Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Carmelit

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Type
  
Funicular Subway

Services
  
1

Opened
  
1959

Locale
  
Haifa

Stations
  
6

Status
  
Temporarily closed

Ridership
  
732,664 (2012)

Phone
  
+972 4-837-2231

Began operation
  
October 6, 1959

Terminis
  
Paris Square, Gan HaEm

Carmelit

Website
  
www.carmelithaifa.co.il

Address
  
Natanzon St 20, Haifa, Israel

Similar
  
Railway Station/M Hashmona, Karmelit, גן האם, Haifa Municipal

Profiles

Carmelit haifa metro subway 2010


The Carmelit (Hebrew: כַּרְמְלִית‎, Arabic: كرمليت‎‎) is an underground funicular railway and Subway unit in Haifa, Israel. Construction started in 1956 and ended in 1959. The Carmelit was closed in 1986 after showing signs of aging and reopened in September 1992 after extensive renovations. It was closed in March 2015 due to a fault in the cable and later reopened in July 2015. Since February 2017 it has been closed again for renovations after a fire. The Carmelit is currently the only underground rapid transit system in Israel, until the expected completion of the Tel Aviv Light Rail, planned for 2021.

Contents

Carmelit the world s coolest subway


System

The Carmelit, named after the mountain through which it runs, Mount Carmel, is an underground funicular railway that runs up and down parts of Mount Carmel within Haifa. The altitude difference between the first and last stations is 274 meters (899 feet). Carmelit cars have a slanted design, with steps within each car and on the station platform. Since the gradient varies along the route, the floor of each car is never quite level, and slopes slightly "uphill" or "downhill" depending on the location.

The Carmelit is one of the smallest subway systems in the world, having only four cars, six stations and a single tunnel 1.8 km (1.1 mi) long. The four cars operate as two two-car trains, which run on single-track with a short double-track section to allow the trains to cross.

The technology used in the system forces it to have an even number of stations at about equal distances. This means that some stations are not located close to major centers, but were placed there for technical reasons.

History

A rail-based solution to connect Mount Carmel with downtown Haifa was envisioned by the British mandatory authorities. However, only in 1955, under the auspices of then-mayor Abba Hushi, did practical talks begin. The French company Compagnie Dunkerquoise d'Entreprises created a detailed plan and proposed to a generous loan for a large part of the project, and a deal was signed in 1956. The plan was for a funicular system, and the inauguration took place in 1959, attended among others by the French transport minister Robert Buron and Israeli prime minister David Ben Gurion.

Solel Boneh was the Israeli company carrying out the works, which continued at a pace of 3 meters a day, other than a geologically difficult section where a speed of 1.5 meters a day was achieved.

Shutdowns

The Carmelit was shut down for intensive renovation on December 19, 1986, after 27 consecutive years. The old rolling stock was brought to a scrapyard near Kfar Masaryk in 1991, after being offered to the Israel Railway Museum. There, it was refused due to high transport costs. After several delays and failed attempts, renovation work started on October 29, 1990. The Carmelit finally reopened to the public in early September of 1992.

In March 2015, the Carmelit was closed again due to a faulty cable, and subsequently reopened in July 2015. At this point, new ticket machines were installed to accommodate the Rav-Kav ticketing system.

On Saturday, February 4, 2017, a fire erupted in the Carmelit's Paris Square station. One of the two two-cars trains was heavily damaged, as well as parts of the tunnel. As a result, the Carmelit was shut down yet again until further notice.

The Carmelit today

The small number of stations means that the Carmelit serves only a small part of Haifa – which was the important population and business center at the time it was designed. Nowadays, the vast majority of Haifa's population does not live close to any of the stations, making it very lightly used. There have been talks of extending its tunnels to reach more population centers, but such an extension has not been done, primarily for fiscal reasons. The most widely used public transportation system in Haifa is Egged buses, which cover most of the city.

Haifa's comptroller wrote in his 2004 report (published in 2005) about the declining use of the Carmelit. According to the report, the Carmelit is used by only 2,000 passengers each day, and has been losing money ever since being reopened in 1992. The accrued losses between 1992 and 2003 are over ₪191 million.

The Carmelit is the only subway in Israel. The Jerusalem Light Rail began operation in 2011, while major construction on Tel Aviv's light rail, much of which will be underground, commenced in 2011. In Haifa, an extensive BRT system called the Metronit was built, which has stops at a few Carmelit stations. It was hoped that this will increase ridership on the Carmelit after the Metronit system began operating in late 2013.

As of October 31, 2010, it is possible to take a bicycle on the Carmelit, without extra cost.

Properties

The Carmelit stations are small; entrance halls were installed in only the two end stations (Gan HaEm and Paris Square).

Operating hours

  • Sunday–Thursday: 06:00–24:00.
  • Friday and holiday eves: 06:00–15:00.
  • Saturday: 19:00–24:00.
  • References

    Carmelit Wikipedia