Askerbanen

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Askerbanen
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NSB BM70 unites to Vestfold are one of the trains that use Askerbanen
Info
Type Railway
Start station Sandvika
End station Asker
No. of stations 2
Operation
Opened 2005
Owner Jernbaneverket
Operator(s) Norges Statsbaner
Flytoget
CargoNet
Rolling stock BM70, BM71, BM72, BM73
Technical
Line length 9.5 km
Track length 19 km
No. of tracks 2
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in)
Electrified 15 kV 16⅔ Hz AC
Operating speed 160 km/h

Askerbanen is a 9.5 km railway line between Asker and Sandvika in Norway. The line runs parallel to Drammenbanen and will be expanded from Sandvika to Skøyen. Most of the railway is in tunnel and is dimensioned for 160km/h. The entire railway is electrified with 15kV 16 2/3Hz AC and cost NOK 3.7 billion.[1]

The railway line was built so regional- and express trains could drive directly between Asker Station and Sandvika Station without being slowed by local trains that make multiple stops on the railway. The main purpose of the new track is to increase the regularity of the line, but when the stretch to Skøyen is complete, the travel time between Skøyen and Asker will have been reduced from 20 to 13 minutes.

Use

The track is used by express trains on Bergensbanen and Sørlandsbanen, regional trains on Vestfoldbanen in addition to the Airport Express Train and the local train between Kongsberg and Eidsvoll. Other local trains are operated on the old Drammenbanen, in addition to freight trains, though in 2006 the night freight trains were moved to the new line, despite not operating at more than 100 km/h.[2]

Expansion

As of 2006, Lysaker Station is being renovated, while the construction of the 6.7 km stretch from Sandvika to Lysaker will start in 2007 and will be completed in 2011, two years after Lysaker Station. There are also plans to expand with a 2.1 km line from Lysaker to Skøyen, starting some time after 2015.[3] On the southeast side of Oslo construction of an equivalent project will be constructed between Oslo and Ski.[4]

Critisism

  • Norsk Bane and other high speed railway interest organisations have criticised Jernbaneverket for not building the railway to permit a train to operate with continual high speed through the entire line, if it should wish to not make stops at Sandvika station, like the express trains do today. The line has been built so that all trains have to break down to 80 km/h in a curve going inn to Sandvika Station. They claim this defeats the entire purpose of construction high speed railways and may hinder or severely exaggerate the cost of building new high speed lines to Western and Southern Norway.[5]
  • The same advocates claim that though the track will give higher regularity, the service frequency will not be able to be increased due to that the bottleneck on the service west of Oslo lays in Oslotunnelen between Oslo and Skøyen.[6]
  • The Progress Party claims that building new track is too expensive, as it costs a lot per kilometer of track with small effects due to the short stretches that are built.
  • The NOK 1 billion renovation of Lysaker Station has turned into a scandal due to that the station is being built on a curve, and thus doesn't have straight platforms. This will become a security problem in addition to creating a gap up to 40 cm, denying accessibility to the trains. NSB claims they will have to buy new trains due to this station alone, costing the state owned company NOK 1.5 billion.[7] Minister of Transportation and Communication, Liv Signe Navarsete (Sp) has said that resolving the problems by building a straight station is not an alternative, since it would cost many hundred million kroner and delay the new station up to many years.[8]

References

  1. Økonomisk Rapport (2006-06-29). Jernbaneverket (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  2. Akser og Bærums Budstikke (2006-06-02). Nærmere løsning for godstogene (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  3. Jernbaneverket (2006-11-01). Nytt dobbeltspor Skøyen - Asker (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  4. Jernbaneverket (2005-09-27). Nytt dobbeltspor Oslo S - Ski (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  5. Norsk Bane (2006-06-02). Oslo-området (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  6. Norsk Bane (2006-06-02). Oslo-området (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  7. Asker og Bærums Budstikke (2006-07-14). NSB ber om byggestans (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  8. Norwegian Ministry of Transport and Communications (2006-07-14). Presisering om Lysaker stasjon (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.

External links

Railway lines in Norway
Operational Arendalsbanen | Askerbanen | Bergensbanen | Bratsbergbanen | Dovrebanen | Drammenbanen | Gardermobanen | Gjøvikbanen | Hovedbanen | Indre Østfoldbanen | Kongsvingerbanen | Meråkerbanen | Nordlandsbanen | Ofotbanen | Randsfjordbanen | Raumabanen | Jevnakerbanen | Rørosbanen | Solørbanen | Sørlandsbanen | Vestfoldbanen | Østfoldbanen
Branch Alnabru-Loengalinjen | Alnabanen | Brevikbanen | Dalane-Suldallinjen | Flåmsbana | Hortenlinjen | Skøyen-Filipstadlinjen | Spikkestadlinjen | Stavnebanen
Urban Ekebergbanen | Fellestunnelen | Fløibanen | Furusetbanen | Grorudbanen | Gråkallbanen | Holmenkollbanen | Kjelsåsbanen | Kolsåsbanen | Lambertseterbanen | Lilleakerbanen | Røabanen | Sognsvannsbanen | T-baneringen | Østensjøbanen
Heritage Krøderbanen | Setesdalsbanen | Urskog-Hølandsbanen | Thamshavnbanen | Rjukanbanen | Valdresbanen | Nesttun-Osbanen | Gamle Vossebanen
Abandoned Flekkefjordbanen | Grimstadbanen | Hardangerbanen | Havnebanen | Holmestrand-Vittingfossbanen | Ladelinjen | Lierbanen | Lillesand-laksvandbanen | Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen | Namsoslinjen | Numedalsbanen | Setesdalsbanen | Singsakerlinjen | Sperillbanen | Sulitjelmabanen | Tinnosbanen | Treungenbanen | Tønsberg-Eidsfossbanen | Ålgårdbanen