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Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Monday, November 17, 2003

Traffic woes to ease with express thoroughfares

Chinese capital Beijing is building an express road network to connect the current four ring roads to ease traffic woes. The city will have 15 such thoroughfares in place - with no traffic lights - by 2006. They will link the fifth, fourth and third ring roads down through the urban second ring road.


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The Chinese capital, facing an ever serious traffic problem, is building an express road network to connect the current four ring roads to ease the city's traffic woes.

According to Zhou Zhengyu, deputy director of the Beijing Transportation Committee, the city will have 15 such thoroughfares in place - with no traffic lights - by 2006. They will link the fifth, fourth and third ring roads down through the urban second ring road.

Zhou said, so far, 80 per cent of the 280 kilometres of express roads have been completed and another 38.6 kilometres of roads will be finished by next year.

The city's traffic map so far has linked four completed ring roads like growth rings on a tree, but there are not enough feeder roads yet to connect the outer rings to the downtown area.

Zhou said his committee will team up with other departments to improve the traffic management system to carry out other traffic-mitigating measures, including charging more for parking. Paying more to park may keep motorists from using their cars.

Liu Xiaoming, another deputy director of the transportation committee, said the city is expected to invest 35 billion yuan (US$4.2 billion) next year to better its traffic situation.

Besides the construction of express roads, Liu said a public transit network and a special bus line would extend 130 kilometres next year.

In another development in Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province, officials have decided to construct a new modern railway station in the Panyu District, hoping the facility will become a new railway transit hub and fortify its status as a logistics centre in the country.

The total investment for the new railway station will come to between 4.1 billion yuan (US$494 million) and 5.1 billion yuan (US$614 million), which will make it the most modern and largest passenger railway station in Asia, according to Du Wen, director of the Preparation Committee of Guangzhou New Railway Station.

And Guangzhou, in the core of the Pearl River Delta, together with Shanghai, Beijing and Wuhan, will become one of the four largest railway passenger transportation hubs in 2020 when the new station starts services, Du said.

Guangzhou Railway Station, which lies in Guangzhou's busy Yuexiu District, will be closed and all its passenger train services will be moved to the new railway station in the future.

The railway could have trains that reach speeds of more than 300 kilometres an hour in upcoming years, Du said.

Guangzhou municipal government has decided to open multichannels to raise the large sums needed for construction, Du said. (China Daily News)


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