Heletz railway

The Heletz Railway (Hebrew: מסילת חלץ, Mesilat Heletz) is a 20 km railway in southern Israel which connects the Railway to Beersheba from a point just south of Kiryat Gat to the Lod–Ashkelon railway near moshav Mavki'im. The track passes close to moshav Heletz, from which it derives its name.

Lone JT42CW freight locomotive on the Heletz Railway near Sde David.

History

The railway was constructed by Israel Railways in the early 1980s, to provide a shortcut for freight trains from southern Israel headed for the Port of Ashdod. Previously, such trains had to be routed through the Lod Railway Station in central Israel. The railway was once used for some limited passenger service, though today it is used by passenger trains only on an emergency basis—in instances when the Lod – Kiryat Gat section of the Railway to Beersheba is blocked.

Development

The Ashkelon-Beersheba railway which opened in 2015 to the south of the Heletz railway provides an alternate rail connection between the Railway to Beersheba and the Lod-Ashkelon railway.

Israel Railways has proposed a plan to extend the Heletz railway from Kiryat Gat to Tarqumiyah in the future as a means of providing a rail connection between the Gaza Strip and the southern West Bank.

gollark: See, if everyone stopped using them ever and they were erased from everyone's mind, they would be gone!
gollark: Suuuure you do.
gollark: And yet they mention them rather a lot.
gollark: The Wordoidal Olfactory Epithelium %wheel #43584572/*APPROPRIATE PLASTICITY* has had basically zero successes with actively replacing gollarkian memetics.
gollark: Again, I apparently can't actually replace them.
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