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Dresden‒Prague high-speed line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Dresden‒Prague high-speed line is a series of upgrades to reduce the train travel time by one hour between Dresden, Germany and Prague, Czech Republic, scheduled for construction after 2032.[1]

The main component is a planned 30.4-kilometre-long (18.9 mi) twin-bore base tunnel running north‒south under the Ore Mountains between Heidenau station near Dresden and the city of Ústí nad Labem, creating a 46-kilometre-long (29 mi) bypass to the existing Elbe Valley section of the Děčín–Dresden-Neustadt railway.[2]

The new route forms part of the Orient/East–Med Corridor in the European Union's Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T).[3]

References

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  1. ^ Rothe, Michael (2023-11-23). "New Dresden-Prague line: Germany's longest railroad tunnel to be built in the Ore Mountains". Wirtschaft in Sachsen. Sächsische Zeitung. Retrieved 2024-01-02.
  2. ^ Newton, Jonathan (2023-11-29). "Germany to build its longest rail tunnel to connect Dresden and Prague". International Railway Journal. Retrieved 2024-01-02. The twin-bore 30.4km Erzgebirgs Tunnel through the Erz mountains … will be built between Heidenau, Germany, and Ústí nad Labem … almost three times as long as the Landrücken Tunnel, which is currently Germany's longest, and about one and a half times the length of the Fehmarnbelt Tunnel [de] currently under construction.
  3. ^ Raimondi, Marco (2023-11-22). "DB presents project for Germany's longest rail tunnel to Czechia". Railfreight. Retrieved 2023-12-02. 2032 and is estimated to take about 12 years.
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