*** Welcome to piglix ***

Lelystad–Zwolle railway

Hanzelijn
Hanzelijn.PNG
Route of the Hanzelijn
Overview
Locale Netherlands
Website www.hanzelijn.nl
Operation
Opened 2012
Technical
Line length 50 km (31 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Electrification 1.5 kV DC
Route map
line from Almere
0.0 Lelystad Centrum
3.2 Lelystad yard
A6
20.6 Dronten
Drontermeer tunnel
N50
34.2 Kampen Zuid
A28
line from Amersfoort
IJssel river
Zwolle
line to Meppel

The Lelystad–Zwolle railway, also known as the Hanzelijn (English: Hanseatic Line), is a Dutch railway line, finished in 2012. It connects Lelystad, capital of the province of Flevoland, with Zwolle, capital of the neighbouring province of Overijssel, and provides a direct rail link between Flevoland and the north-east of the Netherlands.

The Hanzelijn project was essentially a less-costly alternative to the Zuiderzeelijn (Zuiderzee Line), a projected new Lelystad-Groningen line via Emmeloord, Heerenveen and Drachten for which planning was cancelled in 2007.

Work started in January 2007 and was completed in December 2012. Two new stations have been built: Dronten and Kampen Zuid. The maximum speed on most of the line is 200 km/h, though no Dutch domestic rolling stock can achieve speeds greater than 160 km/h, except for the Fyra trains, which only run on specially designated lines. The railway was opened by Queen Beatrix as the Dutch Royal Train traversed the line on 6 December 2012, and scheduled services began operating on Sunday, 9 December 2012. The journey from Lelystad to Zwolle will take 30 minutes, reducing the time taken from Amsterdam to Zwolle – and further north – by about 15 minutes. The total length of the new track is 50 km.

The line includes a 790 m (2,592 ft) tunnel under the Drontermeer (the semi-artificial channel separating the mainland from the reclaimed Eastern Flevoland), and joins the existing Utrecht–Zwolle–Kampen rail line just before the 1 km (0.6 mile) high-level fixed bridge over the river IJssel. This new bridge, which includes a separate pedestrian and cycle track, opened on 14 June 2011, replacing a rail-only twin-span vertical-lift drawbridge.


...
Wikipedia

...