Dorasan Station: Difference between revisions
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
Isaac Crumm (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Korail dorasan station sign mark.jpg|175px|thumb|right|Dorasan Station marker]] |
[[Image:Korail dorasan station sign mark.jpg|175px|thumb|right|Dorasan Station marker]] |
||
'''Dorasan Station''' is railroad station situated on the [[Gyeongui Line]], which once connected North and [[South Korea]] and has now been restored. |
'''Dorasan Station''' is railroad station situated on the [[Gyeongui Line]], which once connected North and [[South Korea]] and has now been restored. For several years the northernmost stop on the line was Dorasan Station, which is served by [[Tonggeun]] commuter trains. |
||
On December 11, 2007 freight trains began traveling north past Dorasan Station into North Korea, taking materials to the [[Kaesong Industrial Region]], and returning with finished goods. It is scheduled to make one 10 mile trip every weekday. |
|||
Plans to begin regular passenger service across the [[Imjin River]] to [[North Korea]] have yet to be finalized. |
|||
== Gallery== |
== Gallery== |
Revision as of 15:53, 11 December 2007
Dorasan Station is railroad station situated on the Gyeongui Line, which once connected North and South Korea and has now been restored. For several years the northernmost stop on the line was Dorasan Station, which is served by Tonggeun commuter trains.
On December 11, 2007 freight trains began traveling north past Dorasan Station into North Korea, taking materials to the Kaesong Industrial Region, and returning with finished goods. It is scheduled to make one 10 mile trip every weekday.
Plans to begin regular passenger service across the Imjin River to North Korea have yet to be finalized.
Gallery
-
gate to platform
-
Art at Dorasan Station commemorating the meeting of June 15 2000
-
U.S. President George W. Bush and South Korea President Kim Dae Jung