Amur Yakutsk Mainline

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Amur Yakutsk Mainline

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Coordinates: 62°02′42″N 129°43′48″E / 62.045°N 129.730°E / 62.045; 129.730

Map of major railways in Russia, with Trans-Siberian Railway shown in red, BAM in green and Amur Yakutsk Mainline (including "Little BAM") shown in orange

The Amur-Yakutsk Mainline (Russian Амуро-Якутская магистраль, Amuro-Yakutskaya Magistral’), abbreviated to AYaM (Russian АЯM) is a partially complete railway in eastern Russia, linking the Trans-Siberian Railway and Baikal-Amur Mainline with the Sakha Republic.

Passenger services on the line currently extend from Tynda to the town of Tommot, roughly 450 km south of the planned terminus at Yakutsk. The section from Tommot to Yakutsk is under construction and is expected to be completed in around 2013.[1] In November 2011, construction of the railway reached the settlement of Nizhny Bestyakh, on the opposite bank of the Lena River from Yakutsk.[2] The final step required to bring the railway into the city itself is a combined road and rail bridge, to be constructed upstream of Yakutsk where the river is narrower.

The railway via Nizhny Bestyakh is planned in the long term to form the start of a railway towards Magadan and possibly even across the Bering Strait.[3]

Amur Yakutsk Mainline
km Station
Unknown BSicon "ABZq+lr"
0 Trans-Siberian at Bamovskaya 7273
Straight track
Stop on track
19 Shturm
Bridge over water
Maly Oldoy
Stop on track
49 Murtygit
Stop on track
66 Purikan
Stop on track
82 Anosovskaya (Anosovsky)
Bridge over water
Maly Oldoy
Stop on track
94 Silip
Bridge over water
Ushumun
Stop on track
112 Zabolotny
Bridge over water
Tynda
Stop on track
133 Belenkaya
Bridge over water
Tynda
Stop on track
160 Seti
Unknown BSicon "ABZld"
BAM to Severobaikalsk
Station on track
179 Tynda
Straight track
Bridge over water
Tynda
Stop on track
190 Shakhtaum (Vostochny)
Bridge over water
Gilyuy
Stop on track
205 Bestuzhevo
Unknown BSicon "ABZrd"
BAM to Komsomolsk-na-Amure
Straight track
Bridge over water
Gilyuy
Stop on track
225 Gilyuy
Stop on track
250 Mogot
Bridge over water
Mogot
Stop on track
269 Rikhard Zorgye
Unrestricted border on track
285 Amur Oblast/Sakha (Yakutia)
Straight track
Stop on track
285 Yakutsky
Stop on track
298 Nagornaya-Yakutskaya (Nagorny)
Bridge over water
Timpton
Stop on track
319 Ayam
Enter and exit tunnel
319 Nagorny-Tunnel (ca. 1300 m)
Stop on track
340 Zolotinka
Bridge over water
Iengra
Stop on track
357 Okurdan
Bridge over water
Gorbyllakh
Stop on track
382 Oborcho
Station on track
399 Berkakit
Station on track
408 Neryungri-Passazhirskaya
Straight track
Non-passenger station/depot on track
416 Neryungri-Grusovaya
Bridge over water
Chulman
Bridge over water
Chulman
Stop on track
419 Denisovsky (Serebryany Bor)
Bridge over water
Chulman
Bridge over water
Chulman
Station on track
430 Chulman
Bridge over water
Chulman
Stop on track
444 Chulbas
Stop on track
455 Tenisty
Stop on track
485 Khatymi (Bolshoy Khatymi)
Bridge over water
Khatyma
Stop on track
504 Ogonyer
Station on track
548 Tayozhny
Bridge over water
Bolshoy Nimnyr
Station on track
608 Bolshoy Nimnyr
Stop on track
653 Seligdar
Stop on track
669 Kosarevsky (Lebediny)
Station on track
686 Aldan
Straight track
Station on track
716 Kuranakh (Nizhny Kuranakh)
Bridge over water
Yakokit
Station on track
767 Tommot
Straight track
Bridge over water
Aldan
Stop on track
Bolotny
Station on track
869 Amga (Verkhnyaya Amga)
Bridge over water
Amga
Bridge over water
Kyrbykan
Stop on track
932 Karbykan
Bridge over water
Uluu
Stop on track
962 Uluu
Station on track
982 Kyurgelyakh
Stop on track
1061 Khaniyerdakh
Bridge over water
Munduruchchu
Station on track
1085 Olen (Sakha)
Bridge over water
Lyutenge
Stop on track
Lyutenka
Station on track
1136 Kyordyom
Bridge over water
Lyutenge
Bridge over water
Menda
Stop on track
1153 Menda
Stop on track
1176 Rassoloda
Bridge over water
Tamma
Station on track
1136 Pravaya Lena (Lena River - Right Bank)
Unknown BSicon "ABZld" Track turning from right
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exWBRÜCKE"
Lena
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exSTR"
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exHST"
1209 Tabaga
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exHST"
1228 Kyurdyugelakh
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exHST"
1249 Chabyda
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exDST"
1275 Yakutsk-Grusovaya (Cargo)
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exBHF"
1284 Yakutsk-Passazhirskaya (Passengers)
Straight track Unknown BSicon "exKDSTe"
1288 Rechnoy Port (River Port)
Straight track
Bridge over water
Tamma
Stop on track
1195 Khaptagay
Station on track
1213 Nizhny Bestyakh
Unknown BSicon "exLUECKE"
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Churapcha
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Megino-Aldan
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Kyubyume
Unknown BSicon "exGRENZE"
Sakha Republic/Magadan Oblast
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Susuman
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Orotukan
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Atka
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Palatka
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
Sokol
Unknown BSicon "exKBHFe"
Magadan
Contents

Route

The line is single-track, excepting the double-track section from Tynda to Bestuzhevo, which shared with the Baikal-Amur Mainline (BAM). The full length of the line is not electrified.

As in most of Siberia, construction and operation of the railway is complicated by the large temperature variations, ranging from under -50°C in winter to over +30°C in summer, as well as the challenges of building on permafrost in difficult terrain.

The line currently has an official length of 1213 km, branching from the Trans-Siberian railway at Bamovskaya station, near Skovorodino in Amur Oblast. The line continues north, joining the Baikal Amur Mainline near Tynda and continuing along the BAM for 27 kilometers before branching northwards at Bestuzhevo. The line in this section crosses the Gilyuy River twice. Shortly after entering the Sakha Republic, the line passes through the 1,300 meter-long Nagorny tunnel under the Stanovoy Range.

In the highlands of southern Sakha Republic, the line crosses numerous further rivers, including the Iyengra and Chulman, before reaching the coal-mining area around Neryungri at around kilometer 400. The settlement of Berkakit, situated 9 km south of Neryungri, was founded in 1977 as the base for the railway's operations in the south of the Sakha Republic. Berkakit is the official starting point for the current project to construct the railway to Yakutsk (officially referred to as the Berkakit-Tommot-Yakutsk Line), and the majority of the town's workforce is employed either in management or maintenance of the railway.

To the north of Neryungri, the railway crosses the Aldan Highlands, before reaching Aldan at kilometer 686, where the main offices of the Yakutia Railways are located. The current terminus of the operating section of line is Tommot, on the right bank of the Aldan River at kilometer 767.

Bridge over the Aldan River at Tommot

Beyond Tommot station, the railway crosses the Aldan on a 350 meter long bridge, the longest on the line (except for the planned bridge over the Lena). From here, the line continues to the settlement of Verkhnyaya Amga (station simply named Amga), where it crosses the Amga River. Provisional goods services began to Amga in 2006, with construction trains travelling as far as Kharbykan.

Construction reached the settlement of Kyordyom, on the Lena River opposite the town of Pokrovsk, by 2008. From here, it was planned to start construction of a 3 km-long combined road and rail bridge across the Lena in 2009, in the area of the settlement Tabaga. The line was to continue to the city of Yakutsk, with a passenger terminal to be built, and an extension to the river port.[4]

With the expected difficulties in building a bridge across the more than 2 km-wide Lena, prone to massive flooding in spring and with moving ice during autumn, there has been much discussion of the rail head remaining on the east bank of the river, terminating in Nizhny Bestyakh, across the river from Yakutsk. This section has been built,[5] the connection over the river to Yakutsk city being postponed. The route via Nizhny Bestyakh will now form the beginning of any further extensions towards Magadan.[6]

History

Ceremony at Neryungri in 1985, marking the beginning of construction towards Yakutsk

Construction of the AYaM began in the 1930s, with the construction of the spur line from Bamovskaya to Tynda (then known as Tyndinsky) as part of the planned construction of the Baikal-Amur Mainline. This section began operation in 1935, but was then dismantled in 1940-41 as the Second World War saw the BAM project cancelled and the rails were reused for other projects closer to the front.

Reconstruction of the Bamovskaya-Tynda section (known as the "Little BAM") began on 5 April 1972, almost two years before the government of the Soviet Union announced the revival of the BAM project in 1974. The start of provisional services on the Little BAM began in November 1976, with full services in October 1977. At the same time the line was extended northwards, the section Tynda-Berkakit opening in October 1979, later extending as far as Neryungri.

From 1989, construction recommenced from Neryungri towards Chulman. This extension branches a few kilometers before the previous terminus of Neryungri-Grusovaya (cargo terminal). Traffic was gradually extended to Chulman, Aldan and finally to Tommot, firstly construction and cargo traffic, followed by passenger services. The complete section to Tommot was declared open on 24 August 2004. Since this date a daily passenger service has run between Neryungri and Tommot, covering the 368 Kilometer section in around 8 hours.

The bridge crossing the Aldan River in Tommot, at 400 meters wide at this point the largest river on the planned route besides the Lena, was completed in the 1990s, although not initially used. A further section of around 60 kilometers was under construction when financial problems halted the project.

Construction resumed in 2005, with construction traffic able to operate through to Kharbykan by the start of 2007. Cargo traffic currently operates as far as Amga. In early 2009 the construction reached the dual settlements of Pokrovsk/Kyordyom, on the left and right banks of Lena respectively, some 78 km south of Yakutsk.[7]

The first train was welcomed into Kyordyom on September 25, 2010.[8] The line to Nizhny Bestyakh was officially completed on November 15, 2011, with officials stating that a bridge across the river to Yakutsk would be constructed in the near future.[2][9]

Future planning

Planning for the line almost as far as Yakutsk is complete, although there has been debate as to whether the line should end at the settlement of Nizhny Bestyakh, on the opposite bank of the Lena River from Yakutsk, or whether a bridge (or possibly tunnel) should be built. The decision for or against a river crossing depends on a number of questions regarding both costs and engineering challenges. The Lena is at this point more than 2 kilometers wide, has a number of side streams, and can flood the valley to a width of up to 10 kilometers during the snowmelt in spring.

A combined road and rail bridge is under consideration, across a narrower section of the river near Tabaga, 40 km upstream from the Yakutsk.[10]

On July 14, 2010, in Moscow, a meeting was held to discuss construction of a tunnel under the Lena river, instead of a bridge. Construction of a tunnel would be quicker and cost less than that of a bridge, as it would not be dependent on seasonal construction hampered by the river freezing over in autumn and breaking up in spring. The flooding situation of the river also makes the tunnel more attractive. However, the annual maintenance costs for a tunnel were estimated to be more than twice that of a bridge. Construction of a tunnel in permafrost also posed engineering challenges.[11][12]

There is currently no bridge of any kind across the Lena in the Sakha Republic. Air travel is currently the only mode of transport to Yakutsk available year-round; land transport to the outside world is possible via ferry in summer, or by driving across the frozen river in winter. During spring and autumn, the moving ice on the river makes crossings impossible. The dual road-rail bridge would allow year-round land access to the city for the first time.

Future plans have been proposed for the extension of the rail line further to the east, towards the Kolyma region, Magadan and even Chukotka and a Bering Strait crossing which would link Russia with the United States. The Russian government in 2011 approved the construction of a US$ 65 billion Siberia-Alaska rail link and a tunnel across the Bering Strait.[3]

Plans were announced in May 2012 by the governor of Magadan Oblast to extend the railway 1800km eastwards of Yakutsk to Moma by 2016.[13]

References


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