According to Katz, the first 3 months transportation on the new line will be free when using a rav kav card. The route is 28 minutes between the two cities. The train will fly at a speed of 160kmph, which is almost as fast as the average driver on the highways of Israel when there is no traffic.
Initially the route will be between the train station next to Binyanei Hauma in Jerusalem and the Hagana train station in Tel Aviv. There will be two trains per hour on this route (to start). I don't know if that is two trains in each direction per hour or two trains total, one in each direction.
The second stage will add a second train track and will increase the number of trains to 3 per hour - every 20 minutes a train will leave Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, and vice versa - with the possibility of increasing the routes to 6 per hour when necessary.
The interesting part is Katz's promotion in the announcement, saying that by Pesach we will enable all the people of Israel to ascend in the masses to Jerusalem via the high speed train from Tel Aviv. We are connecting and strengthening the capital, Jerusalem, and connecting to the history of Jerusalem.
I say interesting because Katz did not speak about connecting Jerusalem to the central region, making it easier for people to get to work or tourism. He did not talk about other benefits of the train bringing people to work in Jerusalem, possibly creating more expansion of business, more tourism, other financial benefits to the country or to those specific cities. He spoke about bringing people to Jerusalem, helping them connect to Jerusalem and the history. He spoke about them coming to Jerusalem to visit on Pesach and be a part of the holiday in Jerusalem.
There are a lot of benefits to the new train. Katz focused on the most Jewish of them.
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Rafi. You question what 2 trains an hour means... It is obviously 1 each way every 30 minutes, as your article goes on to say that stage 2 of the project will be a second track allowing traffic in both directions simultaneously
ReplyDeleteI thought about the implication of the 3 trains, but shouldn't it increase to 4, not 3?
ReplyDeleteIf you think 160kph is almost the average speed of Israeli drivers, I never want to be in a car with you behind the wheel.
ReplyDeleteWhen I used to drive to TA, there would be stretches where I'd be comfortably doing 140 and passing vehicles on my right. 160 is insane.
A free train to (and from) Jerusalem for 3 months sounds nice, but in reality it would likely be a nightmare of pushing and shoving to get on. How many people would accumulate while waiting for a train for 30-60 minutes? I wouldn't go near it! I also avoided the light rail until it became more sane, because in the beginning it was free and horribly overcrowded.
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