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Mandalay–Lashio Railway

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Mainline rail interchange Mandalay–Lashio Railway
မန္တလေး-လားရှိုး ရထားလမ်း
Goteik viaduct
Overview
OwnerMyanma Railways
LocaleMandalay Region, Shan State
Operation
Began operation1903
Operator(s)Myanma Railways
Technical
System length286.5 km (178.0 mi)
Track gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
System map
Myanmar Railways
Mandalay-Lashio
mile
390 1/2
Mandalay
394
Shan Su
382 3/4
Myo Haung
to Ava Bridge
to Kyaukse
385 1/4
Thoe Gyan
to Tha Ye Ze
392 3/4
Tonbo
to the quarry
396 1/4
Sedaw
to the quarry
400 1/4
Sa Tu Ta Lun Hto
405
Zi Pin Gyi
411
Thondaung
415
Anisakan
422 1/2
Pyin U Lwin
427 3/4
Pwe Kaul
433 1/2
Wet Wun
438 1/4
Sin Lan Su
444
Hsam Ma Hse
456
Nawnghkio
463
Gokteik
Goteik viaduct
472 1/4
Nawngpeng
482
Sa Khan Tha
490
Kyaukme
496
Loi Hkaw
504
Taw Gyi
509 1/2
Hsipaw
521
Ta Hpa Le
Sun Lon
529 1/4
Se-eng
537 1/4
Man Sam Ye Da Gun
543
Man Pwe
545 1/4
Thi Ri Shan Hkai
547 3/4
Nam-yau
to Namtu Mine Railway
560 3/4
Lashio

Mandalay–Lashio Railway (Burmese: မန္တလေး-လားရှိုး ရထားလမ်း) also known as Northern Shan State Railway (Burmese: ရှမ်းမြောက် မီးရထားလမ်း) is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) gauge railway line in Myanmar's Shan State, operated by Myanma Railways.[1] The line runs from Mandalay Central Railway Station to Lashio Railway Station in 11 hours, it is under proposal extending towards the Yunnan border from the current terminus with dual gauge rails. The section from Lashio to Muse and Yunnan is expected to be interoptable with both Chinese and Myanmar trains. There are a number of spur lines. There is another proposed project to allow Chinese trains to run 900 km from Kunming all the way to Kyaukpyu under Build-Operate-Transfer. Major stops in Pyin Oo Lwin, Kyaukme, Hsipaw. The line is in poor condition and on many sections the ride is extremely rough. The carriages with open windows serve to trim the trackside vegetation as it moves and attendants sweep away the debris regularly during the journey. On the descent down to Mandalay there is a back and forth switch back.

History

[edit]

The Northern Shan Railway was originally built in order that British industrialists could obtain access to southern China, via Kunming. The line is still incomplete and has not extended past the northern Shan city of Lashio. It did provide access to the ancient Chinese silver and lead mines in Bawdwin, which were a major source of wealth for future US President Herbert Hoover.

The Goteik viaduct, a trestle bridge which at the time of its construction, was the longest such span in the world was completed in 1900 in record time. At the time, it was considered to be an engineering triumph.[2]

Stations

[edit]
  • Mandalay Central Railway Station via Myo Haung junction.
  • (4) Myo Haung 382 3/4
  • (24) Thoe Gyan 385 1/4 (Junction) to Tha Ye Ze
  • (25) Tonbo 392 3/4 Spur Line to the quarry
  • (26) Sedaw 396 1/4 Spur Line to the quarry
  • (27) Sa Tu Ta Lun Hto 400 1/4 Zig Zag railway
  • (28) Zi Pin Gyi 405
  • (29) Thondaung 411
  • (30) Anisakan 415
  • (31) Pyin U Lwin 422 1/2
  • (32) Pwe Kaul 427 3/4
  • (33) Wet Wun 433 1/2
  • (34) Sin Lan Su 438 1/4
  • (35) Hsam Ma Hse 444
  • (36) Nawnghkio 456
  • (37) Gokteik 463 Gokteik Viaduct
  • (38) Nawngpeng 472 1/4
  • (39) Sa Khan Tha 482
  • (40) Kyaukme 490
  • (41) Loi Hkaw 496
  • (42) Taw Gyi 504
  • (43) Hsipaw 509 1/2
  • (44) Ta Hpa Le 521
  • (45) Sun Lon -
  • (46) Se-eng 529 1/4
  • (47) Man Sam Ye Da Gun (Man Sam Waterfall) 537 1/4
  • (48) Man Pwe 543
  • (49) Thi Ri Shan Hkai 545 1/4
  • (50) Nam-yau 547 3/4 (Junction) to Namtu Mine Railway
  • (51) Lashio Railway Station 560 3/4

under proposal

[edit]
  • Muse Station

References

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  1. ^ Railways in Myanmar/Burma, Myohaung – Lashio (E10)
  2. ^ Wohlers, David C.; Waters, Tony (October 2022). "The Gokteik Viaduct: A Tale of Gentlemanly Capitalists, Unseen People, and a Bridge to Nowhere". Social Sciences. 11 (10): 440. doi:10.3390/socsci11100440.