Rewari Junction railway station
Railway station in Haryana, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Railway station in Haryana, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rewari Junction railway station (station code: RE[1]) is a major railway station of the Indian Railways serving the city of Rewari in the Indian state of Haryana. It is in the Jaipur Division of the North Western Railway zone and lies on the Delhi–Ajmer–Ahmedabad route. Six railway lines branch out from this railway station.
Rewari Junction | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Indian Railway and Delhi Suburban Railway station | |||||
General information | |||||
Location | Station Road, Rewari, Haryana India | ||||
Coordinates | 28°12′12″N 76°36′40″E | ||||
Elevation | 246 metres (807 ft) | ||||
Owned by | Indian Railways | ||||
Operated by | Indian Railways | ||||
Line(s) | Delhi–Ajmer line Bathinda–Rewari line Rewari–Rohtak line Bikaner–Rewari line Ringus–Rewari line | ||||
Platforms | 8 | ||||
Tracks | 14 | ||||
Bus routes | 6 | ||||
Construction | |||||
Structure type | Intermediate Junction | ||||
Parking | Available(paid) | ||||
Other information | |||||
Status | Functional | ||||
Station code | RE[1] | ||||
Zone(s) | North Western Railway zone | ||||
Division(s) | Jaipur | ||||
History | |||||
Opened | 1873 | ||||
Rebuilt | 2009–11 | ||||
Electrified | Yes | ||||
Passengers | |||||
35000 per day | |||||
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Rewari railway junction station is located 82.3 kilometres (51.1 mi) southwest of old Delhi and 75.6 kilometres (47.0 mi) southwest of the nearest large airport is located at New Delhi.
Rewari railway station was established in 1873 after the 82.3 kilometres (51.1 mi) long first commercial 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) metre-gauge track in India was laid from Delhi to Rewari by Rajputana State Railway in 1872.[2][3] A 41.4 kilometres (25.7 mi) long segment of the railway line had been laid a year earlier from Delhi to Garhi Harsaru that catered to existing flourishing salt production works (from underground brine) at Farrukhnagar, 13.8 kilometres (8.6 mi) to its west. The railway line was extended 135.8 kilometres (84.4 mi) from Rewari to Alwar and Bandikui in 1874 and then more 225.2 kilometres (139.9 mi) to Jaipur and Ajmer in 1875 by Rajputana–Malwa Railway and eventually another 492 kilometres (306 mi) to Ahmedabad in Gujarat in 1881. Rewari became a railway junction when, a 300.65 kilometres (186.82 mi)-long metre-gauge railway line to Bhatinda was completed in 1884 by Rajputana–Malwa Railway[4] Next, a 379 kilometres (235 mi) long line to Bikaner via Kanina, Loharu, Sadulpur, Churu & Ratangarh was laid in 1896.[5]). Another 216 kilometres (134 mi) long line to Phulera via Narnaul, Neem-Ka-Thana and Ringas was laid in 1905 over the time. Eventually five metre-gauge tracks branched out from Rewari. All metre-gauge trains starting from (and terminating at) Delhi railway junction (station code DLI) to Punjab, Rajputana, Saurashtra, Kutch and north Gujarat regions passed through Rewari station. The management of Rajputana–Malwa Railways (and Rewari railway station) was transferred to Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway (BBCI) in 1889. BBCI became Western Railway in 1951. Delhi–Rewari–Bikaner railway line was transferred to Bikaner Division of newly formed Northern Railway zone in 1952 while Rewari–Jaipur and Rewari–Ringas–Phulera sections remained in Western Railway.
Rewari–Delhi railway line was transferred from Bikaner Division of Northern Railway to Delhi Division of Northern Railway on formation of North Western Railway zone in 2002 but Rewari railway junction itself remained in North Western Railway zone. The recently commissioned 72.9 kilometres (45.3 mi) long Rewari–Rohtak track is in Delhi Division of Northern Railway. The remaining four tracks branching out from Rewari railway station belong to North Western Railway zone. Rewari station itself is in the Jaipur Division of North Western Railway zone.
Six 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) broad-gauge tracks branch out from Rewari towards
Conversion of 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) metre gauge to 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad gauge started in 1990. The Delhi–Rewari railway line had double metre-gauge tracks and one of the tracks was converted to broad gauge in December 1992 as a part of conversion of Ajmer–Delhi line.[6] This allowed metre-gauge trains from north Rajasthan to continue up to Delhi railway junction on the remaining track while broad-gauge trains ran from Delhi railway junction to Rewari on the other track. Rewari–Bhatinda track was converted to broad gauge in December 1993[7] and Delhi was connected to Bhatinda (and further north) by broad gauge trains via Rewari for the first time opening an alternative route. The Rewari–Jaipur–Ajmer track was converted to broad gauge in 1994 and broad-gauge trains started running from Ajmer to Delhi via Rewari. Broad-gauge trains started running from Ahmedabad to Delhi via Rewari from May 1997.
Within a few years, both the tracks from Sarai Rohilla to Delhi railway junction were converted to broad gauge and all metre-gauge trains stopped operating from Delhi Junction. As a result of this, all metre-gauge trains to Rewari and beyond terminated at and started from Sarai Rohilla which became a railway terminus. By September 2004, the second metre-gauge track from Sarai Rohilla to Rewari was also converted to broad gauge and all metre-gauge trains stopped operating between Rewari and Sarai Rohilla (though the converted track was "officially" dedicated to the nation by politicians only in October 2006).[8][9] Rewari thus became the terminus of metre-gauge trains for the next three years. For example, the train from Bikaner to Delhi ran on metre-gauge track up to Rewari and then a connecting train ran on broad-gauge track from Rewari to Delhi Junction.
All metre-gauge railway tracks from Rewari were converted to broad gauge by the end of 2009. Therefore, metre-gauge trains stopped operating from Rewari. This obviated the need for change of trains at Rewari which no longer remained a gauge-change station.[10] Broad-gauge trains now connected Rewari to various cities in all parts of India.
Rewari was the world's oldest and largest commercial metre-gauge railway junction until 2010 when this fact became a part of history.[10] Rewari is now one of the largest railway junctions in India with six railway lines converging here. Only one railway junction in India, namely Mathura Junction, has seven railway lines converging there. Rewari will also have seven railway lines when the railway line from Rewari to Asaoti railway station north of Palwal on the Mathura–Palwal–Tughlakabad main railway line is laid as a dedicated freight railway line as a part of the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor in a few years.
Rewari is a major junction on the Indian Railways network. It has connections to major cities in India by direct trains and is a major freight transit station. Therefore, Ahmedabad–Rewari–Ludhiana trunk route is being doubled to cater to ever increasing containerised freight trains. The Delhi–Rewari railway line had double metre-gauge track earlier; now it has double broad-gauge track since 2008. The 361 kilometres (224 mi) long Rewari–Ajmer railway line via Bandikui and Jaipur has double track since 2008. The doubling of the track from Ajmer to Palanpur has been going on since 2010 and may complete in 2021 as most of the segments have been doubled. The track from Palanpur to Ahmedabad is also being doubled. The track to Hisar towards Ludhiana is being doubled and a segment has been doubled up to Kosli.
Rewari railway station has electrified tracks as the Alwar-Rewari–Hisar and Rewari–Narnaul–Ringas–Phulera railway tracks have been electrified in 2017. Electrification of Rewari–Ajmer railway track is completed in 2020.[11][12] Electric trains (EMU) may run between Delhi and Rewari when the track is electrified.
Rewari–Ringas–Ajmer–Palanpur 654 kilometres (406 mi) long track is being electrified and will have a high catenary with 7.45 m high OHE for double-stack containers. The electrical locomotives on these tracks will have a special pantograph for the high catenary. (OHE height is 5.5 metre for normal electrical locomotives.)
A Regional Mass Rapid Transport Service (RRTS) is planned to come up on Delhi Nizamuddin station-Gurgaon–Rewari–Alwar route to enhance connectivity between Delhi and the developing manufacturing hubs in Rewari district and Bhiwadi.[13] The alignment of a new railway line of Rapid Regional Transit System (RRTS) from existing Nizamuddin station in New Delhi to Gurgaon–Manesar–Dharuhera–Rewari–Bawal–Shahjanpur–Alwar has been finalised. It will have a railway station east of Rewari at village Majra Gurdas.[14]
Plans for the 66 kilometres (41 mi) long seventh railway line from Rewari to Palwal on Agra-Delhi main railway line were under consideration for over two decades.[15] This railway line will now be built from Rewari to Pirthal and Asaoti railway station north of Palwal on the Mathura–Palwal–Tughlakabad main railway line [16] as a dedicated freight railway line as a part of the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor[17] being constructed by Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India (DFCCI).[18]
The 1,521 kilometres (945 mi) long Western Dedicated Freight Corridor from Kandla port and the JNPT container seaport at New Bombay to Dadri near Delhi passes through Rewari station. As there is not much space available at Rewari railway yard, a container stabling yard is being built west of Rewari station at Khori. On the eastern end of the railway line from Rewari towards Dadri, a container yard and industrial estate is being built at Pirthal near Asaoti railway station north of Palwal. The project is being funded by Japan.
Rewari is a major transit station for freight traffic from Bombay, Kandla and other ports in western India towards Delhi and northern states/union territories of Haryana, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir. As the railway tracks from Kandla, Pipavav, Mundra and other ports in Saurashtra to Ahmedabad and Palanpur and then to Rewari via Ringas were not electrified, freight trains (goods trains) with containers double-stacked ply on this route to Rewari junction and then take the containers further north from Rewari. Infringements like low road overbridges and foot overbridges that fouled with double-stacked containers were either dismantled or raised in years 2004–06 for running these freight trains.
In India freight (goods) trains can carry standard containers double-stacked on flat-bed wagons with normal axle load of about 22 tonnes and do not require special low-bed wagons unlike in other countries that have (relatively narrow) 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge. They carry almost 4000 tonnes per rake which is almost twice the load a normal goods train can haul. Some double-stacked container freight trains on this route through Rewari station also carry "high cube" containers that are 2896 mm (9 ft 6 inch) high (higher than standard containers that are generally 8 ft or 2.438 mm high) on special low-well wagons owned by private clients.[19] Some private logistics operators have built container storage yards north of Rewari near Garhi Harsaru (south of Gurgaon) for this purpose.
Rewari–Ringas–Ajmer–Palanpur–Mehsana railway track is now electrified.[11] This track has a high catenary with 7.45 m high OHE for double-stack containers from Kandla port on the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor. The electrical locomotives on these tracks have a special pantograph for the high catenary. (OHE height is 5.5 metre for normal electrical locomotives.)
Rewari railway station has all major facilities like high-level platforms, waiting rooms, restaurants, computerised ticket reservation, bookshop and retiring rooms for sleeping. On conversion of metre-gauge tracks to broad gauge, the station yard was remodelled and the tracks and platforms were rearranged to provide 8 platforms in 2009–10; low-level metre-gauge platforms were raised higher. Some heritage buildings that were more than 100 years old were demolished to lay new railway lines and build high-level platforms.[20] New buildings have been constructed.
Before 2006, metre-gauge trains from Rewari terminated at Delhi and there was no direct train from Rewari to east or south of Delhi or beyond Ahmedabad in the west. Rewari was also not connected by metre-gauge trains with metre-gauge railway networks of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and South India. Now Rewari railway station is connected by trains with many major cities of India. Rewari railway station's location on the Delhi-Ajmer-Ahmedabad trunk route and on the route to Punjab makes it an important railway junction. Numerous express and superfast trains from all over the country pass through it. About 90 trains (45 pairs of trains) originate or stop at Rewari railway station as in November 2012.
The following is a list of a few trains stopping at Rewari railway station.
Train no. | Train name | Zone | From | To | Scheduled dep |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
12915 | Ashram Express | WR | Ahmedabad/ADI | Delhi/DLI | 08:35 |
12372 | Jaisalmer–Howrah Express | ER | Jaisalmer/JSM | Howrah/HWH | 11:50 |
22452 | Mumbai–Bandra–Chandigarh Exp | NR | Bandra/BDTS | Chandigarh/CDG | 10:30 |
19602 | New Jalpaiguri–Ajmer Exp | NWR | New Jalpaiguri/NJP | Ajmer/AII | 15:10 |
19565 | Uttaranchal Exp | WR | Okha/OKHA | Dehradun/DDN | 07:45 |
12413 | Pooja Exp | NR | Ajmer/AII | Jammu/JAT | 20:18 |
Rewari Railway Heritage Museum is the only surviving steam loco shed in India and houses some of India's last surviving steam locomotives. Built in 1893, it was the only loco shed in North India for a long time and a part of the track connecting Delhi with Peshawar.[21] After steam engines were phased out by the 1990s and steam traction on metre-gauge tracks was discontinued in January 1994,[7] the loco shed remained in neglect for many years before it was decided to rehabilitate it. The steam shed reopened in May 2002. In December 2002 Indian Railways declared it a heritage museum.[22] The shed was refurbished as a heritage tourism destination, its heritage edifice was restored and a museum was added by the Indian Railways exhibiting Victorian-era artefacts used on the Indian rail network, along with the old signalling system, gramophones and seats. The refurbished heritage museum was opened in October 2010. The engines will also be available for live demonstrations.[21][23][24]
Rewari steam loco shed, being the only surviving repository of steam locos in India housing some of India's last surviving steam locomotives, has become an ideal choice for filmmakers. The Rewari steam locos have been rented out for various film shoots and a part of the film Gandhi, My Father was shot here.[21][25] The locos at the shed have appeared in films such as Gadar: Ek Prem Katha, Love Aaj Kal, Gandhi and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag among others.
Fairy Queen is the oldest working engine in the world and one of national treasure (cultural artifacts) of India. The engine was built in 1855 and acquired by the Eastern Indian Railways from a British firm. Now it is used to haul a train used for tourism purposes that departs from the Delhi Cantonment railway station and reaches its destination at Alwar in Rajasthan via Rewari.
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