Categories: Heavy Rail

Some Extra Info – Geoncheon Connection

This is a brief post for those who asked for more information on the Geoncheon connection mentioned in this previous post.

As you can see in the the diagram below, this short piece of track connects the Gyeongbu high-speed railway with the new high-speed Donghae Southern Line which currently ends at Pohang. The connection opened on April 2 and is approx 7.2 km long.

Originally, any trains from Seoul heading to Pohang via high-speed rail would have had to stop and change direction at SinGyeongju Station. According to FRDB it’s the same issue that trains have at the moment going from Gyeongju on the Jungang Line to the previous Donghae Southern line. The connection, shown in red below, was built to solve this problem.

Of course this then means that trains from Seoul to Pohang won’t be able to stop at SinGyeongju station. This was also the case for previous Seoul – Pohang trains on the original line which were unable to stop at Gyeongju Station (though in this case trains could stop at West Gyeongju Station).

Image: Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport

The original Geoncheon Station continues to operate its 4 Mugunghwa services a day, with the new “station” marked as Geoncheon on the high-speed offshoot marked as a signal station. Moryang Station on the original Jungang Line which a reader asked about hasn’t been used by passengers since the beginning of 2008 is now being used as a signal station.

I’m still curious myself as to whether the high-speed rail in fact joins the Jungang Line just after Geonchen as shown in the diagram. Other maps don’t show this but they may just not have been updated yet.

Also, here are some pictures from the newly opened Pohang Station.

Andy

Originally from New Zealand, Andy moved to Korea in 2007 and very quickly became interested in the many different public transport and urban development projects around Korea. He currently works in the transport sector in a communications role.

Share
Published by
Andy

Recent Posts

GTX-A is finally here

The first segment of the Great Train eXpress (GTX) officially opened on March 30, 2024…

4 months ago

Go on a virtual train ride

See what it's like to ride the KTX and other trains across Korea from the…

2 years ago

A conversation with ChatGPT about Seoul’s public transport system and more

ChatGPT does not need an introduction. The evolution in AI and the leaps the Internet…

2 years ago

Climate action on transport by Korea

14% of Korea's greenhouse gas emissions are caused by transport as of 2017, making it…

2 years ago

Tunnelling of first GTX-A section complete

Another milestone for the GTX project was announced just before the new year — one…

2 years ago

Line 9 extension gets green light — again

Wanna feel old? Seoul's Line 9 is nearly 13 years old! But it is still…

2 years ago