Vietnam News

$1 bln project to revive French-built railway to Da Lat

An 84-km railway line from Thap Cham to Da Lat, built by the French in early 20th century, will be revived at a cost of VND28 trillion ($1.15 billion).

Built over a long period of 25 years (1908-1932), the line ran from the former coastal Champa Kingdom near Thap Cham town in Ninh Thuan Province to resort town Da Lat in the Central Highlands.

The revival will be implemented as a public-private partnership (PPP) project, it was said at a Wednesday meeting between the Ministry of Transport and Ninh Thuan authorities.

The ministry has chosen Bach Dang Hotel Complex Trading – Service JSC based in Da Nang as the project’s investor.

The investment will go into recovering the entire route, which comprises 17 stations, 64 bridges, five tunnels and a 16-km rack rail section.

It is expected that the investor will complete investment preparation and pre-feasibility study for approval within 2024 so that the project can be completed and become operational in 2030.

When it was built, the route was the second in the world to use track rails to traverse steep terrain, after the Jungfraujoch that runs across the Alps.

The railway line remained operational for around 14 years after the colonial French regime was defeated and withdrew from Vietnam in 1954. Then it fell into disuse and the tracks were dismantled by people to sell as scrap metal.

Part of the railway line, a short distance of seven kilometers, has already been revived. Operated by Da Lat, it has become a popular tourist attraction.

By Anh Duy – VnExpress.net – July 14, 2022

En poursuivant la visite de ce site, vous acceptez l’utilisation de traceurs (cookies) vous permettant juste d'optimiser techniquement votre navigation. Plus d’informations

En poursuivant la visite de ce site, vous acceptez l’utilisation de traceurs (cookies) vous permettant d'optimiser techniquement votre navigation. Aucune information sur votre utilisation de ce site ne sera partagée auprès de quelconques médias sociaux, de sociétés commerciales ou d'agences de publicité et d'analyse. Cliquer sur le bouton "Accepter", équivaut à votre consentement.

Fermer