Saturday 19 November 2016

Ampang Line

Ampang LRT train for Ampang Line & Sri Petaling Line.png
The Sri Petaling Line & Ampang Line (MalayLaluan Sri Petaling & Laluan Ampang), is a Light rail transit(LRT) system network in Klang Valley operated by Rapid Rail, a subsidiary of Prasarana Malaysia. It is the first standard gauge light rail transit network in Malaysia which commenced services in 1996.
Prior to July 2016, the whole system network was branded as Ampang Line due to the shared train system on both service lines at Ampang control centre and depot. Effective 17 July 2016, following the completion of the line's extension to Putra Heights, Rapid Rail has introduced two new modes of operation. The system network is now distinguished into two main lines namely:
6-car CSR Zhuzhou LRV at SP19 Awan Besar
Overview
Native nameLRT Laluan Ampang & LRT Laluan Sri Petaling
TypeLight rail transit
SystemLRT KL System 1 (LRT1)
 3  Ampang Line - GEC Alsthom CBTC
 4  Sri Petaling Line - SelTrac CBTC
StatusOperational
LocaleKlang Valley
TerminiStart: Sentul Timur & Chan Sow Lin
End:Putra Heights & Ampang
Stations35 & 2 reserve [2]
Servicesi) Chan Sow Lin - Ampang
ii) Sentul Timur - Putra Heights
iii) Sentul Timur - Bandar Tasik Selatan
Daily ridership172,080 (2015)
Ridership62.089 million (2015)[1]
(Decrease 1.8%)
Line number 3  &  4 
WebsiteRapid Rail
Operation
Opened16 December 1996
Last extension30 June 2016
OwnerPrasarana Malaysia
Operator(s)Rapid Rail
CharacterElevated and at-grade
Depot(s)Ampang Depot &
Kuala Sungai Baru Depot
Rolling stock25 six-car trainsets of Adtranz-Walkers LRV
35 [3] six-car trainsets of CSR Zhuzhou LRV or AMY
Comparison on train lengths
Technical
Line length45.1 km (28.0 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
ElectrificationThird Rail
Operating speed60 km/h (37 mph)
the two lines are one of the components of the Klang Valley Integrated Transit System.

 SP1 Sentul Timur Parking
 SP2 Sentul (LRT) Parking
 SSP13  MR11  SP3 Titiwangsa MadridMetro-BusUrbano.svg MadridMetro-EMT.svg 8  12 
 SP4 PWTC
 KA04 Putra 1  2 
 SP5 Sultan Ismail MadridMetro-BusUrbano.svg MadridMetro-EMT.svg
 SP6 Bandaraya MadridMetro-EMT.svg
 KA03 Bank Negara 1  2 
 KJ13  SP7 Masjid Jamek 5 
 SBK18 Merdeka 9 
 SP8 Plaza Rakyat MadridMetro-LargoRecorrido.svg Pudu Sentral
 MR4  SP9 Hang Tuah 8 
 SP10 Pudu
 SSP20  AG1  SP11 Chan Sow Lin 3  12 
 SP12 Cheras
 SP13 Salak Selatan (LRT) Parking
 SP14 Bandar Tun Razak
 KT2  KB04  SP15 Tasik Selatan Parking Terminal Bersepadu Selatan 1  7 
 SSP25  SP16 Sungai Besi Parking 12 
 SP17 Bukit Jalil Parking
 SP18 Sri PetalingParking
 SP19 Awan Besar Parking
 SP20 Muhibbah Parking
 SP21 Alam Sutera
 SP22 Kinrara BK5Parking
 SP23 Kinrara BK3(future station)
 SP24 IOI Puchong Jaya Parking
 SP25 Pusat Bandar Puchong
 SP26 Taman Perindustrian Puchong
 SP27 Bandar Puteri
 SP28 Puchong Perdana
 SP29 Puchong Prima
 SP30 Kampung Sri Aman(future station)
Kuala Sungai Baru Depot
 KJ37  SP31 Putra Heights 5 

New Modes of Operations

The passenger travelling from Ampang to either Sentul Timur or Putra Heights would need to disembark and switch trains at Chan Sow Lin.

Stations

Route map and fare information at Masjid Jamek station
The Ampang Line system network consists of two main service lines with a total length of 34.4 kilometres that begin at two different stations to the south and east of the city, meeting at an interchange station, continuing through the city centre and ending at the same station at the north. The LRT Ampang Line begins at Ampang, while the LRT Sri Petaling Line currently begins at Putra Heights. Both lines converge at Chan Sow Lin; the line leads to the north, both terminating at Sentul Timur. The Ampang to Sultan Ismail section was the first phase of the LRT system to open, on 16 December 1995, with the second stretch from Chan Sow Lin to Sri Petaling operational on 11 July 1998, primarily for accessibility to the National Sports Complex during the 1998 Commonwealth Games via the Bukit Jalil station. The section between Sultan Ismail and Sentul Timur opened on 6 December 1998.The passenger seating capacity is 168 seats per train (without wheelchair).
The route between Plaza Rakyat and Sentul Timur is an elevated railway, running along the Gombak River between Bandaraya and Titiwangsa. The Chan Sow Lin-Ampang route is primarily at surface level, using a previously disused railway formation, while the Chan Sow Lin-Plaza Rakyat route and the Sri Petaling-Chan Sow Lin route use a combination of surface-level and elevated tracks. There are no underground sections.
The system network includes 29 stations: eleven along the Sentul Timur as a common stations, and seven each along the LRT Ampang Line and the LRT Sri Petaling Line. The service depot and primary train depot is currently at Ampang. There is a temporary secondary train depot at Sri Petaling station. New depot at Kuala Sungai Baru has been build to support Ampang depot due to limited area for development and to cater new CSR Zhuzhou train.
Unlike previous railway system in Malaysia, which were built to metre gauge, the Ampang Line network system was the first railway system in the country to adopt standard gauge. Between Ampang and Plaza Rakyat and between Chan Sow Lin and Salak Selatan, the line uses the trackbed of previously disused lines that were part of the Malayan Railway network (Ampang/Sultan Street branch), closed in the 1960s (between the present Chan Sow Lin station and the present Plaza Rakyat) and the early 1990s (the remaining portion of the line). The Ampang depot stands on the site of the former Ampang railway station.
Ridership on the line has been far below expectations. Built with a capacity of 500,000 passengers per day[6] and a breakeven point of 170,000 passengers per day,[7] in 1998, two years after launch, the line was averaging only 53,000 passengers per day, in part because of fares perceived as too high.[7] In 2002, STAR-LRT was taken over by the government-owned Syarikat Prasarana Negara Berhad. By 2003, the ridership had increased to 110,000, still insufficient for profitability.[6]


LRT Sri Petaling Line stations

Chan Sow Lin is the interchange station between the two routes. The route that runs to Ampang station consists of seven stations running into East of Klang Valley. Passengers to Sri Petaling should disembark at Chan Sow Lin station. But on July 17, 2016, commuters no longer have to switch trains to Putra Heights, instead, they have to switch trains if they wishes to go to Ampang. Passengers will also have to disembark at Chown Sow Lin from Sentul Timur to continue their journey to Ampang.
On 29 August 2006, Deputy Prime Minister Mohd Najib Abdul Razak announced that the southern end of the LRT Sri Petaling Line would be extended from its existing terminus at Sri Petaling station to the suburbs of Puchong and Putra Heights, south-west of Kuala Lumpur. The first phase of the line extension work, a 7.4 km four-station phase from Sri Petaling to Bandar Kinrara (with four new stations: Awan Besar, Muhibbah, Alam Sutera and Kinrara BK5) opened on 31 October 2015 and IOI Puchong Jaya, Pusat Bandar Puchong, Taman Perindustrian Puchong and Bandar Puteri opened on 28 March 2016.[8] Full service for the remaining stations to Putra Heights started on 30 June 2016.
Station NumberStation NamePlatform typeInterchange/Notes
 SP1 Sentul TimurTerminal side
 SP2 SentulSide
 SP3  MR11 TitiwangsaSideInterchange station to KL Monorail Line.
 SP4 PWTCSideConnecting station to KTM Seremban Line and KTM Port Klang Line
 SP5  MR9 Sultan IsmailSideConnecting station to KL Monorail Line.
 SP6 BandarayaSide
 SP7  KJ13 Masjid JamekSideInterchange station to LRT Kelana Jaya Line.
 SP8 Plaza RakyatSide
 SP9  MR4 Hang TuahSideInterchange to KL Monorail Line.
 SP10 PuduSide
 SP11  AG1 Chan Sow LinIslandInterchange to LRT Ampang Line platform 2B and 1B towards  AG8  Ampang and MRT Sungai Buloh-Serdang-Putrajaya Line to  SSP20  Putrajaya
 SP12 CherasSide
 SP13 Salak SelatanSide
 SP14 Bandar Tun RazakSide
 SP15   KB04   KT2 Bandar Tasik SelatanIslandConnecting station to KTM Seremban Line and KLIA Transit Line.
 SP16 Sungai BesiSide
 SP17 Bukit JalilSide
 SP18 Sri PetalingSide[9]
 SP19 Awan BesarIsland
 SP20 MuhibbahSide
 SP21 Alam SuteraSide
 SP22 Kinrara BK5Side
 SP23 Kinrara BK3 future stationSideCurrently on hold, the station will be built at a later date.
 SP24 IOI Puchong JayaSide
 SP25 Pusat Bandar PuchongSide
 SP26 Taman Perindustrian PuchongSide
 SP27 Bandar PuteriIsland.
 SP28 Puchong PerdanaSide
 SP29 Puchong PrimaSide
 SP30 Kampung Sri Amanfuture stationIslandCurrently on hold, the station will be built at a later date.
 SP31  KJ37 Putra HeightsTerminalCross-platform interchange to LRT Kelana Jaya Line.

RT Ampang Line stations

Chan Sow Lin is the interchange station between the two lines. The line that runs to Ampang station consists of seven stations running into East of Klang Valley. Starting from July 17, 2016, passengers to Ampang will have disembark and switch trains at Chan Sow Lin station as the main line will serve from Sentul Timur to Putra Heights.

Station NumberStation NamePlatform typeInterchange/Notes
 AG1  SP11 Chan Sow LinIslandInterchange at Platform 2A to  SP31  Putra Heights and Platform 1A to  SP1  Sentul Timur
 AG2 MiharjaSide
 AG3 MaluriSideInterchange to future MRT Sungai Buloh-Kajang Line.
 AG4 Pandan JayaSide
 AG5 Pandan IndahSide
 AG6 CempakaSide
 AG7 CahayaSide
 AG8 AmpangTerminal


LRT1 Extension Project

On 29 August 2006, Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Mohd Najib Abdul Razak announced that the southern end of the Sri Petaling Line, which now ended at Sri Petaling station, would be extended to the suburbs of Puchong and Putra Heights, located to the south-west of Kuala Lumpur. The extension will be part of a 10bil ringgit plan to expand Kuala Lumpur's public transport network.
In September 2009, Syarikat Prasarana Negara began a public viewing for the details of the alignment for the Ampang Line and Kelana Jaya Line at various locations. After a number of amendments and public viewings, the new LRT extension will add 11 new stations and 18.1 km of new track. The Ampang Line Extension Project starts from Sri Petaling Station and passes through Kinrara, Puchong and ends at the new terminus of Putra Heights where the line will meet the Kelana Jaya Line to provide a suburban interchange.[10] Construction works on the Kelana Jaya Line Extension Project and the Ampang Line Extension Project escalated at the end of March 2011, with commencement of structural works, subject to approval from state government and local authorities.[11] Thales Group were selected to provide SelTrac Communications-Based Train Control(CBTC) for the extension.[12]
The first phase of the line extension work, a 7.4 km four-station phase from Sri Petaling to Bandar Kinrara (with four new stations: Awan Besar, Muhibbah, Alam Sutera and Kinrara BK5) opened on 31 October 2015, while the full service on the remaining stations to Putra Heights was commenced on 30 June 2016.[13] The extension project is slated to double the ridership on the Ampang Line system network to more than 400,000 passengers per day

Interchanges

When the STAR-LRT, current name is Ampang Line system network was launched in 1996, the Bandaraya LRT station became the first LRT station to be designated as an interchange station, with a footbridge connecting to the Bank Negara Komuter station, a commuter rail station of Seremban Line & Port Klang Line, a few hundred metres away. With the completion of the Sri Petaling-Chan Sow Lin route, the Bandar Tasik Selatan station was opened as another integrated interchange station for the Seremban Lineservice and KLIA Transit. The line includes interconnectivity with Kelana Jaya LineKLIA TransitKL Monorail services, Sungai Buloh-Kajang MRT Line & Sungai Buloh-Serdang-Putrajaya Line service in the future. With the extension from Sri Petaling LRT Station to Putra Heights LRT Station, there will be an interchange at the Putra Heights station with Kelana Jaya Line, along with the current Masjid Jamek LRT Station on the main line. The system currently has a total of six stations linked to other railway systems.
The Ampang Line system network is the only rail system in the Kuala Lumpur that, though it passes through the city centre, does not stop within or near Kuala Lumpur Sentral. This is because KL Sentral, despite its name, is not in fact in the centre of KL.


Rolling stock

The rolling stock of the Ampang Line currently consists of a fleet of 90 Adtranz standard-gauge light rail vehicle (LRV) manufactured by Walkers Limited of Australia. These trains are electric multiple units (EMU), which draw power from the underside of a third rail alongside the track. All cars in each train are powered. The trains are manned, with driver cabs occupying the ends of the train.
The trainsets come in two configurations. The first and most common variation is the six-car trainset, which consists of three sets of two EMUs (2+2+2) and occupies the maximum platform length of the stations. Each of the two EMU sets at the front and rear consist of one driving car and one trailer car, while the two EMUs between are trailer cars. Each two EMU sets are not connected to other EMU sets in the train. The second variation is a four-car trainset, a more obscure configuration that consists of only two EMU sets (2+2) of one driving car and one trailer car at both ends. These are only two-thirds the length and number of cars of the six-car variation. The 2+2 trainsets were used in full service until the widespread deployment of 2+2+2 trainsets.
Each car has 3 bogies: 2 power bogies and one articulated trailer for the centre bogie. The end cars, numbered 1101 to 1260, have driver cabs. Middle cars numbered 2201 to 2230 have a concealed driver control panel, enabling the car to be moved around the depot independently.
The train interiors are simple and basic. There are no individual seats, only longitudinal bench seating on either side of the train, surfaced in metal, while spaces near the connecting ends of the cars are provided for passengers who use wheelchairs and other assistive devices. There is a large amount of floorspace for standing passengers. The rolling stock has remained relatively unchanged since its introduction in 1996; new trains will be used on the line from October 2015.
50 new trains will be deployed to increase the capacity of the line and provide a better service. Each of the new trains is six cars long[10][15] and provided by CSR Zhuzhou of China, similar to on the design for İzmir Metro and Buenos Aires Underground 200 Series.[14] These trains are disabled-friendly and include safety features like closed-circuit TV, emergency breakable window, emergency ventilation fan, fire and smoke detection system and supervised automatic train operation system (SATO), and other elements such as interactive destination display inside the train, non-slipping seats, LCD infotainment, walk-through gangways, and a more spacious wheelchair space for the physically challenged

The Ampang Line system network fleet consisted of the following models:
  • 29 + 1 (out of service) 6-car Adtranz-Walkers LRV trainsets currently in operation since December 1996, to be gradually phased out and replaced by CSR Zhuzhou LRVtrainsets.
  • 50 6-car CSR Zhuzhou LRV trainsets, given name as AMY, eight trainsets of which have been delivered since January 2015, the balance being still under construction.


Formation

Car No.123456
Seating capacity
Designation
Set Designation123456Arrival DateStatusLaunch Date
AMY 1Jan 10In operation31 October 2015
AMY 2Feb 28In operation31 October 2015
AMY 3Mar 2015In operation31 October 2015
AMY 4Apr 2015In operation31 October 2015
AMY 5May 2015In operation31 October 2015
AMY 6Jun 2015In operation31 October 2015
AMY 7July 2015In operation31 October 2015
AMY 8End July 2015In operation31 October 2015
AMY 9August 2015In operation31 October 2015

History

The system has assumed multiple names throughout its service. Initially known as STAR (MalaySistem Transit Aliran Ringan; English: Light Rail Transit System), the STAR LRTor the STAR Line, the system was renamed in 2005 to refer to system's two service routes: the LRT Sri Petaling Line and LRT Ampang Line. In April 2007, the entire LRT system was renamed the Ampang Line system network as one common line, with no official names given to the service route. With refer to the new opening stations at Ampang Line Extension Project, the service route has been rename again to distinguish its own route.
  • 13 November 1992: Sistem Transit Aliran Ringan Sdn Bhd (Star LRT) incorporated to implement Kuala Lumpur's first LRT project.
  • 22 December 1992: Franchise agreement between the Malaysian government and Star LRT signed for the development, ownership and operation of LRT system.
  • 30 August 1994: Work on the project officially commenced.
  • 16 December 1996: Ampang – Sultan Ismail begins operations.
  • 11 July 1998: Chan Sow Lin – Sri Petaling begins operations. This branch forms part of the Sri Petaling Line.
  • 6 December 1998: PWTC – Sentul Timur begins operations.
  • 1 September 2002: Syarikat Prasarana Negara Berhad (Prasarana) takes over ownership and operations of Star LRT under the first phase of Kuala Lumpur's public transport restructuring exercise. Prasarana renames the system to Starline.
  • November 2004: Operations of Starline transferred to Rapid KL. Ownership of assets remain with Prasarana.
  • 19 July 2005: Rapid KL announces that Starline's two lines will be renamed the LRT Ampang Line and LRT Sri Petaling Line. All signage will be changed by 2006.
  • 28 November 2011: Kelana Jaya Line and Ampang Line system network integrated with a single ticketing system.[citation needed]
  • 31 October 2015: Awan Besar – Kinrara BK5 begins operations on Ampang Line Extension Project (LEP) Phase 1.
  • 31 March 2016: IOI Puchong Jaya – Bandar Puteri
  • 30 June 2016: Puchong Perdana and Puchong Prima officially opened, and terminate at Putra Heights.


Accidents

  • 27 October 2006: A six-coach LRT train which came in from Ampang overshot the end of the elevated tracks at Sentul Timur station, resulting in the front half of the first coach dangling in the air about 25m above the ground.
  • 25 September 2008: Six people injured when a train hits another train near the Bukit Jalil station. It is believed that the first coach suddenly stopped 200 metres from the station before it was rammed by another train on the same track. LRT service was disrupted for the day before resuming the next day.


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