“Finally!” was the sentiment many share, as the decade-in-the-making Cat Linh-Ha Dong urban elevated rail line carried its first passengers.
This should have happened back in 2015, but the project has been beset with long delays and costly overruns.
Station staff guided people into the carriages at Cat Linh Station on Saturday. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Dat |
Dang Van Hoa, a resident in Hoan Kiem District, said he was delighted to be among the first passengers of the first trains.
He told Vietnam News Agency that he had boarded many metros in more developed nations and was glad to see the Cat Linh-Ha Dong trains in operation.
He hoped the Government will invest into building more urban rail lines to make it easier and more convenient for people to go commute.
Pham Quang Tuan, who lives in Ha Dong District near one end point of the line and works on Giang Vo Street, Cat Linh Ward, near the other end point, said he bought the house in Ha Dong five years ago partly because of the anticipation that the trains would soon be operational.
“Now I probably won’t have to worry about slogging through the congested streets every day getting to work or back home,” Tuan said.
A resident who lives nearby the Cat Linh Terminal, Truong Van Diep, added: “After so many difficulties, I am pleased the project is eventually running, and I found the ride to be quite smooth and quiet, not unlike what I have been witnessing in other countries.”
Others praised the advantages of the mass transit system, especially in terms of convenience, safety, protection from pollution and time worries, compared to driving a motorbike, the most popular method of transport in Vietnam currently.
Nguyen Thanh Phuong, a resident in Hai Ba Trung District, said she is really looking forward to try the metro trains, but perhaps at a later date as right now COVID-19 situation in Hanoi is getting a little more complicated with rising community infections, getting into the crowded, cold tubes might not be the best idea.
She hoped the new metro line would help reduce congestion on the Nguyen Trai Street where it passes, the route she usually takes on her way to work, a primary school in My Dinh District.
All in all, about 25,680 passengers have boarded the metro in the first day of operation, announced the Hanoi Metro on Sunday, with more expected on Sunday as most people are off work.
15 days of free travel
With a total investment of approximately US$868 million (up $315 million compared to initial estimates) and funded by China’s official development aid (ODA), the elevated line is more than 13km long and has 12 stations and 13 trains. Each train, whose designed speed is 80km per hour, has four carriages capable of carrying more than 900 passengers.
The initial commercial routes of the project are divided into two phases.
In Phase 1, lasting six months, including the first 15 days of free travels for all passengers, four to six trains run from 5:30am to 10pm, at 10 to 15 minute intervals.
In Phase 2, also six months, there will be a total of nine trains running from 5:30am to 10:30pm, with 10-minute intervals reduced to six minutes during peak times.
To board, people go up to the second floor of any of the 12 stations along the line, obtain a ticket (magnet stripped) from the automatic ticket machines with cash or buy directly from ticket kiosks, and get through the ticket barriers.
Metro Hanoi, the managing unit of the project, has prepared more than 200,000 tickets to issue for passengers in the first 15 days free-of-charge. At the end of each ride, passengers will return these tickets to a station’s staffer at the exit doors.
The municipal People’s Committee has announced the price of the tickets for the metro, with the lowest one being VND7,000 (US$0.31) for a trip and VND30,000 VND for a day pass.
A monthly pass for a passenger is priced at VND200,000, with lower price schemes available for bulk purchases by companies or factories.
People who are eligible for waiving of bus fares are also eligible for free rides on the metro, i.e. children under six years old, people with disabilities, the elderly, people with merits to the revolution, and people considered in poor households.
Handover
The quality assessment results of the metro line were approved by the State Council for Acceptance of Construction Projects on October 29, after much controversy and resulting delays over unresolved issues stated in quality assessment reports of the metro by a third-party consultant in France, even after the project was essentially completed.
The council’s approval set the stage for the project to commence operations.
At 7:25am on Saturday, 15 minutes before the first trains departed, under the witness of Hanoi’s Party Secretary Dinh Tien Dung and Deputy Prime Minister Le Van Thanh, deputy transport minister Nguyen Ngoc Dong and Vice Chairman of Hanoi People’s Committee Duong Duc Tuan signed the agreement on handing over the project from the transport ministry to Hanoi for management and exploitation.
Over 700 staff are working on the metro line.
Vu Hong Phuong, Director of Railway Projects Management Unit under the transport ministry, said the urban rail system is always a focus priority for the Government and Hanoi’s administration as this is a modern method of mass transit that helps reduce traffic jams and pollution.
Among the eight metro projects that have been approved to connect the urban cores of Hanoi with satellite urban centres, the Cat Linh-Ha Dong was selected as a ‘pilot’ for early investment, to timely alleviate the rising traffic in the western area of the capital city.
Duong Duc Tuan said with current progress, it would take 8 to 10 years to finish one urban rail line project, so other than continuing to call for ODA, there should be more ‘breakthrough measures’ to expedite the progress.
Source: Vietnam News
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