Ltd. (south of Shanghai Circus World);
Shanghai Gonghexin Road Elevated Development Co., Ltd. (north of Shanghai Circus World)
LocaleMinhang, Xuhui, Huangpu, Jing'an, and Baoshan districts, Shanghai, China
Termini
Stations28
Service
TypeUrban rail transit in China Rapid transit
SystemShanghai Metro Shanghai Metro
Operator(s)Shanghai No. 1 Metro Operation Co. Ltd.
Depot(s)Fujin Road Depot;
Meilong Depot
Rolling stock84 Class A 8 car trains
Daily ridership1.507 million (2019 peak)[1]
History
CommencedJanuary 19, 1990; 34 years ago (1990-01-19)
OpenedMay 28, 1993; 30 years ago (1993-05-28)
Last extensionDecember 29, 2007; 16 years ago (2007-12-29)
Technical
Line length36.39 km (22.61 mi)[2]
Number of tracks2
CharacterUnderground: Shanghai South Railway StationWenshui Road
Elevated: XinzhuangJinjiang Park
At grade: Wenshui RoadFujin Road
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead lines (1500 volts)
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph)[3]
Average speed: 33.9 km/h (21 mph)
SignallingCASCO
Route map
Route on the Shanghai map:
To scale geographic map:

Line 1 is a north–south line of the Shanghai Metro. It runs from Fujin Road in the north, via Shanghai Railway Station to Xinzhuang in the south. The first line to open in the Shanghai Metro system, line 1 serves many important points in Shanghai, including People's Square and Xujiahui. Due to the large number of important locations served, this line is extremely busy, with a daily ridership of over 1,000,000 passengers.[4] Generally, the line runs at grade beside the Shanghai–Hangzhou railway in the south, underground in the city center and elevated on the second deck of the North–South Elevated Road in the North. The line is colored red on system maps.

History[edit]

The required investment for the project was US$620 million (including domestic supporting RMB investment). In August 1988 and May 1989, the program of loans to the Federal Republic of Germany, France and the United States was approved by the State Planning Commission.[5]

  • The Federal Government of Germany has a loan of 460 million marks, an annual interest rate of 0.75%, a committed rate of 0.25%, a repayment period of 30 years, and a grace period of 10 years.[5]
  • French mixed loan of 132 million francs, of which 54% of government soft loans, annual interest rate of 2%, loan repayment period of 19 years, grace period of 11 years; export credit 46%, annual interest rate of 8.3%, loan repayment period of 10 years, grace period of 22 month.[5]
  • The US loaned US$23.18 million, of which 45% were government grants and 55% were commercial loans. The annual interest rate fluctuates, the loan repayment period is 10 years, and the grace period is 5 years.[5]

With the start of construction of the project, the cost has also increased. In August 1993, the budgetary estimate was adjusted to 3.974 billion yuan, of which domestic supporting funds increased by 1.086 billion yuan. In January 1995, the total budget was adjusted for the second time to 5.39 billion yuan, of which 3.961 billion yuan was domestic supporting funds.[5]

Shanghai Metro Line 1 opening history
Segment Commencement Opened Length Station(s) Name Investment
Jinjiang Park — Xujiahui 19 Jan 1990 28 May 1993 4.4 km (2.73 mi) 4 Initial phase (1st section) ¥5.39 billion[6]
Xujiahui — Shanghai Railway Station 19 Jan 1990 10 Apr 1995 11.7 km (7.27 mi) 8 Initial phase (2nd section)
Xinzhuang — Jinjiang Park 10 Dec 1994 28 Dec 1996 5.3 km (3.29 mi) 4 Southern extension ¥620 million[7]
Shanghai Railway Station — Gongfu Xincun 28 Dec 2004 12.4 km (7.71 mi) 9 1st Northern extension ¥4.62 billion[8]
Gongfu Xincun — Fujin Road 29 Dec 2007 4.3 km (2.67 mi) 3 2nd Northern extension ¥1.5339 billion[9]

Stations[edit]

Service routes[edit]

Shanghai Metro Line 1 service routes
Routes Station name Connections Distance Location Open-
ing
Plat-
form[10]
M P English Chinese km min
Xinzhuang 莘庄  5   Jinshan [i] Xinzhuang railway station (Shanghai) XZH 0.00 0.00 0 Minhang 28 Dec 1996[11] At-grade
Side
Waihuanlu 外环路 1.31 1.31 3
Lianhua Road 莲花路 1.46 2.77 5 28 Dec 1996[ii]
Jinjiang Park 锦江乐园 1.63 4.40 8 Xuhui 10 April 1995[11][13]
Shanghai South Railway Station 上海南站  3   15   Jinshan  Shanghai South railway station SNH 2.09 6.49 11 28 May 1993[iii] Underground
Island
Caobao Road 漕宝路  12  1.60 8.09 14 28 May 1993[14][13]
Shanghai Indoor Stadium 上海体育馆  4  1.57 9.66 16
Xujiahui 徐家汇  9   11  1.20 10.86 18
Hengshan Road 衡山路 1.58 12.44 21 10 April 1995[11][13]
Changshu Road 常熟路  7  1.09 13.53 23
South Shaanxi Road 陕西南路  10   12  0.93 14.46 24 Huangpu
Site of the First CPC National Congress · South Huangpi Road 一大会址·黄陂南路  14  1.32 15.78 26
People's Square 人民广场  2   8  1.57 17.35 29
Xinzha Road 新闸路 0.95 18.30 31
Hanzhong Road 汉中路  12   13  0.99 19.29 33 Jing'an
Shanghai Railway Station 上海火车站  3   4 [iv] China Railway Shanghai railway station SHH 0.82 20.11 35
North Zhongshan Road 中山北路 1.37 21.48 38 28 Dec 2004[11]
Yanchang Road 延长路 1.52 23.00 40
Shanghai Circus World 上海马戏城 0.93 23.93 42
Wenshui Road 汶水路 1.44 25.37 45 Elevated
Side
Pengpu Xincun 彭浦新村 1.57 26.94 47
Gongkang Road 共康路 1.39 28.33 50
Tonghe Xincun 通河新村 1.44 29.77 53 Baoshan
Hulan Road 呼兰路 1.01 30.78 55
Gongfu Xincun 共富新村 1.75 32.53 58
Bao'an Highway 宝安公路 1.64 34.17 60 29 Dec
2007[11]
West Youyi Road 友谊西路 1.32 35.49 62
Fujin Road 富锦路 1.27 36.76 65 Elevated
Side & Island
  1. ^ Xinzhuang station on the Jinshan line is currently under reconstruction. Expected reopening: 2024.
  2. ^ Former station opened on 28 December 1996;[11] Renovated station opened on 25 June 2021.[12]
  3. ^ Former station opened on 28 May 1993;[14][13] current station opened on 30 October 2004.[11]
  4. ^ Virtual transfer with lines 3 and 4 – passengers who hold the Shanghai Public Transportation Card and transfer within 30 minutes of exiting the station are able to transfer to other lines without exiting the system.
Line 1 train running under the North–South Elevated Road.

Important stations[edit]

  • Shanghai Railway Station - Connects the metro with the main railway station in the city, allowing rail transport to and from other provinces. Virtual Interchange with lines 3 and 4.
  • People's Square - This station serves a business and shopping area, and is also close to multiple tourist attractions making the station busy all day long. Interchange with lines 2 and 8.
  • Xujiahui - This is a business and commercial area, also with tourist attractions such as the Xujiahui Cathedral. Interchange with lines 9 and 11.
  • Shanghai Indoor Stadium - This station is located at the sports stadium of the same name and the biggest regional and long-distance bus station in the city. Interchange with line 4.
  • Shanghai South Railway Station - This station serves the second railway station of the city, which accommodates trains serving cities mainly to the south. Interchange with lines 3 and 15.
  • Xinzhuang - The southern terminus of line 1; interchange with line 5.

Future expansion[edit]

West extension of line 1[edit]

A 1.2 km (0.75 mi) extension to Humin road (North Xinzhuang Station) has been approved as part of the National Development and Reform Commission has approved the 2018-2023 construction planning of the city's Metro network. Work is expected to begin before 2023 and will take 4 years at acost of US$518. The extension will connect to the under construction Jiamin line.[15]

Headways[edit]

Shanghai Metro Line 1 headway[16]
Time Xinzhuang -
Shanghai Railway Station
Shanghai Railway Station -
Fujin Road
Monday - Thursday
AM peak 7:00–9:00 About 2 min and 30 sec
Off-peak 9:00–17:00 About 4 min About 6 min
PM peak 17:00–19:00 About 3 min
Other
hours
Before 7:00
After 19:00
About 4 – 9 min
Friday
AM peak 7:00–9:00 2 min and 30 sec
Off-peak 9:00–14:30 About 4 min About 6 min
PM peak 14:30–17:00 About 4 min
17:00–19:00 About 3 min
Other
hours
Before 7:00
After 21:00
About 4 - 9 min
Saturday and Sunday (Weekends)
Peak 9:00–20:00 About 4 min
Other
hours
Before 9:00
After 20:00
About 6 - 12 min

Technology[edit]

Signalling[edit]

As the first line in the system, Shanghai Metro was conceived and designed during 1980s, when fixed block signalling and track circuit based train control (TBTC) was still considered a state-of-art approach to automatic train operation. The signalling system was designed by CASCO, a signalling manufacturer owned jointly by China Railway Signal & Communication Group Corporation (CRSC) and General Railway Signal (GRS), and was largely based on the system designed by GRS for the Washington Metro.[17] Coded audio-frequency (AF) track circuits are used for both train detection and transmission of speed commands, as well as limited train-to-wayside communication (TWC) for automatic train supervision (ATS). Train operation between stations and station stop can be automatic, while doors are controlled manually by train operators.[18][19]

From 2013 to 2019, the system was completely renewed, with obsolete components such as relay interlockings replaced by modern microprocessor-based ones, but the general operation of the signaling system remained unchanged.[20] As of 2020, the original design is expected to serve two additional decades.[21]

Rolling Stock[edit]

In the summer of 2006 after poor cooling affected 16 DC01 trains on Line 1 in the summer, high temperatures inside the carriages had long been a problem, 96 ice cubes have been put into a one-meter-high waste container to alleviate the high temperature of the 16 DC trains on Line 1. In order to make up for the defects in the refrigeration power and design of the 16 DC trains, emergency measures must be taken whenever the temperature reaches 33 °C (91 °F) or more.[22] With the transformation between 2006 and 2008 from 6 carriages to 8 carriages the air conditioners of the trains were improved and modernized, making ice waste containers a thing of the past.[23]

The line was initially operated by trains built by the German Shanghai Metro Group which included Adtranz (now Bombardier) and Siemens together with AEG Westinghouse and Düwag.[24]

All are Class A[i] trains 8 cars in length.

Shanghai Metro Line 1 rolling stock
Fleet numbers Manufacturer Time of
manufac-
turing
Class No
of
car
Assembly[ii] Rolling stock Number Notes
88 ADtranz[iii] and Siemens

CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive Co., Ltd. (expansion cars and replacement cars)

1992-1994
2007-2008
A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+Mp+M+Tc 01A01 101-110 and 114
(92011-92241, 93011-93361, 93382-93413, 94022-94053, 94071-94121, 94142-94173, 94202-94233, 14652 and 14663)
In 2008-2009 expanded DC01B trains by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive using the middle carriages of trainset 111-113, 115, and 116.

8 cars (92113, 93191-93222, 93361, 94142 and 94153) retired in July 2023.

  • 93191 at SUES.
  • 92113 wrecked at Tonghe Xincun station on March 24, 2004. In 2007 it was stripped, mothballed and replaced by the new carriage built by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive.

24 cars (92011-92033, 92102, 93121, 93133, 93162, 93233, 93262, 93273, 93293-93333, 93402, 93413, 93442, 93453, 94102-94121, 14652 and 14663) were taken out of service in 2020.

40 1993-1994
2008-2009
A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+Mp+M+Tc 01A02 111-113, 115 and 116
(93371, 93421, 93431, 93481, 94011, 94061, 94131, 94181, 94191, 94241 and 014352-014643)
In 2008-2009 expanded DC01C trains by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive Trains are a combination of the Tc carriages of the original DC01 trains and the middle six carriages are newly produced by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive (30 newly produced carriages similar to 11A01).

The trains are undergoing a major refurbishment in 2024 to keep them operational until 2037. Work is expected to be completed by November 2025. Trains will be removed and transported to CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive for renovation and rebuilt.

72 1998-2001
2011
A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+Mp+M+Tc 01A03 117-125
(98011-98061, 99011-99481, 99502-99533, 00022-00053, 01742-01773, 01802-01833, 14672 and 14683)
99251 wrecked at Tonghe Xincun station on March 24, 2004. It was repaired and returned to service.
98033 and 98042 wrecked at Shanghai Railway Station station on December 22, 2009. In 2011, these were replaced by two new carriages of CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive.
  • 98033 was mothballed at Meilong Depot.
  • 98042 was converted to the SMTC Experimental Car by CRRC Dalian R&D.

8 cars (98011-98061, 14672 and 14683) out of service after general overhaul.

Trainset 118-125 are an extension of the original AC01A trains by adding two newly produced by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive Tc carriages to six old middle AC01 carriages (using the 48 middle carriages from AC01).

96 1998-2001
2007-2008
A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+M+Mp+M+Mp+Tc 01A04 126-137
(99491, 99541, 00011, 00061, 01251, 01301, 01361, 01371, 01421, 01431, 01481, 01491, 01541, 01551, 01601, 01611, 01661, 01671, 01721, 01731, 01781, 01791, 01841 and 013631-014342)
In 2008-2009 expanded AC01B trains by CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive.
Trains are a combination of the Tc carriages of the original AC01 and six CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive carriages (42 newly produced carriages similar to 04A01). The Tc carriages of trainset 130-137 were returned from line 2 (AC02, trainset 217-224).
128 Even numbers: SATCO[iv] (and 0155)
Odd numbers CRRC Nanjing Puzhen Co., Ltd. (and 0140)[25]
2006-2007 A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+M+Mp+Tc 01A05 0140-0155
(012351-013621)
013151 wrecked at Shanghai Railway Station station on December 22, 2009. It was repaired and returned to service.
88 CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive Co., Ltd. 2016-2018 A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+M+Mp+Tc 01A06 0156-0166
(014681-015551)
160 2017-2019 A[i] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+M+Mp+Tc 01A07 01067-01086
(015561-017151)
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Class A carriage: 21-24m in length, 3.0m in width and 3.8m in height; Capacity: about 310 people.
  2. ^ Tc: Trailer with cab; Mp: EMU with pantograph; M: EMU without pantograph.
  3. ^ ADtranz was acquired by Bombardier in May 2001. Subsequently, in January 2021 it was acquired by Alstom.
  4. ^ SATCO (Shanghai Alstom Transportation Equipment Co., Ltd.) is a joint venture between Alstom Metropolis and Shanghai Electric.

Former Rolling Stock[edit]

All were 6-car Class A rolling stock.

Shanghai Metro Line 1 former rolling stock
Fleet numbers Manufacturer Time of
manufac-
turing
Class No
of
car
Assembly[i] Rolling stock Number Notes
60 Bombardier Movia 456 2004 A[ii] 6 Tc+Mp+M+M+Mp+Tc AC04 0130-0139
(011751-012341)
Seconded to line 9.They were converted to 09A01 trains and renumbered 090011-090601.
96 ADtranz[iii] and Siemens 1992-1994 A[ii] 6 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+Tc DC01 101-116
(92011-92241, 93011-93481 and 94011-94241)
Expanded into 8 carriages (01A01 & 01A02) using new CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive carriage (01A02). While 01A01 (trainset 101-110 and 114) used M and Mp carriages from trainset 111, 112 ,113, 115 and 116.
78 ADtranz[iii] and Siemens 1998-2001 A[ii] 6 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+Tc AC01 117-129
(98011-98061, 99011-99541, 00011-00061 and 01731-01841)
Expanded into 8 car sets:
  1. ^ Tc: Trailer with cab; Mp: EMU with pantograph; M: EMU without pantograph.
  2. ^ a b c Class A carriage: 21-24m in length, 3.0m in width and 3.8m in height; Capacity: about 310 people.
  3. ^ a b ADtranz was acquired by Bombardier in May 2001. Subsequently, in January 2021 it was acquired by Alstom.

Future Rolling Stock[edit]

Shanghai Metro Line 1 future rolling stock
Fleet numbers Manufacturer Time of
manufac-
turing
Class No
of
car
Assembly[i] Rolling stock Number Notes
48 CRRC Zhuzhou Locomotive Co., Ltd. 2027-2028 A[ii] 8 Tc+Mp+M+Mp+M+M+Mp+Tc 01A08 TBA Planned to replace all 01A01 trains.
  1. ^ Tc: Trailer with cab; Mp: EMU with pantograph; M: EMU without pantograph.
  2. ^ Class A carriage: 21-24m in length, 3.0m in width and 3.8m in height; Capacity: about 310 people.


References[edit]

  1. ^ "Metro breaks records" (in Chinese). Shanghai Metro 163 Official. 2019-03-09. Retrieved 2019-03-09.
  2. ^ "Operations Overview". Shanghai Metro Operation Co, Ltd. Archived from the original on 2007-08-31. Retrieved 2007-09-24.
  3. ^ "Shanghai Metro Lines 1 & 2". Movia. Bombardier. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  4. ^ "Ridership". Sina. Retrieved 2012-05-03.
  5. ^ a b c d e Hu, Genxi (2002). 上海党史与党建 "Shanghai Party History and Party Building" (No. 11 ed.).
  6. ^ "市政基础设施建设". shtong.gov.cn. Retrieved February 4, 2004.
  7. ^ "(十四)闵行区". shtong.gov.cn. Retrieved November 18, 2003.
  8. ^ "轨道交通". shjjw.gov.cn. Archived from the original on June 8, 2010. Retrieved July 22, 2005.
  9. ^ "富锦路停车场项目信息". Archived from the original on March 21, 2018. Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  10. ^ 乘车指南 > Station信息. Shanghai Metro Official Site. Retrieved 2015-12-17. Instructions: 点击相应线路,选择Station,点击"站层图"可查看相应Station的站台结构。
  11. ^ a b c d e f g 上海轨道交通1号线的历史&大事记. Sina. 2009-10-20. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22.
  12. ^ Chen, Huizhi (25 June 2021). "Lianhua Road Metro station gets a new look". Shine.
  13. ^ a b c d 市政基础设施建设.
  14. ^ a b 锦江乐园站. Jiefang Daily. 2013-01-07. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-07-23.
  15. ^ Chongming is in line for planned Metro extension
  16. ^ "Schedule" (in Chinese). Shanghai Metro. 2021-07-07. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  17. ^ JinDong, Lu; YiXin, Chen. "The Shanghai No. 1 Subway Line" (PDF). Japan Railways & Transportation Review. January 1997 (Urban Railways in China and India): 31–37.
  18. ^ 陈其昌 (1996), 上海地铁一号线采用的列车自动控制系统 [ATC in Line No.1 of Shanghai Subway], 铁道通信信号, retrieved 2020-05-17
  19. ^ 黄钟 (1997), 上海地铁二号线ATC系统的技术比选及对国产化的认识, 地铁与轻轨, retrieved 2020-05-17
  20. ^ "卡斯柯助力上海地铁1号线信号系统改造". CASCO. Retrieved 2020-05-17.
  21. ^ 张琳, ed. (2020-03-19). "工作室持续研发,可移动测试台和云监控的时代即将到来!" (Press release). 上海地铁维保公司通号六支部. Archived from the original on 2020-05-17. Retrieved 2020-05-17.
  22. ^ Jianhui, Wang (August 1, 2006). "上海地铁一号线列车用冰块为乘客降温(图)". sina.com.cn.
  23. ^ Zhang, Haifeng (September 4, 2006). "车厢多2节 载客增3成". sina.com.cn.
  24. ^ "Shanghai Metro". Railway Technology.
  25. ^ 上海地铁一号线延伸线列车. 中车南京浦镇车辆有限公司 (in Chinese). Retrieved 2020-03-20.

31°16′09″N 121°27′25″E / 31.2692°N 121.4570°E / 31.2692; 121.4570