2004 in rail transport

Events

January events

February events

March events

April events

May events

June events

Hiawatha Line
  • June – the 150th anniversary of the Grand Excursion is commemorated with special runs by Milwaukee Road 261 and Canadian Pacific 2816 along the northern Mississippi River.
  • June – Caltrain finishes their two-year-long CTX project, which included strengthing the tracks between San Francisco and San Jose and introducing an all new CTC system. This project allowed for the start of Baby Bullet express service and the resumption of weekend service on the route.
  • June 7 – The high speed Gautrain between Johannesburg and Pretoria, South Africa is announced; it is expected to open in 2009.
  • June 23 – Madrid Metro orders 698 new subway cars valued at €1 billion; the order is shared by Bombardier and Siemens.
  • June 25 The Causeway Street Elevated streetcar line in Boston is closed.
  • June 26
    • The Hiawatha Line light rail service in Minneapolis, Minnesota opens to the public.
    • An AVE Class 102 train reaches a new speed record of 365 km/h (227 mph) during type approval test runs.[4]
  • June 30 – In Ireland the first stage of Dublin's LUAS light rail system opens, the "Green Line" from Sandyford to St. Stephen's Green in the city centre. The route follows the old Harcourt Street railway line for the most part.

July events

  • July 14 – Canadian National Railway completes its purchase of BC Rail.
  • July 15 – Dennis H. Miller is promoted to president of the Iowa Interstate Railroad.
  • July 25 – Thieves steal two brass handles and four copper pipes from the Fairy Queen steam locomotive in New Delhi, India.
  • July 28 Phase 1 of Wuhan Metro's Line 1 connecting Huangpulu Station to Zongguan Station opens.
  • July 29 – The Dublin to Rosslare Europort route becomes the first in the Irish Republic to have locomotive hauled trains completely replaced by diesel railcars.

August events

September events

October events

  • October – General Motors Electro-Motive Division introduces the EMD SD70M-2.
  • October – Amtrak opens a new maintenance facility in Oakland, California.
  • October 3 – The Southwestern Railroad leases the Carlsbad Subdivision (183 miles of track between Clovis and Carlsbad, New Mexico) from the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway.
  • October 6 – Aonami Line, Nagoya to Kinjō-futō route start in Aichi Prefecture.
  • October 14 – The Canadian Transportation Safety Board issues its final report on the CN accident of May 2, 2002; the report blames the truck driver's fatigue as the cause of the accident and admonishes fire crews for less-than-optimal training in hazardous materials.
  • October 15 – Canadian National Railway announces that it is selling its locomotive remote control business unit (which produced the Beltpack control system) to Cattron Group, Inc., so the railroad can focus on operations.
  • October 18 – Rocky Mountain Railtours officially changes its name to Rocky Mountaineer Vacations.
  • October 21 – The first railroad conductors graduate from British Columbia Institute of Technology's 32-week course.
  • October 22 – Canadian National Railway (CN) announces that it will open shipping offices in Shanghai and Beijing; the office will advertise CN's shipping abilities to North American destinations, especially on the Pacific coast.
  • October 27 – The North American rail labor union Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees votes to merge with the Teamsters.
  • October 29 - The Manila Line 2 commenced full commercial operations by opening the remaining segment from Legarda Station up to Recto Station.

November events

  • November 1 – Amtrak discontinues the Palmetto south of Savannah, Georgia, replacing rail service to several towns in western Central Florida with Thruway Motorcoach bus service. The Pennsylvanian west of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania is also discontinued, with the rest merged into the Keystone Service and Three Rivers lines.
  • November 3 – Progressive Rail leases former Wisconsin Central Railway track in northern Wisconsin and begins operations on the line under its subsidiary railroad, Wisconsin Northern Railroad.
  • November 8 – Canadian National, Canadian Pacific and Norfolk Southern announce an operating agreement to speed shipments between eastern Canada and the eastern United States.
  • November 20 - NoMa-Gallaudet University Station (formerly New York Avenue-Florida Avenue-Gallaudet University), the first "in-fill" station to be built between two existing stations, is opened on the Washington D.C. Metro Red Line.
  • November 23 – The new Wisconsin Northern Railroad begins operations on leased Union Pacific Railroad (formerly Chicago and North Western Railway) and Canadian National Railway (formerly Wisconsin Central) tracks.

December events

  • December 4 – Second phase of the Hiawatha Line opens, connecting Minneapolis, Minnesota to MSP Airport and the Mall of America in Bloomington
  • December 12
    • SNCF disallows smoking on all French TGV trains.
    • Swiss Federal Railways begins the first phase of implementing its Rail2000 plan to improve service.
  • December 13 – Bombardier president Paul Tellier announces his retirement.
  • December 17 – The last X'Trapolis train enters service with Connex in Melbourne, Australia.
  • December 18 - The WMATA Blue Line is extended from Addison Road-Seat Pleasant to Largo Town Center in Lake Arbor, Maryland. The extension, totaling 3.2 miles (5.2 km) adding the Morgan Boulevard and Largo Town Center Stations, is the first WMATA project to go beyond the Interstate 495 (Capital Beltway) in Prince George's County.
  • December 21
    • Siemens receives an order to build 60 new ICE trainsets for service between Moscow and Saint Petersburg, Russia; the new equipment is expected to enter service in 2007.
    • KCR Ma On Shan Rail opens in Hong Kong.
  • December 28 – Shenzhen Metro begins operation in Shenzhen, China.

Unknown date events

Accidents

  • February 6 – February 2004 Moscow metro bombing – A male suicide bomber killed 41 people near Avtozavodskaya subway station on the Zamoskvoretskaya Line in Moscow.
  • February 15 – The Tebay rail accident occurred when four railway workers working on the West Coast Main Line were killed by a runaway wagon near Tebay, Cumbria, England.
  • February 18 – Nishapur train disaster: A train carrying a convoy of petrol, fertiliser, and sulfur derails and explodes in Iran, killing 320 people.
  • April 22 – In the Ryongchon disaster, a flammable cargo explodes at the railway station in the town of Ryongchŏn, North Korea, near the border with China; the explosion occurs only a few hours after North Korean leader Kim Jong-il passed through the station en route back to the capital from a secret meeting in China.
  • May 31 – A fire erupts in one of the Seattle Center Monorail trains; of the 150 passengers aboard at the time, only 5 required treatment for minor injuries and no deaths occurred.
  • June 17 – The Karanjadi train crash was the accidental derailment of a passenger train at Karanjadi, a village in Maharashtra, India, on June 17, 2004. 20 people were killed and well over 100 injured in the crash, which was the result of heavy monsoon rains.
  • October 23 – The Chūetsu earthquake, 6.8 magnitude, in Japan causes the first derailment of a Shinkansen train; the train was traveling 200 km/h (125 mph) on the Tokyo-Niigata line, but no fatalities were reported.
  • November 6 – Seven people die in the Ufton Nervet rail crash in Berkshire, England.
  • November 16 – The northbound high speed tilt train Spirit of Townsville from Brisbane, bound for Cairns, failed to slow down for a sharp 60 km/h curve at Berajondo, Queensland, Australia, derailing the train; although seven of the train's passenger cars and the leading power car left the tracks, remarkably there were no fatalities. See Cairns Tilt Train derailment, High-speed train derailment in central Queensland.
  • December 26 – Approximately 1700 are killed in the Queen of the Sea train disaster, the world's worst rail disaster to date as the Sri Lankan train is overwhelmed by a tsunami created by the Indian Ocean earthquake.

Deaths

August deaths

September deaths

  • September 1 Alastair Morton, chief executive of Eurotunnel 1987-1996, chairman of Strategic Rail Authority 1999-2001, dies (b. 1938).
  • September 2 – Robert R. Dowty, construction foreman for the replica Jupiter and 119 steam locomotives at the Golden Spike National Historic Site at Promontory, Utah (b. 1923).
  • September 5 – Nelson W. Bowers, president of the National Railway Historical Society (1983–1987); (b. 1931).
  • September 6 – W. H. Krome George, director of Norfolk Southern 1979–1990 (b, 1918).

November deaths

  • November 22 – Edward Blossom, trolley and interurban streetcar restorationist, founder of Dushore Car Company (b. 1930).

December deaths

Industry awards

Japan

Awards presented by Japan Railfan Club

North America

2004 E. H. Harriman Awards
GroupGold medalSilver medalBronze medal
ANorfolk Southern RailwayBNSF RailwayUnion Pacific Railroad
BMetraSoo Line RailroadIllinois Central Railroad
CGuilford Rail SystemWheeling and Lake Erie RailroadProvidence and Worcester Railroad
S&TTerminal Railroad Association of St. LouisConrailAlton and Southern Railway
Awards presented by Railway Age magazine

United Kingdom

Train Operator of the Year
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References

  1. "Testing takes train into Laos". Railway Gazette International. July 7, 2008.
  2. (in Chinese) Official site Archived January 29, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  3. Tramways & Urban Transit, June 2004, p. 229.
  4. "Un AVE con vagones fabricados en Valladolid bate el récord de velocidad en España, 404 km/h". El Norte Castilla (in Spanish). October 6, 2006. Archived from the original on November 11, 2009.
  5. "Eurostar unveils new rail alliance with European high-speed train operators, Thalys and Deutsche Bahn's ICE" (Press release). Eurostar. May 4, 2005. Archived from the original on November 10, 2006. Retrieved November 6, 2006.
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