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Madrid–Galicia high-speed rail line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spanish high-speed railway line
Madrid–Galicia high-speed rail line
Overview
Statusin operation
OwnerAdif
LocaleSpain
Termini
Service
TypeHigh-speed rail
Operator(s)Renfe Operadora
Technical
Line length415.7 km (258.3 mi)
Number of tracksDouble track
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)standard gauge
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz
Operating speed300 km/h (190 mph)
Route map

km
length
inm
462,533
Ourense-Empalme
toconventional line to/from Monforte
Miño river
400m
N-120
Bouzachas Tunnel
1015m
Canivelos road bridge
95m
Road bridge over Lonia river
120m
Montealegre Tunnel
3450m
Road bridge over Regueiro Zain
525m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Baraña river
276m
N-525
N-525
Rande Tunnel
5106m
448,539
Road bridge over Taboadela river
20m
Road bridge Arroyo Pazos
64m
Os Casares Tunnel
3490m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
57m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
176,99m
Road bridge over Arnoia river
799m
Bouzas Tunnel
852,6m
Bouzas road bridge
216m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
57,19m
Miamán road bridge
177m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Miamán
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Seiró Tunnel
1798m
Valdemouro road bridge
411m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Prado Tunnel
7606m
Portela road bridge
246m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Corga de Vela Tunnel
1170m
Os Portos road bridge
246m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
El Corno Tunnel
8569,60m
Felgueira II bridge
80m
Felgueira I bridge
22m
Cerdedelo Tunnel
Támega road bridge
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Portocamba Tunnel
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Bolaños Tunnel
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Medina del Campo-Ourense
Espiño Tunnel
7895m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
382,613
A Gudiña-Porta de Galicia
O Cañizo Tunnel
5360m
O Pereiro
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
Vilavella Tunnel
735m
Vilavella road bridge
105m
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
A-52
La Canda Tunnel
7224m
La Canda Tunnel
Tuela road bridge
Lubián Tunnel
Pedro road bridge
Hedroso Tunnel
Leira river
Padornelo Tunnel
Los Perdegales road bridge
Requejo Tunnel
Pedralba Tunnel
conventional line Zamora-Ourense
343,784
conventional line from/toOurense
Puebla Oeste bridge
Puebla Tunnel
Viaducto de Puebla Este
Otero Tunnel
Otero road bridge
170m
333,588
Sanabria AV
Palacios road bridge
419m
Asturianos road bridge
158m
Arroyo de Valchanos
Mombuey
N-631
Nuestra Señora de Agavanzal reservoir
299,446
Otero de Bodas
274,993
Tábara
N-631
Arroyo de Valdurcos
Esla river
N-630
Arroyo de Las Callejinas
N-630
249,434
Montamarta
Arroyo de Valdurcos
Autovía del Duero (A-11)
La Campiña Tunnel
Arroyo de Valderrey
80m
Valorio Tunnel
193m
Bolón Tunnel
431m
233,0
conventional line from/toOurense
232.4
Zamora
conventional line from/toMedina del Campo
Autovía del Duero (A-11)
Viaducto del Río Valderaduey
Autovía Ruta de la Plata (A-66)
223.2
CrossoverCoreses
Intersection withconventional line Medina-Zamora
N-122
Duero river
Duero river bridge
203.4
Semi-PAETToro
Guareña river
Arroyo del Puente
Arroyo del Caño
Arroyo de la Pitanza
A-62
Intersection withconventional line Medina-Salamanca
156.5
Gauge changer in Medina towardsSalamanca
155.4
Medina del Campo AV
Autovía del Noroeste (A-6)
conventional line Madrid-Hendaya
Zapardiel river
bridge over A-6
conventional line Olmedo-Medina
Adaja river road bridge
144.4
PCAPozal de Gallinas and future link toValladolid
Intersection withconventional line Olmedo-Medina
137.1
Junction to eliminate gauge changer ofMedina del Campo
Start of the Olmedo–Galicia section
133,8
Junction Medina
N-601
133.0
Olmedo
106.6
97.1
94.4
Tabladillo Tunnel
86.0
Garcillán
72.5
70.7
Puentecilla Tunnel
Intersection withconventional line Villa
AP-61
68.3
Segovia-Guiomar railway station
66.2
37.5
Guadarrama Tunnels
35.5
Miraflores de la Sierra
Intersection withconventional line Madrid-Burgos
32.9
Arroyo Valley bridge
32.1
23.2
Tunnels of Cerro de San Pedro
Intersection withconventional line Madrid-Burgos
18.9
CrossoverTres Cantos
Intersection withconventional line Madrid-Burgos
Intersection withconv. line Madrid-Alcobendas/S.S. de los Reyes
Fuencarral maintenance center
Intersection with link Hortaleza-Pitis
Intersection with link Hortaleza-Chamartin
Link to Chamartin Iberian gauge (width changer)
0.50
Madrid Chamartín railway station
End of the line

TheMadrid–Galicia high-speed rail line is ahigh-speed railway line inSpain that links the city ofMadrid with the region ofGalicia via the cities ofOlmedo,Zamora,Ourense andSantiago de Compostela. The line also connects theAtlantic Axis high-speed rail line to the rest of the SpanishAVE high-speed network. The Madrid–Galicia high-speed rail line is constructed as double electrified line and is designed for trains running at speeds up to 350 kilometres per hour (220 mph).[1]

History

[edit]

The line shares the same railway for the section between Madrid and Olmedo with theMadrid–Asturias high-speed rail line. This part was inaugurated on 23 December 2007 along with the entire section Madrid–SegoviaValladolid. Construction on the section betweenOurense and Santiago de Compostela started in 2004 and the 87.1 km (54.1 mi) part was completed and connected with theAtlantic Axis high-speed rail line in Santiago de Compostela on 10 December 2011. This part of the line has a track gauge of1,668 mm (5 ft 5+2132 in)Iberian gauge, which is due to be converted to1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)standard gauge later.[1] Since November 2015, trains inAlvia commercial service used this part on routes between Galicia and other Spanish regions.

In July 2015 it was announced that the traction power supply for the Olmedo-Pedralba de la Pradería (nearPuebla de Sanabria) section would be switched-on on 7 August 2015.[2] The 99 km (62 mi) southern section, between Olmedo (130 km (81 mi) north of Madrid on the Madrid–Leon line) and Zamora entered revenue service on 17 December 2015 and initially served byAlvia trains.[3][4] In January 2017 it was announced that the boring of the Bolaños tunnels along the Verín - Ourense section of the line was completed.[5] The central part, which crosses some of Spain's most remote and fragile natural areas, was initially expected to open in 2018,[6][7] but has again been delayed to end 2021.[8] The 110 km (68 mi) new built section between Zamora and Otero de Sanabria (near Puebla de Sanabria) was completed at a cost of 898 million euros and put in service on 26 October 2020. It is capable for speeds up to 350 km/h (217 mph).[9] TheSanabria AV [es] high-speed rail station opened on 22 July 2021.[10] The 119.4 km (74.2 mi) last remaining part between Puebla de Sanabria and Ourense was completed on 21 December 2021 and the whole line was commercially inaugurated inAVE service on 21 December 2021, after 20 years of work.[11]

In May 2024, AVE capacity was increased with the introduction ofTalgo AVRIL trains, which added about 20% more seat capacity and can run at higher speeds.[12] The new trains suffered from technical problems during the initial months of service, resulting in rolling stock substitutions and delays.[13][14]

Operations

[edit]

There are 10 services each day in both directions.[15] AVE trains initially ran betweenMadrid andOurense with a maximum operating speed of 300 km/h (186 mph) to cover the distance in 2h 15min. The daily AVE schedule betweenAlicante and Ourense viaMadrid Chamartín was introduced on 13 September 2022 and covers the distance in 4h 56min.[16] In May 2024, the variable gaugeTalgo AVRIL trains started running with 330 km/h (205 mph) in service on schedules between Madrid andA Coruña and between Madrid andVigo viaSantiago de Compostela. In additionAlvia services in the line on class130 and730 gauge-changing trains with a commercial speed of 250 km/h (155 mph), connect Madrid to Vigo,Lugo andFerrol andBarcelona to A Coruña and Vigo.[17]

Since 5 November 2024, two Alvia Madrid-Vigo services bypassing Santiago de Compostela are replaced by AVE services on Talgo AVRIL trains, thus achieving for first time journey times between Madrid and Vigo below 4 hours at 3h 57min.[18]

Incidents

[edit]

On July 24th 2013, a speeding trainderailed on a non-LAV (conventional line) stretch near theSantiago de Compostela railway station, killing 79 people.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Infraestructuras y Estaciones". Adif. Retrieved25 November 2015.
  2. ^"Adif pone en tensión tramo de alta velocidad Olmedo-Pedralba de la Pradería". ABC.es. 22 July 2015. Retrieved25 November 2015.
  3. ^Fran Hurtado (15 December 2015)."El AVE Madrid-Zamora se estrena este jueves sin actos inaugurales".noticias.lainformacion.com. Archived fromthe original on 23 December 2015. Retrieved23 December 2015.
  4. ^"La llegada del AVE a Zamora se retrasa a finales de año, según la ministra, Ana Pastor". La Opinion de Zamora. 19 June 2015. Retrieved25 November 2015.
  5. ^"FCC completes boring of Bolaños tunnels". railjournal.com. 9 January 2017. Retrieved12 January 2017.
  6. ^"Los AVE de pruebas entre Olmedo y Zamora comenzarán a circular a finales de septiembre".La Opinión de Zamora. 23 August 2015. Retrieved26 November 2015.
  7. ^"Economía/AVE- Adif ratifica la llegada del AVE a Galicia en 2019".europapress. 29 November 2018. Retrieved14 March 2019.
  8. ^"EU co-financing for Galician high speed line".Railway Gazette International. 27 January 2020. Retrieved12 April 2020.
  9. ^"Ábalos destaca la inversión de 898 millones en el nuevo tramo del AVE a Galicia".www.elnortedecastilla.es. 26 October 2020. Retrieved13 November 2020.
  10. ^"La ministra inaugura la estación AVE "ejemplo del compromiso" con el corredor noroeste".Agencia EFE. 22 July 2021.
  11. ^Chris King (20 December 2021)."AVE links Madrid with Galicia after 20 years".euroweeklynews.com. Retrieved21 December 2021.
  12. ^"Más de 100.000 viajeros utilizan los nuevos trenes Avril de Renfe en su primera semana".La Opinión A Coruña. 29 May 2024. Retrieved16 July 2024.
  13. ^"El nuevo AVE gallego se queda fuera de servicio".Huffington Post. 15 July 2024. Retrieved16 July 2024.
  14. ^"Renfe estrena los Avril de Talgo y arranca el AVE a las capitales gallegas y Asturias".EFE. 21 May 2024. Retrieved16 July 2024.
  15. ^"Spain to launch €15 high-speed train between Madrid and Galicia".The Local Spain. 2021-11-28. Retrieved2021-12-22.
  16. ^"Renfe irrumpe con dos AVE directos de Ourense a Alicante".economiadigital.es (in Spanish). 19 August 2022. Retrieved19 February 2025.
  17. ^"Madrid - Galicia high-speed line to open on December 21".International Railway Journal. 2021-11-22. Retrieved2021-12-22.
  18. ^P. Currás, Víctor (17 October 2024)."Renfe suma dos AVE a Vigo y reduce el viaje con Madrid por debajo de las 4 horas por primera vez en la historia".www.farodevigo.es (in Spanish). Retrieved24 October 2024.
Lines in service
Lines under construction
Planned lines
Rolling stock
Services
Renfe
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