Cairo Metro Line 1 is the first line of the Cairo Metro in Cairo, Egypt. It is the first metro system in Africa and the Middle East.[9] It was constructed in 1987 and connects Helwan with El Marg, stopping at 35 stations. Line 1, sometimes called the French-built line or simply the French line has a total length of 44.3 kilometres (27.5 mi) with 4.7 kilometres (2.9 mi) of it being underground[2] and has trains that run with 3 units (9 cars), which have a frequency of 2.5 minutes and a maximum speed of 100 km/h (62 mph).[10] The line can carry 60,000 passengers per hour in each direction.[11]
Costs
The Construction of the project started in 1982 after the French government agreed on giving Egypt the necessary loan. The first New Marg - Helwan line costs 1107 million Francs which were converted into Egyptian currency and divided into multiple stages.[12] The total cost of the first stage from Helwan to Ramsis is E£473.9 million divided into the following:
E£397 million for the tunnel between Saiyeda Senab and Ramsis with a length of 4.7 kilometres (2.9 mi) .[12]
E£74.5 million for the movement of 60 km different structures and the improvement of the older railways.[13]
E£2.4 million for the creation of a station in Dar El Salam.[13]
The second stage coasted in total E£499.6 million and connected the (Laymoun Bridge-Marg) railway with the metro.[13] Additional costs were made available as requested by the ministry of transportation:
E£172.8 million for completing the (Ramsis-Marg) lane.[13]
E£280 million for the third stage of the (Helwan-Marg) lane.[13]
E£400 million for the (Shubra el Kheima-Ramsis-El Tahrir) lane[13]
E£2 million for the preparation study of the second lane Imbaba-El Darasa[13]
Construction
The construction of the Helwan-El Marg line was in two stages.
The first stage was from Helwan to Sayeda Zenab and included a tunnel from Helwan to Ramses Square.
First the line from Helwan to Sayeda Zenab, which is 24 kilometres (15 mi) long had the following construction works:
The isolation of the existing railways and the construction of 9 car bridges and 21 people bridges.[14]
The production of 882 kilometres (548 mi) of cables which satisfy the needs of the rail way from Helwan to Sayeda Zenab.[15]
Second the line from Helwan to Ramses Square, which would be a subterranean and is 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) long. It includes five subterranean stations after the Sayeda Zenab station:
In 1987 the line from Helwan to Ramses Square was finished and opened for the public.[16] It had a total length of 28.5 kilometres (17.7 mi).
The second stage of the Helwan El Marg line included the construction of a line from Ramses Square to El marg, which would be 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) long.[16] The operation of the line was aimed for 1988,[16] but due to some difficulties it started operation in 1989.[10]
The second stage included also:
The conversion of the Marg line to an electric line.[16]
The acquisition of 48 new units, which would make 100 units available for operation.[16]
The improvement of a workstation to provide maintenance works for 204 Units.[16]
The construction of a 220 kilo-Volt power generator, to provide electricity for the future lines.[16]
Connections
To other Metro lines
Line 1 connects to Line 2 at Al-Shohadaa and Sadat stations and with Line 3 at Nasser station.
A new train driving simulator integrated in Cairo Metro's training center dedicated for Line 1 drivers, which was provided by Transurb Technirail that won the international tender issued by Cairo Metro in December 2011.[18]
Transurb Technirail will provide Cairo Metro with a driving simulator and a computer-assisted learning area to train Line 1 drivers, improving their driving skills and to train them on the elementary functions of the rolling stock and on how to handle malfunctions.[18]
^"First Line Working". Cairo Metro The Egyptian Co. for Metro Management and Operation. Archived from the original on 3 May 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2014.