Transport

China builds a high‑speed rail line in just 9 hours — the country’s latest engineering feat is jaw‑dropping

The new “short selling operation” in China allows millions of travelers to continue using rail transport.

The new “short selling operation” in China allows millions of travelers to continue using rail transport.
Adrián Irago

The Chinese city of Longyan has become the backdrop to a milestone in modern rail engineering. Once served by a single active passenger station, the metropolis has seen a seven-hour train journey reduced to just 90 minutes – all thanks to a nine-hour overnight operation that connected the existing station to a newly built line.

The feat followed three months of studies, simulations and meticulous planning, executed with near-surgical precision. The goal was to install a new section of track and link it to three existing branches, all while keeping disruption to a minimum.

The project’s complexity lay not only in the engineering challenge but in the time constraints and resources deployed. Authorities sought to halt rail traffic for the shortest window possible. With a population of more than 2.69 million residents, many of whom rely on trains for daily commuting within the city and to nearby destinations, a shutdown lasting several days could have severely disrupted daily life and flooded local roads with additional traffic.

How the operation was coordinated

To meet the tight deadline, the work was divided into seven coordinated zones operating simultaneously. This parallel approach reduced overall construction time and made it possible to open the new section to the public in record time. In total, 1,500 workers, 23 excavators and seven service trains were mobilized, concentrating their efforts within a remarkably short operational window.

After eight and a half hours of overnight work, the station reopened. Each of the seven zones included teams responsible for signaling systems, control technology and monitoring devices, while others prepared the ground, removed outdated materials and restored asphalt and concrete surfaces. Excavators and service trains proved essential to the effort, operating continuously throughout the intervention in what functioned as a moving logistical chain.

A short-window operation on an unprecedented scale

China has become a pioneer in so-called “short-window operations,” projects carried out within extremely limited time frames, typically when they affect active services such as rail transport. However, the Longyan project stood out for the scale of resources deployed and the degree of precision achieved, surpassing previous operations of this kind.

The new section now allows passengers traveling between Longyan and Nanping to complete the journey in just 90 minutes – a dramatic reduction from the seven hours previously required. Trains on the new line can reach speeds of up to 200 kilometers per hour, or about 124 miles per hour. While that falls short of the top speeds permitted on other high-speed routes in the country, it is more than sufficient to significantly streamline travel between the two cities.

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