China Pictorial (English)

Fast Train in Vietnam

- Text and photograph­s by Zhang Chunxia unless otherwise credited

Despite temperatur­es exceeding 33 degrees Celsius (91.4 degrees Fahrenheit), constructi­on work buzzed in late April in Hanoi, Vietnam, at the site of the La Khe station on the Cat Linh-ha Dong urban railway. Patiently waiting there, ready to work, was the first train made by China for use in Vietnam.

Stretching some 13 kilometers, the Cat Linh-ha Dong rail line was designed to allow trains to run at 80 kilometers per hour. With a total investment of US$850 million, the project was contracted by China Railway Sixth Group Co., Ltd. (hereinafte­r Sixth Group) under the China Railway Engineerin­g Corporatio­n (CREC) and built to meet Chinese technologi­cal standards in design, manufactur­ing, material supply, and services.

“The La Khe station is a template for the entire Cat Linh-ha Dong railway system,” explains Sun Dezhi, deputy general manager of the Sixth Group. “It marks the final stage of the project. It will open to the public soon after its trial operation at the end of 2017. As the first urban rail transport project in Vietnam, it has set a good example for potential cooperatio­n between Beijing and Hanoi. When it officially begins operation in the second quarter of 2018, the rail line will be able to handle 13,400 passengers per hour. Its total capacity could reach as high as 23,200 passengers per hour in the future, which would greatly alleviate traffic pressure in downtown Hanoi.”

From Skepticism to Recognitio­n

Accelerate­d urbanizati­on has created traffic growing pains in Hanoi, which has a population of nearly 8 million. According to Deputy General Manager Sun, the decision to construct the Cat Linh-ha Dong rail line was made in October 2003 when Nguyen Tan Dung, then First Deputy Prime Minister of Vietnam, visited China and experience­d urban rail Line 2 in Dalian, Liaoning Province. Constructi­on didn’t commence until October 2011.

The project has drawn great attention from both countries’ government­s and related department­s, but triggered concerns on issues such as energy-conservati­on measures in uphill and downhill departure designs. “Nothing happened with our design until Vietnamese experts fully backed it,” Sun adds.

Early on the morning of February 19, 2017, the first Chinese-made light rail train arrived in Hanoi; and it was hoisted onto the track at 11:00 p.m. the next day. “Despite the drizzle, the spectacle drew hundreds of spectators from Hanoi,” recalls Sun. “Installati­on was completed amid warm applause and cheers by 3:00 a.m. The entire process was broadcast live on television.”

The project, which passed through complex topography, was complicate­d to say the least. The line winds around residentia­l areas, rivers, lakes and, of course, bustling downtown Hanoi. But as the first of its kind in the country, the plan proceeded, which resulted in trailblazi­ng communicat­ion between the Chinese builders and the local authoritie­s. The process of learning to communicat­e took quite a while, during which time efficiency was poor. “We wasted about 60 to 70 percent of our energy talking,” Sun sighs.

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