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Trans European high speed rail network

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The Trans-European high-speed rail network (TEN-R), together with the Trans-European conventional rail network, make up the Trans-European Rail network, which in turn is one of a number of the European Union's Trans-European transport networks (TEN-T). It was defined by the Council Directive 96/48/EC of 23 July 1996.

Contents

The European Union council decision 2002/735/EC defines technical standards for interoperability of the system.

Description

The aim of this EU Directive is to achieve the interoperability of the European high-speed train network at the various stages of its design, construction and operation.

The network is defined as a system consisting of a set of infrastructures, fixed installations, logistic equipment and rolling stock.

By definition of the EC decision, a high-speed line must have one of these three infrastructure characteristics:

  • specially built high-speed lines equipped for speeds generally equal to or greater than 250 km/h
  • specially upgraded high-speed lines equipped for speeds of the order of 200 km/h
  • specially upgraded high-speed lines which have special features as a result of topographical, relief or town-planning constraints, on which the speed must be adapted to each case.
  • The rolling stock used on these lines must be compatible with the characteristics of the infrastructure.

    Along important listed rail routes (TEN-T), the railway shall be of high speed type, either when new parts are built, or when upgrades are made. This creates a quality requirement on these projects.

    Corridors

  • Corridor 1 – Berlin-Palermo (Berlin-Leipzig-Nurnberg-Munich-Innsbruck-Verona-Florence-Rome-Naples-Reggio Calabria/Messina-Palermo, Milan-Bologna)
  • Corridor 2 – Brussels-centred network to London, Paris, Amsterdam, Cologne
  • Corridor 3 - High-speed rail axis of south-west Europe (Lisbon-Porto, Lisbon-Salamanca, Lisbon-Madrid-Barcelona-Lyon, Madrid-Bilbao-Bordeaux-Paris)
  • Corridor 4 - High-speed railway axis east (Paris to Strasbourg, Luxembourg, Mannheim) (Lyon-Turin-Milan-Trieste-Ljubljana-Budapest)
  • Corridor 6 - Lyon-Budapest
  • Corridor 7 - Paris-Bratislava
  • References

    Trans-European high-speed rail network Wikipedia