Tumangang station

Tumangang station is a railway station in Tumangang-rodongjagu, Sŏnbong, Rasŏn Special City, North Korea, on the Hongŭi Line of the Korean State Railway.[1]

Tumangang

두만강
Street-side view of Tumangang station
Korean name
Hangul
두만강역
Hanja
Revised RomanizationDumangang-yeok
McCune–ReischauerTumangang-yŏk
General information
LocationTumangang-rodongjagu,
Sŏnbong-gun,
Rasŏn-t'ŭkpyŏlsi
North Korea
Coordinates 42.4214°N 130.6081°E / 42.4214; 130.6081
Owned byKorean State Railway
History
Opened22 September 2013
Electrifiedyes
Services
Preceding station   Korean State Railway   Following station
Terminus
Hongŭi Line
Terminus

In 2008, construction was started from Khasan, Russia to Rajin port, including modernisation of communications equipment and the conversion of the standard-gauge track to dual-gauge (standard and Russian gauges), to allow movement of trains from Russia to Rajin without stopping for bogie changes. Construction was completed in October 2012, and an opening ceremony was held on 22 September 2013.[2]

There are service facilities for locomotives and rolling stock at Tumangang station.[3]

Services

Freight

Tumangang station is the primary transit point for trade with Russia. The main imports from Russia are timber and crude oil; the main exports are magnesite, steel, fertiliser, non-ferrous metals and non-ferrous metal concentrates,[3] but since the collapse of the Soviet Union freight traffic has dropped significantly.

Passenger

The international express train 7/8 that operates between P'yŏngyang and Moscow runs on this line between Hongŭi and Tumangang before crossing the border into Russia, however this service is not able to be used by non-DPRK citizens due to chronic delays.[4][1] There is also a long-distance service between Tumangang and Tanch'ŏn Ch'ŏngnyŏn station on the P'yŏngra Line.[3]

The Russian Railways operate trains 651/652 between Moscow, Ussuriysk and Tumangang.[5] Trains 651/652 are now the longest passenger train journey in the world that can be undertaken by foreign citizens - 9,453 km. Between Moscow and Ussuriysk, the carriages that form trains 651/652 are coupled to the Trans-Siberian Rossiya.[4]

References

  1. Kokubu, Hayato, 将軍様の鉄道 (Shōgun-sama no Tetsudō), ISBN 978-4-10-303731-6
  2. "Khasan-Rajin line renovation". ITAR TASS. 2013-09-22.
  3. The traffic and geography in North Korea: Hambuk Line (in Korean)
  4. "Train 651Ж and 652Ж | Tumangang (DPRK) Moscow train | TrainReview". trainreview.com. Retrieved 2020-10-31.
  5. Расписание беспересадочного вагона Москва — Пхеньян Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
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