Green line (Taichung Metro)

Green line
A train running on the Green line. The surrounding noise barriers are installed for much of the line's length.
Overview
Other name(s)Line 1
Native name臺中捷運綠線
LocaleTaichung, Taiwan
Termini
Stations18 in operation
7 planned
Service
TypeMedium capacity rapid transit
Depot(s)Beitun Depot
Rolling stock18 two-car fully automated trains
History
Opened25 April 2021 (2021-04-25)
Technical
Line length16.71 km (10.4 mi)
Number of tracks2
CharacterElevated
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Operating speed75 km/h (47 mph)
SignallingAlstom Urbalis 400 moving block CBTC ATC under ATO GoA 4 (UTO), with subsystems of ATP, Iconis ATS and Smartlock CBI
Route map

101 Yuanshan New Village planning
102 Jungongliao planning
Beitun Depot
103a Beitun Main
103 Jiushe
TRA Songzhu
104 Songzhu
105 Sihwei Elementary School
Liu River
106 Wenxin Chongde
Mei River
(Left arrow Taichung Airport MRT planning Right arrow)
107 Wenxin Zhongqing
Mayuanto Creek
108 Wenhua Senior High School
109 Wenxin Yinghua
(Left arrow Blue Line Right arrow)
110 Taichung City Hall
Fengshujiao Creek
111 Shui-an Temple
112 Wenxin Forest Park
113 Nantun
114 Feng-le Park
115 Daqing
Taichung TRA elevated track planning
116 Jiuzhangli
117 Jiude
Tuku Creek
Fengshujiao Creek
118 Wuri
TRA Wuri
Taichung TRA elevated track planning
Fazi Creek
Taichung
119 Taichung HSR station; TRA Xinwuri
120 Chenggongling planning
TRA Chenggong
121 Xialaoxu planning
122 Duchuantou planning
Daduxi Stop
Changhua TRA elevated track planning
123 Kulingjiao planning
Jinma Road Bridge
124 Jinma planning
(TRA Western Trunk line planning Down arrow)

The Green line is a Medium capacity rapid transit line in Taichung as part of Taichung Metro.[1][2] The line was briefly opened to the public on 16 November 2020, but closed on 22 November due to faulty couplers on the trains.[3] The line officially re-entered service on 25 April 2021, becoming Taiwan's fifth rapid transit system in operation.[4] Two extensions, one heading east to Dakeng and the other reaching south into Changhua, are also planned.[5][6]

Route overview

Trains at Beitun Depot

The current line is known as the Wuri-Wenxin-Beitun Line (烏日文心北屯線). It begins in Beitun District at Beitun Main Station and runs westward, crossing the TRA Taichung Line at Songzhu station. Then, it follows Wenxin Road along Taichung's 7th Redevelopment Zone, passing through Xitun and Nantun districts and forming a wide semicircle around the city center. At Daqing station, the line runs parallel to the TRA Taichung Line until its western terminus at Taichung HSR Station in Wuri. The line is fully elevated except for small sections at both termini.[7]

Planned extensions

There are two planned extensions to the line. The first, known as the Dakeng Extension, branches east from Jiushe station and runs along Songzhu Road to the base of Dakeng. The second, known as the Changhua Extension, runs west past Taichung HSR Station and crosses the Dadu River to Changhua. The extensions add two and five more stations respectively, and will cost an additional $25 billion NTD.[5][6]

History

Planning and construction

President Tsai Ing-wen inspecting the new trains

A metro system in Taichung was discussed since 1990, which would connect various suburbs including Caotun, Zhongxing New Village, and others. The plan was dropped due to high cost and low projected ridership. A new proposal was renewed and approved in 2004, but construction did not begin immediately because of costs exceeding estimates and disagreements over where stations would be.[8][9][10]

In 2010, preliminary work began by relocating trees on the median and rerouting the utilities that run under those roads.[11] Progress was plagued by various delays, including conflicts between the city and electrical contractors, problems with land acquisition, and the bankruptcy of a major utilities contractor. Because of the delays, mayor Jason Hu and his administration were heavily criticized by rivaling political parties.[12][13]

Formal construction began in May 2013.[14][15] Two separate incidents occurred during construction. On 19 August 2014, a crane malfunctioned and broke off its arm, falling on top of a restaurant. No injuries were reported.[16][17] Then, on 10 April 2015, a crane's arm snapped while lifting a 209-ton I-beam, causing the beam to fall and crushing a car underneath. Workers atop the beam were also thrown off. The driver of the car and three workers lost their lives, while four other works sustained heavy injuries.[18][19] Construction was halted for three months following the incident.[20] On 30 June 2016, construction of the line was completed, and testing began soon after.[21][22]

Initially, the stations numbers were numbered sequentially from G1 to G20, with the "G" representing green. However, since G8 is pronounced similar to chi-bai, which is considered profane in Hokkien, the "G" prefix was changed to "1", which represents how the Green line is the first line completed.[23] The station's English names were initially written in a mix of Tongyong Pinyin and Hanyu Pinyin, and the lack of standardization drew criticism.[24] On 24 August 2020, the Taichung City Council decided to use Hanyu Pinyin for all stations except for Sihwei Elementary School.[25]

Operations

Beginning on 16 November 2020, the Green line was opened to the public for testing and was free to ride until its formal opening ceremony planned for on 19 December. On the first day, 70,977 passengers used the line.[26] However, on 21 November, the couplers on one of the trains snapped in half; the line was closed to the public the next day.[3] Then, on 27 November, another coupler was found to be broken.[27]

Trial runs resumed on 25 March 2021. A opening ceremony was held on 25 April 2021.[28]

On 10 May 2023, a construction crane fell from a construction site of Highwealth Construction Corp onto a moving Taichung Metro Green Line train south of Feng-le Park metro station, Taichung, Taiwan, killing 1 and injuring 8 passengers onboard.

Rolling stock

The line runs eighteen EMU trains equipped with automatic train operation. The trains are powered by a direct current, 750 V third rail. Each train has a capacity of roughly 536 people divided into two cars, each car having ten doors and two air conditioning units. Of the eighteen trains, nine are built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in Kobe, Japan, while the remaining nine are built by Taiwan Rolling Stock Company.[29][30][31]

Station list

Wuri-Wenxin-Beitun Line

Code Station Name Connections Location
English Chinese District City
103a Beitun Main 北屯總站 Beitun Taichung
103 Jiushe 舊社 Dakeng Extension (planned)
104 Songzhu 松竹 Taiwan Railway Taichung Line
105 Sihwei Elementary School (Erfenpu) 四維國小 (二分埔)
106 Wenxin Chongde 文心崇德 Red Line (planned)
107 Wenxin Zhongqing (Tianjin Shopping Distrist) 文心中清 (天津商圈) Orange Line (planned) North
108 Wenhua Senior High School 文華高中 Xitun
109 Wenxin Yinghua 文心櫻花
110 Taichung City Hall 市政府 Blue Line (planned)
111 Shui-an Temple 水安宮 Nantun
112 Wenxin Forest Park 文心森林公園
113 Nantun (Wenxin Wuquan W.) 南屯 (文心五權西) Red Line (planned)
114 Feng-le Park 豐樂公園
115 Daqing (Chung Shan Medical University) 大慶 (中山醫大) Taiwan Railway Taichung Line South
116 Jiuzhangli 九張犁 Wuri
117 Jiude 九德
118 Wuri 烏日 Taiwan Railway Taichung Line (out of station transfer)
119 HSR Taichung station 高鐵臺中站 Taiwan Railway Taichung Line (via Xinwuri railway station)
Taiwan High Speed Rail Taichung HSR station
Changhua Extension (planned)

Dakeng Extension

Code Station Name Transfers Location
English Chinese District City
101 Yuanshan New Village 圓山新村   Beitun Taichung
102 Jungongliao 軍功寮  

Changhua Extension

Code Station Name Transfers Location
English Chinese District City
120 Chenggongling 成功嶺   Wuri Taichung
121 Xialaoxu 下勞胥  
122 Duchuantou 渡船頭   Changhua City Changhua County
123 Kulingjiao 苦苓腳  
124 Jinma 金馬 Taiwan Railway Taichung Line (via Jinma Station, planned)

Accidents and Incidents

On 10 May 2023, a construction crane fell 30 floors from a construction site of Highwealth Construction Corp onto a moving Green Line train south of Feng-le Park metro station, Taichung, Taiwan, killing one and injuring 10 passengers onboard.

References

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