Trans-Siberian Railway
|
Trans-Siberian line in red; Baikal Amur Mainline in green. |
The
Trans-Siberian Railway or
Trans-Siberian Railroad (
Транссибирская магистраль,
Транссиб in
Russian, or Transsibirskaya magistral', Transsib) is a network of
railways connecting Moscow and European
Russia with the
Russian Far East provinces,
Mongolia,
China and the
Sea of Japan.
The main route, the
Trans-Siberian, runs from
Moscow to
Vladivostok via southern
Siberia and was built between
1891 and
1916. It is often associated with the main Russian
train that connects these two cities. At
9,288 kilometres (5,772 miles), spanning 8
time zones and taking about 7 days to complete its journey, it is the third longest single continuous service in the world, after the
Donetsk -
Vladivostok and
Moscow -
Pyongyang services, both of which follow the Trans-Siberian.
A second primary route is the
Trans-Manchurian, which coincides with the Trans-Siberian as far as
Tarskaya, about 1000 km east of
Lake Baikal. From Tarskaya the Trans-Manchurian heads southeast into
China and makes its way down to
Beijing.
|
The Trans-Mongolian train passing through the Gobi Desert |
The third primary route is the
Trans-Mongolian, which coincides with the Trans-Siberian as far as
Ulan Ude on Lake Baikal's eastern shore. From Ulan-Ude the Trans-Mongolian heads south to
Ulaan-Baatar before making its way southeast to
Beijing.
In
1991, a fourth route running further to the north was finally completed, after more than five decades of sporadic work. Known as the
Baikal Amur Mainline (BAM), this recent extension departs from the Trans-Siberian line several hundred miles west of
Lake Baikal and passes the lake at its northernmost extremity. It reaches the
Pacific to the northeast of
Khabarovsk, at
Sovetskaya Gavan (i.e., Soviet Haven, a.k.a.
Sovgavan,
Sovietgavan, and earlier
Imperatorskaya Gavan, i.e., Imperial Haven). While this route provides access to Baikal's stunning northern coast, it also passes through some rather forbidding terrain.
The first projects of railroads in Siberia emerged since the creation of the railroad
Moscow-
St. Petersburg.
[Based on a chapter of: Problem Regions of Resourse Type: Economical Integration of European North-East, Ural and Siberia. / Managing editors: V. V. Alexeev, M. K. Bandman, V. V. Kuleshov " Novosibirsk, IEIE, 2002. ISBN 5-89665-060-4] One of the first was
Irkutsk-
Chita project, intended to connect the former to
Amur river and, consequently, to the
Pacific Ocean. By the
Muravyov-Amursky's initiative, surveys on a railroad in
Khabarovsk region were conducted.
But before
1880 the central government almost not responded to these projects, because of weakness of Siberian enterprises, heavy and clumsy bureaucracy, and fear of financial risk. Financial minister count
Kankrin wrote:
The idea of covering Russia with a railroad network not just exceeds any possibility, but even building the railway from Petersburg to Kazan must be found untimely by several centuries.[Столетие железных дорог // Труды научно-технического комитета Комиссариата путей сообщения. 'ып.20 " М., 1925. Century of Railways // Works of scientific and technical committee of Communications Comissariat. Issue 20 " Moscow, 1925.]
The abovementioned Irkutsk-Chita project, proposed by an American entrepreneur W. Collins, was rejected by the government, and a lesson was given to the major-general Muravyov-Amurskiy who
thoughtlessly showed benevolence to the American project. Thus the government tried to prevent the involvement of Siberia in the American and British sphere of influence in the Pacific region.
By the
1880 there was a large number of rejected and upcoming applications for permission to construct railways to connect Siberia only with the Pacific. This worried the government and made clear that connecting Siberia with Central Russia must not be delayed anymore.
The designing lasted 10 years. Along with the built way, alternative projects were proposed:
* Southern way: via
Kazakhstan,
Barnaul,
Abakan and
Mongolia* Northern way: via
Tyumen,
Tobolsk,
Tomsk,
Yeniseysk and the modern
Baikal Amur Mainline or even through
Yakutsk.Railwaymen fought against suggestions to save funds, for example, to install ferryboats instead of bridges over the rivers, and then, if traffic would be sufficient, to build bridges. The designers insisted and secured the decision to construct a continuous uninterrupted way.
Unlike the rejected private projects, that intended to connect the
existing cities demanding transport, Trans-Siberian did not have such a priority. Thus, to save money and avoid collisions with land owners, it was decided to lay the road aside the existing cities.
Tomsk was the largest city, and the most misfortuned, because the swampy banks of
Ob river near it was considered inapropriate to build a bridge. The railway was laid in 70 km to the South, and just a blind branch line connected Tomsk, thus deprived the city of the prospective transit rail traffic and trade.
The railway was instantly filled to its capacity with local traffic, mostly wheat. Together with low speed and low possible weights of trains, it upset the promised role as a transit route between
Europe and
East Asia. During the Russian-Japanese war, the military traffic to the East almost disorganized the civic freight flow.
 |
A station on the railway in 1910. |
Full time construction on the Trans-Siberian Railway began in 1891 and was put into execution and overseen by
Sergei Witte, who was then Finance Minister.
Similar to the
First Transcontinental Railroad in the USA, Russian engineers started construction at both ends and worked towards the center. From Vladivostok the railway was laid north along the right bank of the
Ussuri River to
Khabarovsk at the
Amur River becoming the
Ussuri railway.
In 1890 a bridge across the river
Ural was built and the new railroad entered Asia. The bridge across the Ob River was built in 1898 and the small city Novonikolaevsk, founded in 1883, metamorphosed into a large Siberian center -
Novosibirsk city. In 1898 the first train reached Irkutsk and the shore of Lake Baikal. The railroad ran on to the East, across the Shilka and the Amur rivers and soon reached Khabarovsk. The Vladivostok - Khabarovsk branch was built a bit earlier, in 1897.
Convict labour, from
Sakhalin Island and other places, and Russian soldiers were drafted into railway-building service. One of the largest obstacles was
Lake Baikal, some 60 km (40 mi) east of Irkutsk. Lake Baikal is more than 640 km (400 mi) long and over 1,600 m (5,000 feet) deep. The line ended on each side of the lake and a special icebreaker ferryboat was purchased from England to connect the railway. In the winter sleighs were used to move passengers and cargo from one side of the lake to the other until the completion of the Lake Baikal spur along the southern edge of the lake. With the completion of the Amur River line north of the Chinese border in 1916, there was a continuous railway from Petrograd to Vladivostok that remains to this day the world's longest railway line.
Electrification of the line, begun in 1929 and completed in 2002, allowed a doubling of train weights to 6,000 tonnes.
Trans-Siberian gave a great boost to Siberian agriculture, allowing large export to the Central Russia and European countries. It pushed not only the closest to the railway territories, but also those, connected with rivers.
Altai exported wheat by Ob river.
Siberian agriculture exported a lot of cheap
grain towards the West. The agriculture in Central Russia was still under pressure of serfdom,
formally cancelled in 1861. Thus, to defend it and to prevent a possible social destabilization, in
1896, the government introduced
Chelyabinsk tariff break (Челябинский тарифный перелом), a tariff barier for grain in
Chelyabinsk, and a similar barrier in
Manchuria. This measure changed the form of bread export: mills emerged in
Altai,
Novosibirsk and
Tomsk, many farms switched to
butter production. Since 1896 till
1913 Siberia exported averagely 30,643 thousand
pood (
501,932 tonnes) of bread (grain, flour)
annually.
[Храмков А. А. Железнодорожные перевозки хлеба из Сибири в западном направлении в конце XIX " начале XX вв. // Предприниматели и предпринимательство в Сибири. 'ып.3: Сборник научных статей. Барнаул: Изд-во А"У, 2001.]
Khramkov A. A. Railroad Transportation of Bread from Siberia to the West in the Late XIX " Early XX Centuries. // Entrepreneurs and Business Undertakings in Siberia. 3rd issue. Collection of scientific articles. Barnaul: Altai State University publishing house, 2001. ISBN 5-7904-0195-3The Trans-Siberian line remains the most important traffic connection within
Russia, and around 30% of Russian exports travel on the line.While it attracts many foreign tourists, it is much used by
Russian people to travel around their country.
Today the Trans-Siberian Railway carries about 20,000 containers per year to Europe, including 8,300 containers from
Japan. This is a fairly small amount, considering that for all means of transport combined Japan sends 360,000 containers to Europe per year. Thus there is potential for growth, and the Russian Ministry of Transport plans to increase the number of containers shipped on the railway to 100,000 by the year 2005 and satisfy the passage and cargo needs of 120 trains per day. This requires that stretches that are now single track and form a
bottleneck are made double track.
The train has 2nd class 4-berth compartments (called kupé) and 1st class 2-berth compartments (called spalny wagon or 'SV') and a restaurant car. *[
1]One-way fares start at about 9,226 rubles ($320 or £190) in a 4-berth sleeper or 18,200 rubles ($630 or £370) in a 2-berth sleeper.
Trans-Siberian line
 |
The marker for kilometer 9288, at the end of the line in Vladivostok |
The main line follows the following route:
*
Moscow (0 km, Moscow Time). Most trains start from
Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal*
Nizhny Novgorod (442 km, MT) on the
Volga River, still called by its old
soviet name
Gorky in most timetables
*
Perm (1436 km, MT+2) on the
Kama River*Official boundary between Europe and Asia (1777 km), marked by a white obelisk
*
Yekaterinburg (1816 km, MT+2) in the
Urals, still called by its old
soviet name
Sverdlovsk in most timetables
*
Omsk (2712 km, MT+3) on the
Irtysh River*
Novosibirsk (3335 km, MT+3) on the
Ob River*
Krasnoyarsk (4098 km, MT+4) on the
Yenisei River*
Irkutsk (5185 km, MT+5) near
Lake Baikal's southern extremity
*
Ulan Ude (5642 km, MT+5)
*Junction with the Trans-Mongolian line (5655 km)
*
Chita (6199 km, MT+6)
*Junction with the Trans-Manchurian line at
Tarskaya (6312 km)
*
Khabarovsk (8521 km, MT+7) on the
Amur River*
Vladivostok (9288 km, MT+7), near the
Pacific OceanFrom 1956 to 2001 trains went via
Yaroslavl instead of
Nizhny Novgorod.
Trans-Manchurian line
The Trans-Manchurian line follows the same route as the Trans-Siberian between
Moscow and
Chita, and then follows thisroute to
China:
*Branch off from the Trans-Siberian-line at
Tarskaya (6312 km from Moscow)
*
Zabaikalsk (6661 km), Russian border town
*
Manzhouli (2323 km from
Beijing), Chinese border town
*
Harbin (1388 km)
*
BeijingTrans-Mongolian line
The Trans-Mongolian line follows the same route as the Trans-Siberian between
Moscow and
Ulan Ude, and then follows thisroute to
Mongolia and
China:
|
The railway features many remarkable bridges, the longest being Khabarovsk Bridge (1916). |
*Branch off from the Trans-Siberian line (5655 km from Moscow)
*
Naushki (5895 km), Russian border town
*
Russia-
Mongolia border (5900 km)
*
Sühbaatar (5921 km), Mongolian border town
*
Ulaan-Baatar (6304 km), the Mongolian capital
*
Zamiin Uud (7013 km), Mongolian border town
*
Erlyan (842 km from
Beijing), Chinese border town
*
Datong (371 km)
*
Beijing |
Changing the wheels from Mongolian gauge to Chinese gauge at the border |
*Since
Russia and
Mongolia use
broad gauge railways while
China uses the
standard gauge, there is a
break-of-gauge, meaning that carriages to or from
China cannot simply cross the border, and each carriage has to be lifted in turn to have its
bogies changed. The whole operation, combined with
passport and
customs control, can take several hours.
*The lower the train number the fewer stops it makes and therefore the faster the journey. Unfortunately, the train number makes no difference to the duration of border crossings.
*
Famous trains*
History of Siberia* Thomas, Bryn (2003).
The Trans-Siberian Handbook (6th Ed). Trailblazer. ISBN 1873756704
*
The Trans-Siberian Railway: Web Encyclopedia*
Global Stroll's Trans-Siberian Railway.
*
Guide to the Trans-Siberian Railway by [
2].
*
Transportation Overview in the Khabarovsk Krai Region of Russia from
U.S. Department of State*For costs, visit *[
3]
*
Map*For timetables, see
Travel planner of German Railways (covers Europe, as well as at least each branch of the Trans-Siberian Railway) and
time-table with distances (pdf); note that Moscow time applies for railways throughout Russia.
*
The site about railways in C.I.S. and Baltics*
Guide to the Great Siberian Railway (1900)*
Google Earth Trans-Siberian Railway placemarks and path*
From London to Japan by train and ferryTravel tales:
*
From Ulaanbaator to Moscow*
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Moscow correspondent writes a travel blog about her trip on the Trans-Siberian.