TCDD Transport or Turkish State Railways Transport (Turkish: TCDD Taşımacılık, reporting mark TCDDT) is a government-owned railway company responsible for the operations of most passenger and freight rail in Turkey. The company was formed on 14 June 2016, splitting off from Turkish State Railways (TCDD) to take over railway operations, while TCDD would continue to administer railway infrastructure.[1] TCDD Taşımacılık officially began operations on 1 January 2017.

Quick Facts Native name, Company type ...
TCDD Transport
Native name
TCDD Taşımacılık A.Ş.
Company typeClosed joint-stock company
IndustryRailway transport, Logistics
PredecessorTurkish State Railways
Founded14 June 2016; 8 years ago (2016-06-14)
Headquarters,
Area served
Turkey
Key people
Ufuk Yalçın (Chairman )
Çetin Altun (Vice Chairman and Board Member )
Fikret Şinasi Kazancıoğlu (Vice Chariman)
ProductsRail transport, Cargo transport, Services
OwnerMinistry of Transport and Infrastructure (Turkey) (100%)
Websitewww.tcddtasimacilik.gov.tr Edit this at Wikidata
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TCDD Taşımacılık operates trains on a network of over 12,430 km (7,720 mi) within 59 of the 81 provinces in Turkey.

Organisation

TCDD Taşımacılık is a government-owned company responsible for the operation of passenger and freight railways within Turkey, including logistical centers and train ferries (Tatvan-Van) using infrastructure owned and maintained by the Turkish State Railways.[1]

Passenger operations

Summarize
Perspective

TCDD Taşımacılık operates passenger rail service on most of its network. Passenger trains service most major cities in Turkey, although a few are without train service, such as Bursa and Antalya. TCDD Taşımacılık operates five types of passenger rail on its network:

  • High-speed (Yüksek Hızlı Tren): TCDD Taşımacılık's premier rail service.
  • Mainline (Anahat): Standard intercity passenger rail service, between major cities.
  • Regional (Bölgesel): Regional rail service, connecting major cities to surrounding cities, towns and villages.
  • Commuter (Banliyö): Commuter rail service within major cities.
  • International (Uluslararası): International train service to Europe.

List of TCDD Transport routes

TCDD Transport operates on the 12,532 km long Turkish rail network, and currently 90% is served by passenger trains.

High-speed services

More information Name, Type ...
Name Type Route Numbers Daily round trips Route kilometres
Yüksek Hızlı Tren High-speed Ankara – Eskişehir 81100, 81103 1x daily 246
Ankara – Eskișehir – Bilecik – İzmit – Istanbul 81001-81030 14x daily 594
Ankara – Konya 81200, 81203, 81204, 81205, 81208, 81209, 81210, 812013 4x daily 312
Ankara – Konya – Karaman 81201, 81206, 81207, 81212 2x daily 414
Istanbul – İzmit – Bilecik – Eskişehir 81501, 81502 1x daily
Istanbul – İzmit – Bilecik – Eskişehir – Konya 81301, 81302, 81303, 81305, 81306, 81308, 81309, 81310 4x daily
Istanbul – İzmit – Bilecik – Eskişehir – Konya – Karaman 81304, 81307 1x daily
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Mainline services

The second main intercity service of the company are the mainline trains known as Express or Main Line (Turkish: Ekspres, Ana Hat). These trains connect major Turkish cities throughout the country but they are progressively stopped as the YHT network expands.

More information Name, Type ...
Name Type Route Numbers Daily round trips Route kilometres
4th of September Blue Train Blue Ankara – Kırıkkale – Kayseri – Sivas – Malatya 22018, 52019 Daily
İzmir Blue Train Blue İzmir – Manisa – Balıkesir – Kütahya – Eskişehir – Ankara 22006, 32005 Daily 824
Konya Blue Train Blue İzmir – Manisa – UşakAfyonkarahisarKonya 72008, 32007 Daily 693
6th of September Express Express İzmir – Manisa – Balıkesir – Bandırma Daily 341
17th of September Express Express İzmir – Manisa – Balıkesir – Bandırma Daily 341
Aegean Express Express İzmirManisaBalıkesirKütahyaEskişehir 32011, 72018 Daily 576
Ankara Express Express IstanbulİzmitBilecik – Eskişehir – Ankara 22001, 12002 Daily 610
Eastern Express Express Ankara – KırıkkaleKayseriSivasErzurumKars 22010, 42009 Daily 1,365
Erciyes Express Express Kayseri – NiğdeAdana 22002, 62001 Daily
Lakes Express Express İzmir – AydınDenizliBurdurIsparta 32015, 72016 Daily
Lake Van Express Express Ankara – Kırıkkale – Kayseri – Sivas – Malatya – Elazığ – MuşTatvan 22012, 52011 Twice-weekly
Pamukkale Express Express Eskişehir – Kütahya – Afyonkarahisar – Denizli 72013, 72014 Daily 421
Roses Express Express İzmir – AydınDenizliBurdurIsparta Daily
Southern Kurtalan Express Express Ankara – Kırıkkale – Kayseri – Sivas – Malatya – DiyarbakırBatmanKurtalan 22014, 52013 5 weekly roundtrips
Taurus Express Express Konya – Karaman – Adana 62005, 62006 Temporarily halted 668
Euphrates Express Express Adana – Osmaniye – Malatya – Elazığ Temporarily suspended due to Earthquakes
Touristic Eastern Express Touristic Ankara – KırıkkaleKayseriSivasErzurumKars 3 times a week 1,365
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Quick Facts Overview, Successor ...
Blue Train
Mavi Tren
Overview
SuccessorYüksek Hızlı Tren
Current operator(s)TCDD Taşımacılık
Former operator(s)TCDD
Route
Train number(s)2
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Blue Train

The Blue Train (Turkish: Mavi Tren) is the Turkish State Railways premier passenger train service started in the 1980s. The first, simply called Blue Train, operated between Istanbul and Ankara, entering service in 1979.[2] More Blue Train services were added later on. The İzmir Blue Train, Central Anatolia Blue Train, Çukurova Blue Train and 4th of September Blue Train were are overnight trains. These trains had custom railcars, built by TÜVASAŞ, all painted blue with a blue painted DE 24000 series locomotive pulling the train. The current remnant is just a branding with regular rolling stock. Today there are only three blue trains are in service.

Service

Regional services

District 1
District 2
  • B21 Ankara–Polatlı
  • B22 Zonguldak–Karabük
  • B23 Zonguldak–Gökçebey
District 3
District 4
District 5
  • B51 Diyarbakır–Batman
  • B52 Elazığ–Tatvan
District 6
  • B61 Mersin–Adana - Busiest regional line
  • B62 Mersin–İskenderun
  • B64 Konya–Karaman
  • B65 Gaziantep–Nizip
District 7
  • B71 Kütahya–Balıkesir
  • B72 Eskişehir–Afyonkarahisar
  • B73 Eskişehir–Kütahya
  • B74 Eskişehir–Tavşanlı

Former services

High-speed rail

Thumb
A high-speed trainset in Ankara.

High-speed rail service is TCDD Taşımacılık's premier trains service, currently operating eight routes between Istanbul, Ankara, Eskişehir, Sivas, Karaman and Konya along the Ankara-Istanbul, Ankara–Sivas, Konya-Karaman and Polatlı-Konya high-speed railways.[3] High-speed trains are branded as Yüksek Hızlı Tren or YHT and operates at speeds of up to 250 km/h (160 mph). YHT train service is expected to expand further to Bursa and İzmir in 2027.

YHT trains use Ankara station as their main hub, with an exclusive concourse and lounges within the Ankara Tren Garı building, built over the southern platforms at Ankara station.

High-speed train service began on 13 March 2009, between Ankara and Eskişehir and in its final year before TCDD Taşımacılık took over, YHT trains carried over 5.89 million passengers.[4]

Intercity rail

Thumb
The Pamukkale Express running through rural Afyon Province.

Intercity rail in Turkey is known as Mainline (Turkish: Anahat) service. Mainline trains operate between major cities, often as overnight trains, and make limited stops. Mainline trains also operate at greater speeds than regional and commuter trains when the route permits it. Intercity trains were operated the most between Istanbul and Ankara and reached speeds of up to 140 km/h (87 mph) in certain sections. The Capital Express, Anatolian Express and the Republic Express were a few notable mainline trains that ran on the Istanbul to Ankara rail corridor. Once the Ankara-Istanbul high-speed railway was completed in 2014, all mainline train service between the two cities was replaced with high-speed rail service.

Mainline trains are usually equipped with TVS2000 air-conditioned cars, however refurbished Pullman cars are also used on some trains. Overnight mainline trains consist of sleeping and dining cars while some trains also have couchette cars in addition to sleepers.

During the final year before TCDD Taşımacılık took over operations, mainline trains carried over 1.3 million passengers.[4]

Regional rail

Thumb
An Afyon-bound regional train from Eskişehir at Alayunt station.

Regional rail (Turkish: Bölgesel treni) service connects major cities to neighboring towns and villages, as well as other cities. These trains are usually the slowest in the whole TCDD Taşımacılık system, making frequent stops along its route. Some trains, like the Ada Express, however operate at faster speeds similar to mainline trains. All regional rail service operates within their respective districts, using one city as a hub.

The most frequent regional rail service in Turkey is between Adana and Mersin with 27 daily trains in each direction. The second most frequent route is between İzmir and Torbalı, with 18 daily trains in each direction.

Regional trains can be locomotive-hauled or consist of diesel or electric trainsets (MUs) or even diesel railcars. Locomotive-hauled trains consist of TVS200 or regular Pullman coaches. DM15000 and DM30000 DMUs are standard along many routes, especially south of İzmir. Regional trains lack any on-board services except at-cart catering services on most trains.

During the final year before TCDD Taşımacılık took over operations, regional trains carried over 13.5 million passengers.[4]

Commuter rail

Thumb
A Marmaray train at Ayrılık Çeşmesi station.

Commuter rail service is currently provided in Istanbul, Ankara and Gaziantep; with new networks under planning stage in Konya and Afyonkarahisar. The Marmaray network operates between Halkalı in Istanbul province and Gebze in the neighboring Kocaeli province. The tunnel that Marmaray uses to cross Bosphorus is the deepest immersed tube tunnel in the world, and the tunnel is also used by freight trains. There is another commuter rail service between Halkalı and Bahçeşehir (both in Istanbul province), but due to the lack of a signalling system and double tracks, trains only operate once in the morning and once in the evening in each direction.

The Başkentray network in Ankara provides commuter rail service along an east-west axis between Sincan and Kayaş, with Ankara station as a hub.

All commuter rail service operates on its own right-of-way, similar to some S-Bahn systems in Germany, and are fully integrated with their respective cities' transportation network. The only commuter railway in Turkey not operated by TCDD Taşımacılık is İZBAN, which operates commuter rail on two lines in the İzmir metropolitan area.

International rail

Thumb
The Istanbul-Sofia Express waiting to depart Sofia.

While TCDD used to operate several international trains to Europe and the Middle-East, most of these trains were cancelled due to the outbreak of war in Syria and Iraq, and the economic crisis in Greece. Currently, TCDD Taşımacılık operates two international trains from Istanbul to Sofia and Bucharest in Bulgaria and Romania respectively. These two routes operate out of Halkalı as a single train and later split in Bulgaria. Once the rehabilitation of the railway east of Halkalı is completed in late 2018, international train service will resume from their former terminus, Sirkeci station. An agreement between Greece and Turkey to revive the Istanbul to Thessaloniki train, cancelled in 2011, was signed in March 2016, but no progress has been made since and it is still unclear whether or not the train will resume service.

A new international passenger service from Kars to Baku, Azerbaijan, was expected to start June 2018 via the recently completed Baku–Tbilisi–Kars railway. A train such as this would be the first revenue passenger train service from Turkey to the Caucasus.[5]

Due to the volatile situation in Syria and Iraq, all international train service to the middle-east is suspended indefinitely.

International services to Europe

Thumb
Sirkeci Terminal on the European side of Istanbul was inaugurated in 1890 as the terminus of the Rumelia Railway and the Orient Express.

Freight operations

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
A freight wagon of the company

From 1980 onwards, rail freight tonne-kilometers transported by the TCDD rose slightly from ~5000million tonne-km in 1980 to ~7000million tonne-km in 1990 and to ~9000million tonne-km in 2000.[6] Approximately 50% of freight moved is minerals or ores, with construction materials increasing to ~10% in 2000 from less than 5% in 1980, food/agricultural products, chemicals/petroleum, and metal sectors each account for between 5 and 10%. International freight accounted for approximately 5% of totals in 2000.[6]

In 2012, 25.7 million ton were transported by rail in Turkey. Two steel companies, Erdemir and Kardemir, top 2 customers of TCDD, had transported 4.5 million ton in 2012, mainly iron ore and coal.[7] 2.1 million tons of rail freight belong to international traffic. Most of international traffic between Turkey and Europe are done via Kapikule and mainly using container trains.[8]

As of 2016, the number of goods transported by rail is stable (25.8 million ton) with 7.1 million being done with private wagons (domestic only). International transport is also stable since 2013 (1.8 million).[9]

Containers are widely used both in international and domestic transportation. 7.6 million tons is carried in containers. TCDD supports transportation by containers. Thus, almost all of the private railway companies invested in container wagons, and carry 20% of all rail freight by their own wagons.[10]

TCDD has plans to strengthen its freight traffic with the construction of 4000 km conventional lines until 2023. That includes new international rail connections to Georgia, Iraq and Iran.[11] This will be complemented with the construction of 18 logistic centers in order to increase the ratio of domestic freight transported by rail.[12] The company is also planning to increase its international transit traffic (as little as 7000 ton in 2016) by constructing an "iron silk road" that will be connecting Europe and Asia and thus taking share from one of the world's highest freight traffic routes.[13] Marmaray and the YSS bridge are the most important parts of this project which were completed in 2015 and 2016 respectively.[14] Another key project is the Kars–Tbilisi–Baku railway which is planned to be completed in 2016 and start functioning in 2017.[15] Also, plans for another supplying project to Kars-Tbilisi-Baku railway, the Kars-Igdir-Nakhcivan railway has been completed.[16]

Freight rail transport in Turkey

Thumb
A freight train at Torbalı

TCDD Transport operate freight trains on all TCDD lines.[citation needed] TCDD Transport has a big fleet of covered goods wagons, flat wagons, tank wagons, open wagons and hoppers. TCDD Transport also has a few schnabel cars and crane cars. TCDD Transport carries freight such as bulk, shipping containers, liquids and goods.

As of 2012, 25.7 million ton is transported by rail in Turkey. Two steel companies, Erdemir and Kardemir, top 2 customers of TCDD, had transported 4.5 million ton in 2012, mainly iron ore and coal.[17]

2.1 million tons of rail freight belong to international traffic. Most of international traffic is between Turkey and Europe, done via Kapikule. Several container trains are running in this route as well as conventional wagons.[18]

Containers are widely used both in international and domestic transportation. 7.6 million ton is carried in containers. TCDD is supporting transportation by containers. Thus almost all of the private railway companies invested in container wagons, and carrying 20% of all rail freight by their own wagons.[19]

TCDD has plans to strengthen freight traffic by adding 4000 km conventional lines until 2023. That includes new international rail connections to Georgia, Iraq and Iran.[20] TCDD is also constructing 18 logistic centers to enable transportation of more loads by rail.[21]

TCDD is planning to increase its transit traffic (11000 to in 2011) by constructing "iron silk road" to connect Europe to Asia. Marmaray is the most important part of this project which is supposed to complete in 2015.[22] Another project is Kars–Tbilisi–Baku railway which will be completed in 2014. TCDD wants to have share from the freight traffic between Europe and China.[23]

Container lines to Europe

As of May 2014, there are 3 companies organizing regular container trains between Turkey and Europe: IFB, Balo and Metrans. The weekly departures by these 3 companies is about 10 in each direction in total.[24] By 16 June 2014 IFB ended direct container service to Turkey and started using vessel connection via Constanta powered by Global Multimodal.[25]

There are also other services started in 2014 such as intermodal trailer service by Ulusoy Logistics[26] and swapbody train by Transfesa.[27]

Fleet

Summarize
Perspective

TCDD Taşımacılık acquired its entire fleet from the Turkish State Railways on 28 December 2016, when the handover between the two organizations was signed. In total, TCDD Taşımacılık possesses 125 electric locomotives, 543 diesel locomotives, 19 high-speed trainsets, 49 EMUs, 64 DMUs, 872 passenger cars and 19,870 freight cars.[4][obsolete source]

Locomotives

More information Model, Picture ...
ModelPictureNumbersBuiltNumber builtTypePowerBuilder (Designer)Notes
Road power
DE24000Thumb24001-244181970–84418[28]Diesel Electric2160 hp (1600 kW)TÜLOMSAŞ (MTE)Ordered for TCDD's complete dieselization of its fleet
DE18100Thumb18101-18120197820[29]Diesel Electric1800 hp (1320 kW)MTEOrdered for use in District 3
DE22000Thumb22001-220861985–8986[30]Diesel Electric2000 hp (1470 kW)TÜLOMSAŞ (Electro-Motive Division)
E43000Thumb43001-43045198745[31]Electric4260 hp (3180 kW)TÜLOMSAŞ (Toshiba)
DE33000Thumb33001-330892003–0489[32]Diesel Electric3000 hp (2220 kW)TÜLOMSAŞ (Electro-Motive Diesel)Based on the DE22000
E68000Thumb68001-680802013–80[33]Electric6800 hp (5000 kW)Hyundai Rotem, TÜLOMSAŞFirst 8 built by Hyundai Rotem, later 72 are being built by TÜLOMSAŞ
DE36000Thumb36001-360202013–20[34]Diesel Electric3600 hp (2680 kW)TÜLOMSAŞ (General Electric)GE PowerHaul type
Switchers
HSL700TBA201880Electro-Diesel710 hp (522 kW)TÜLOMSAŞBased on E1000 electronics (in turn, DE 11 000)[35]
DE11000Thumb11001-11085198585[36]Diesel Electric1065 hp (780 kW)Krauss-Maffei, TÜLOMSAŞFirst 20 built by Krauss-Maffei later 60 built by TÜLOMSAŞ
DH7000Thumb7001–7020199420[37]Diesel Hydraulic710 hp (522 kW)TÜLOMSAŞ
DH9500Thumb9501–9526199926[38]Diesel Hydraulic950 hp (700 kW)TÜLOMSAŞDiesel-hydraulic redesign of TCDD DE11000 to work around short of spare parts for the traction motors of TCDD DE11000
E1000Thumb10002015–1Electric1360 hp (1000 kW)TÜBİTAK MAM, TÜLOMSAŞPrototype, mainly used for shunting operations (electric-only adaptation of TCDD DE11000)
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Trainsets

More information Model, Picture ...
ModelPictureNumbersBuiltNumber BuiltTypePowerBuilder (Designer)Notes
MT15000Thumb15001-15012200812DMU650 kWHyundai RotemUsed for regional services
HT65000Thumb65001-650122009–????12EMU4800 kWCAFTCDD high-speed train sets
E23000Thumb23001-230332009–????33EMUEUROTEMBaşkentray commuter rail
MT30000Thumb15401-154522011–52DMU650 kWTÜVASAŞUsed for regional services
E32000Thumb32001-320542011–????54EMUEUROTEMMarmaray commuter rail
HT80000Thumb80001 & 80101-801182013–202119EMU8000 kWSiemensTCDD high-speed train sets
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Railcars

More information Model, Picture ...
ModelPictureNumbersBuiltNumber BuiltTypePowerBuilder (Designer)Notes
MT5700Thumb5701-5730199330RailcarFiatUsed for regional services
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Passenger cars

More information Model, Picture ...
ModelPictureBuiltTypeBuilder (Designer)
Regional FleetThumb1972CoachTÜVASAŞ
Pullman Fleet1980–90Coach, Couchette, Diner, GeneratorTÜVASAŞ
TVS2000Thumb1992Coach, Diner, Couchette, Sleeper, GeneratorTÜVASAŞ (Past), TÜRASAŞ (Present)
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References

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