Peak Tram

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The Peak Tram approaching the upper terminus
The Peak Tram approaching the upper terminus

The Peak Tramway (Traditional Chinese: 山頂纜車) is a funicular railway in Hong Kong, which carries both tourists and residents to the upper levels of Hong Kong Island. Running from Central district to Victoria Peak via the Mid-Levels, it provides the most direct route and offers good views over the harbour and skyscrapers of Hong Kong.

The Peak Tram is owned and operated by the Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels group (HSH), the owner of Hong Kong's famous Peninsular Hotel along with many other properties. The line, along with HSH's Peak Tower leisure complex at the line's summit, is promoted using the brand The Peak.[1][2]

Contents

Sign to Kennedy Road Station
Sign to Kennedy Road Station
The line near Barker Road intermediate station
The line near Barker Road intermediate station

The Peak Tram's route from Central district to Victoria Peak covers a distance of about 1.4 kilometres and a height difference of just under 400 metres. The line has two pronounced curves, one to the left immediately after leaving the lower terminus, and the other to the right in the upper half of the ascent. The gradient also varies considerably throughout the ascent.

The lower terminus station is located on Garden Road near St. John's Cathedral. The original station was incorporated into St. John's Building, an office tower, with the tram terminus at the ground level. The station comprises a single track, with platforms on both sides. One platform is used for boarding, the other for exiting the tram.

The upper terminus is located below the Peak Tower shopping and leisure complex at Victoria Gap, some 150 metres below the summit of Victoria Peak. The station has the same arrangement of boarding and alighting platforms as the lower terminus. The haulage and control equipment for the funicular is located in a basement below the station.

There are also four intermediate stations, each of which consist of a single stepped platform and a shelter:

The Peak Tram was opened for public service on May 30, 1888, by the then Governor Sir George William des Voeux. As built, the line used a static steam engine to power the haulage cable. It was at first used only for residents of Victoria Peak, although despite this it carried 800 passengers on its first day of operation, and about 150,000 in its first year. These passengers were carried in the line's wooden bodied cars.[3]

In 1926 the steam engine was replaced by an electric motor. On December 11, 1941, during the Battle of Hong Kong, the engine room was damaged in an attack. Service was not resumed until December 25, 1945, after the end of the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong.[3]

In 1956 the Peak Tram was equipped with a new generation of lightweight metal bodied cars, each of which seated 62-seat passengers. Unusually for a funicular line, three such cars were provided, only two of which were in use at any one time. The third spare car was kept in a car shed near Kennedy Road station.[3]

In 1989 the system was comprehensively rebuilt by the Swiss company Von Roll, with new track, a computerized control system and two new two-car trams with a capacity of 120 passengers per tram. Today, more than 4 million people ride the Peak Tram annually, or an average of over 11,000 every day.[3]

View from an ascending car
View from an ascending car
A Peak Tram bridge over Kennedy Road.
A Peak Tram bridge over Kennedy Road.

The line has the following technical parameters:[4]

  • Length: 1364 metres
  • Height: 368 metres
  • Maximum Steepness: 48%
  • Cars: 2 2-car train sets
  • Capacity: 120 passengers per train set
  • Configuration: Single track with passing loop
  • Journey time: 4.9 minutes
  • Maximum speed: 6 metres per second
  • Track gauge: 5 foot (1.52 metres)
  • Traction: Electricity

  1. ^ The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels - Peak Tramways. The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels, Limited. Retrieved on March 13, 2007.
  2. ^ The Peak. The Peak. Retrieved on March 13, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d Peak Tram History. The Peak Hong Kong. Retrieved on March 13, 2007.
  4. ^ Peak Tramway. Funiculars.net. Retrieved on March 13, 2007.

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