Turkish State Railways

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Turkey
Haydarpaşa Train Station
Operation
National railway Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Devlet Demiryolları
Statistics
Ridership 85 million
Passenger km 5,832 million
Freight 18.5 million tonnes
System length
Total 8,671 kilometres (5,388 mi)
Gauge
Main 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in)
Electrification
Main 25 kV 50 Hz AC
Features

State Railways of the Republic of Turkey (Turkish: Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Devlet Demiryolları or TCDD) is the state corporation that operates the public railway system in Turkey. The organization was founded in 1927 to take over the operation of railways that were left within the borders of the Republic of Turkey after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, whose railway network had been run and financed by private corporations. TCDD operates over 8500 kilometres of railway lines and is a member of InterRail.

Contents

[edit] Operation

As the sole train operator in the country, TCDD operates all passenger, freight and suburban railways, including domestic and international departures. Until the opening of the Marmaray tunnel (Bosporus undersea railway tunnel), the country will continue to have two separate railway networks (in Thrace and Anatolia) that are only connected through the Bosporus railway ferry in Istanbul.

[edit] International services

[edit] European services (from Sirkeci Terminal)

[edit] Asian (Middle-East) services (from Haydarpaşa Terminal)

[edit] Suburban

There are four independent commuter train services in Turkey, two in Istanbul, one in Ankara and one in Izmir, operated by TCDD. All four services operate using either E8000 and/or E14000 electric multiple units. The systems operate at up to quarter hour headway, though they are not particularly well integrated into the respective city's remaining urban rail systems.

[edit] History

[edit] Ottoman railways

Sirkeci Terminal on the European side of Istanbul was opened in 1890 as the terminus of the Orient Express
Haydarpaşa Terminal on the Anatolian side of Istanbul was opened in 1908 as the terminus of the Istanbul-Baghdad and Istanbul-Damascus-Medina railways
19th century Basmane Train Station, İzmir


The history of Turkish Railways dates back to 1856. The first railway line in Turkey was the 130 km İzmir - Aydın line, on which a British Company was appointed. The choice of this particular spot was not random. The İzmir - Aydın track was built because of its high commercial potential. Another reason was that this particular area had raw materials that were necessary for British industry. Also this area was important for controlling the Middle East, and at that time of the Ottoman Empire after the English were given the first license, France and Germany began to build up different areas where they exercised their power. Those countries tried to deliver the goods that were necessary for their industries, that they bought from the Ottoman Empire, as fast as possible to the seaports. The railways were built to be as efficient as possible, and were strategically placed, for example being within around 20 km of mines, etc. So the railways were actually placed according to the politics of those foreign countries.

Between the years 1856 - 1922 the following tracks were built in the realm of the Ottoman Empire:

Total 9,919 km

In this case after the Republic was declared in Turkey, only 4000 km of the railway tracks that were built by foreign companies were left within the national borders. To be more precise, the young Republic of Turkey inherited from the Ottoman Empire 2,282 km standard gauge lines and 70 km narrow gauge lines owned by foreign companies and 1,378 km standard gauge lines owned and operated by the former Ottoman Empire.

[edit] 1923 - 1950: The railway period

Before the Republic was announced the railway tracks were build for the benefit of the foreign countries, but after the formation of the Republic in Turkey the railway tracks were built for the good of the Republic. This can be clearly seen of the industrialization plans released between 1932 and 1936 which were based on iron and coal etc. The cheapest and most efficient way to transport those goods was to build railways. In those years the financial assets of transportation were transferred to railways.

In those years of shortage, the construction of railways continued on high-speed. During the Second World War the constructions slowed down. 3,578 km of the tracks that were built between 1923 and 1950, 3,208 km were completed before 1940.

At those times the railways were included in the National Economy procedures. The aim of constructing railways were stated as:

  • To connect potential production centers with the natural resources.
  • To connect production and consumer centers especially with seaports, and facilitate communications with rural areas.
  • To connect commercially undeveloped areas, in order to speed up economic progress across the country. Through this policy 1927 Kayseri, 1930 Sivas, 1931 Malatya, 1933 Niğde, 1934 Elazığ, 1935 Diyarbakır and 1939 Erzurum were connected to the railway network.
  • To enhance national security, therefore creating a comprehensive communication network within the country with railways.

To reach those targets the railway politics were lead in two stages:

  1. Despite the financial problems, the railways that were owned by foreign companies were bought and nationalized, a part of it was transferred with agreements.
  2. Since most of the railways were concentrated in the West of Turkey, the aim was to connect the central and Eastern areas with trade centres and coasts. At this period the newly built main routes were: Ankara - Kayseri - Sivas, Sivas - Erzurum (the Caucasus route), Samsun - Kalin (the Sivas route), Irmak - Filyos (the Zonguldak coal route), Adana - Fevzipaşa - Diyarbakır (the copper route), Sivas - Çetinkaya (the iron route). Before the Republic 70% of the routes were to the west of Ankara - Konya, after the Republic 78.6% were constructed in the east so that a balance of 46% to 54% was reached.

Between 1935 and 1945 the railways were joined. Those joinings created cycles in the railways which for example shortened the distance between Ankara - Diyarbakır from 1,324 km to 1,116 km.

[edit] 1950 and after: the Golden Road period

The road system that was left from the Ottoman Empire, consisted of 13,885 km ruined surface roads, and 4.450 km stabilized roads, which totaled 18,335 km and 94 bridges. The road systems was seen until 1950 as a system to aid the railways. But instead of strengthening the rail network, the automobile roads were extended because of the Marshall plan.

After 1960 even though there were many targets that aimed at the extension of the railroads, most of the financial assets were transferred into automobile roads. Because of these politics, between the years 1950 and 1980 an average of 30 km of railroads were constructed.

In the mid 1980s in Turkey a mobilization was started to build Autobahns, the Autobahns project was the third largest project after the Southeastern Anatolia Project and tourism projects. Because of those projects, until the mid 1990s about USD 2 billion were invested. In these years no investments were made to railroads, and no projects were initiated. Most of the railways (most of them more than 50 years old) were left to their own fate.

In Turkey goods are carried 94% on roads, and only 4% are carried on railroads. The share of goods transportation in Turkey by trains deceased in 50 years by 60%.

[edit] Electrification

Turkey has chosen to electrify at the conventional 25 kV 50 Hz AC. The first lines electrified were the Istanbul suburban lines on the European side, from Sirkeci to Soğuksu on December 4, 1955, and at the same time the E8000 electrical multiple units were taken into use. The Asian side suburban lines from Haydarpaşa to Gebze were electrified in 1969, while the Ankara suburban trains were electrified in 1972, on the line from Sincan to Kayaş.

On February 6, 1977 the track from Gebze to Adapazarı were made double track and electrified, allowing the first main line operation of electric trains in Turkey. The line from Arifiye outside Adapazarı to Eskişehir were further electrified in 1989 and in 1993 to Sincan, allowing electric train passage from Istanbul to Ankara. In 1994 the European line from Istanbul to Edirne, Kapıkule and the Bulgarian border were also electrified. The same year the line from Divriği to İskenderun in Eastern Turkey was also electrified, though this line is not connected to the rest of the electrified network. In 2006 the Izmir suburban system was also electrified.

[edit] Tracks constructed before the Republic

[edit] Still in use

Route Opening Length (m)
İzmir-Aydın Railroad
Şirinyer - Buca 1860 2,452
İzmir - Sütlaç
1861
356,505
Torbalı - Tire 1883 47,541
Gaziemir - Seydiköy 1886 1,088
Alaşehir - Uşak 1887 117,810
Çatal - Ödemiş (Şehir) 1888 26,452
Goncalı - Denizli 1889 9,430
Sütlaç - Çivril 1889 30,224
Ortaklar - Söke 1890 22,012
Sütlaç - Eğirdir 1912 113,795
İzmir-Turgutlu (Kasaba) Railroad
Basmane - Menemen
1865
31,680
Halkapınar - Bornova 1865 4,878
Menemen - Manisa - Turgutlu 1865 61,500
Turgutlu - Alaşehir 1875 75,790
Uşak - Afyon 1890 134,946
Manisa - Kırkağaç 1890 80,853
Kırkağaç – Bandırma 1912 195,244
Eastern Railroad
Sirkeci - Yenikapı
1872
4,756
Yenikapı - Florya 1871 16,372
Florya - Hadımköy 1872 30,325
Hadımköy - Çatalca 1873 19,610
Çatalca - Hudut 1873 209,899
Karaağaç - Hudut 1873 7,137
Mandıra - Kırklareli 1912 45,594
Anatolia Railroad
Haydarpaşa - Feneryolu
1872
5,088
Feneryolu - Pendik 1872 21,162
Pendik - Gebze 1873 19,681
Gebze - İzmit 1873 47,096
İzmit - Büyükderbent 1890 18,312
Büyükderbent - Mekece 1891 71,709
Mekece-Vezirhan 1891 32,831
Vezirhan - İnönü 1892 65,980
İnönü - Ağapınar 1892 55,823
Ağapınar - Yalınlı 1892 54,954
Yalınlı - Sazılar 1892 61,902
Sazılar - Beylikköprü 1892 14,317
Beylikköprü - Ankara 1892 109,516
Eskişehir - Kütahya 1894 76,984
Alayunt - Çöğürler 1895 19,631
Çöğürler - Afyon 1895 74,615
Afyon - Akşehir 1895 98,128
Akşehir - Ilgın 1896 57,641
Ilgın - Konya 1896 116,796
Arifiye - Adapazarı 1899 8,491
Baghdad Railroad
Konya - Bulgurlu
1904
198,892
Bulgurlu - Ulukışla 1911 38,733
Ulukışla - Durak 1912 90,469
Durak - Yenice 1912 17,915
Southern Railroad
Fevzipaşa - Meydanıekbez
1912
35,411
Border - Çobanköy - Nusaybin 1917 382,106
Derbesiye - Mardin 1917 24,340
Toprakkale - İskenderun 1912 59,220
Mersin-Tarsus-Adana Railroad
Mersin - Yenice 1882 43,209
Yenice - Adana (City) 1886 23,949
Sarıkamış-Kars-Border Railroad
Sarıkamış - Kars - Border
(broad line, can be converted to normal line)
1913
Before the Republic Main Routes 3,714,280
Before the Republic Secondary Routes 844,995
Before the Republic Total 4,558,995


[edit] Scrapped narrow-gauge railways

Track Length (m)
Mudanya – Bursa 41,110
Ilıca - Palamutluk 28,391
Samsun - Çarşamba 39,465
Maden - Sarıkamış 231,940
Total 340,906


[edit] Projects under construction

[edit] Marmaray Project

The Marmaray project is a shared-rail underground tunnel system which will connect the rail lines in the European and Asian sides of Istanbul under the Bosporus in Istanbul. It will thereby actually connect the European rail networks to the Middle Eastern and Asian rail networks. In addition, the tunnel will also have an important role in intracity transport, forming an east-west rail system line for the massively populated Istanbul metropolitan area. It is projected to relieve public transportation problems while increasing the percentage of the use of rail systems in public transportation from 3,6% to 27,7%. Such an increase would put Istanbul third in the world with regard to the use of public transportation, behind Tokyo (60%) and New York (31%).

Turkish State Railways network: High-speed rail tracks under construction and in plan
The first ten TCDD CAF high-speed train sets purchased from CAF of Spain
Inauguration ceremony of the EUROTEM (TÜVASAŞ-ROTEM) factory in Adapazarı, Turkey, which will licence build the HSR-350x trains that can reach a maximum speed of 352.4 km/h

[edit] High-Speed Rail Projects

[edit] Istanbul - Ankara High-Speed Line

The first high-speed railroad will connect Ankara via Eskişehir to Istanbul. With this project, a trip from Istanbul to Ankara will take only about 3 hours at a maximum speed of 250 km/h. Trains for this section have been ordered from Spanish CAF.

[edit] Ankara - Konya High-Speed Line

This new railroad, that will dramatically shorten the travel time between Ankara and Konya to 70 minutes, will connect to the Istanbul-Ankara High-Speed Line in Polatli. The same type of CAF trains will be used on this line.

[edit] Ankara - Sivas High-Speed Line

Ankara - Yozgat - Sivas line

[edit] Kars - Tblisi - Baku Railway

The foundation for the Kars-Tbilisi-Baku railway project has been laid on the 24th July 2008 in Kars in attendance of Abdullah Gül, the President of the Republic of Turkey, Mikheil Saakashvili, the President of Georgia, and Ilham Aliyev, the President of the Republic of Azerbaidjan. The Railway project is expected to carry 1 million passengers, 6.5 million tons of freight in its initial phase. On short term it is predicted that 3 million passengers and 18 million tons of freight will be carried on the line.[3]

[edit] Lines which their contruction will start in near future

[edit] Lines in Planning Phase

[edit] Future Possibilities

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References


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