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码头轻轨

码头轻轨 (DLR)
DLR Trains at Queen Elizabeth II station
Overview
Owner Lilypad Rail
Area Served Greater Llanmara
Transit type Light Rail
Number of lines 6
Number of stations 23
Real-Life Inspiration Docklands Light Railway
Colour on map Teal      (#27b0b0)
Service & Operation
Began passenger operation October 2022
Operator(s) Lilypad Rail Docklands Division
Train length 2 vehicles per trainset
Technical
No. of tracks 2 (bidirectional traffic)
Track gauge MTR Mod 3-block standard
Electrification 750V DC Third Rail
Maximum speed 100 km/h
Top operational speed 60-80 km/h
Construction Specifications
Distance between nodes 2-3 blocks
Ballast block (flat section) Smooth Stone
Ballast block (sloped section) Smooth Stone Slab
Sound barrier/support block Stone Bricks
Tunnel wall block Stone Bricks
码头轻轨
Traditional Chinese 碼頭輕軌
Simplified Chinese 码头轻轨
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin mǎ tóu qīng guǐ
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanization máh tàuh hēng gwái
JyutPing maa5 tau4 heng1 gwai2

The Docklands Light Railway (Chinese: 碼頭輕軌, Common Notation: DLR) is a core part of the Lilypad Rail network of services, and provides vital connections to many lines in the Greater Llanmara Region. The line runs as light rail, and in some cases acts as a local to the Metro services' express. The DLR notably features the Central Suburban Loop, with bidirectional travel linking up the major villages in the core of Llanmara City's suburbs.

History

Original Development & Early Operations

Turnham Road was the first station to be built, and such history was showcased with its old-style roundels in the original station design. The line was originally the Llanmara Dockyards Railway, running between Turnham Road and the piers in the Docklands servicing the Llanmara Bay. It was later closed, with the stations at the piers being completely demolished. Turnham Road's counterclockwise platform was demolished, leaving it as a one-way halt. Later, on 17 October 2022, the DLR as we know it today was opened, with trains running between Houton High Street and Hereford Delta. The line continued clockwise to Turnham Road, with a refurbishment of the station taking place and the reinstatement of the clockwise platform. The line was soon extended to a terminus at “Baker's Pit” station, which lay in the Winbeck tunnel between the loop and Winbeck. Baker's Pit saw low ridership and was placed incredibly inconveniently. It only caused clogs as four-car trains spilt out into a node section which backed up trains at Winbeck. Unceremoniously, on 22 October, Baker's Pit was closed shortly after the extension to Winbeck was complete. On the same day, the line extended up to Saint Ann's at a temporary structure that would later be overhauled.

Initial System

On 24 October 2022, the DLR met the Riverside Line at new platforms at Winbeck, although these platforms would prove to be woefully underprepared for the capacity needed at the major interchange. The line continued on an extension towards Boulton-on-Mesa to meet with the Metro Azalea Line. However, due to miscommunications between the Azalea Line contractors and DLR contractors, Boulton-on-Mesa ended up with the DLR north of the Azalea Line platforms, when it should have been the other way around. To solve this, the DLR flew on a viaduct due west while the Azalea Line snuck underneath at-grade. Queen Elizabeth II station added a small ferry dock on the 24th as well to compensate for Ferry services to Lonely Tree Island.

By the 25th, the DLR had extended all the way to Kirkenkessie Bank on the western end of the network and a temporary alighting structure at Waterloo Gate on the eastern end, with three routes, known as “City,” “Clockwise,” and “Anticlockwise.” The former ran from Winbeck to Waterloo Gate on 2-car trains, and the latter two ran from Kirkenkessie Bank to the loop, splitting to run their separate directions via High Street/Turnham Road. The former would later evolve into DLR Route B1, and the latter into A1 and A2. At this time, however, Waterloo Gate was known as Old Town Gateway.

Lower Islands Expansion

On 27 October 2022, the DLR branch to Hampton Terrace & Peakwell was opened. However, this line was known to be volatile. Trains often broke down, and crowded trains often had trouble climbing the slope up to Peakwell. On 30 October 2022, the DLR lost its unidirectional interchange with the Azalea Line at Dencradle, with the transfers now being concentrated at Boulton-on-Mesa and Kirkenkessie. After 1 Nov., Kirkenkessie and Boulton were interchanging with the Metro Victory line, meaning that the Llanmara Bay Tunnel had opened to link the Victory Line and Azalea Line into a single continuous line.

On 16 November 2022, the DLR took over ex-Riverside line services to Hampton West, routing a loop from Hampton West to Winbeck and back via Peakwell & Hampton Terrace. But only a few days later, trouble struck. The 18-20 November incident is infamous for being the moment in which the DLR experienced its first-ever complete gridlock jam. Wilds Railway experts were commissioned to help locate the issue with the jam, and it was found to be a signaling issue in the Chambers-High Streets interlocking in conjunction with a testing siding near the Winbeck North Tunnel Portal. Around this time, the modern route numbering system was introduced.

Connection-based Latter Expansions

Prior to the renovation of Saint Devota, the DLR operated a shuttle between Saint Devota and Waterloo Gate between November 2022 and January 2023. In late November 2022, the DLR also opened a shuttle between Meilan and Financial Centre.

Initial Overhauls

On 8 December 2022, Saint Ann's finally received its overdue permanent structure for the DLR. Shortly after, On 11 December 2022, the Winbeck Capacity Study was completed, and the following day, construction commenced. The original structure at Winbeck was originally built with the inspiration of Salford Crescent in the UK, however, it became an amalgamation of its former self when the mainline platforms were added. The station was woefully underprepared for the traffic, and the sloped and sharply-curved junction proved to be a major bottleneck for the entire network. So, a new station and junction was created to solve these issues based on the Winbeck Capacity Study's findings. The new station was now based on Mudchute and Limehouse stations in the UK, with dedicated flyovers to separate terminating and through DLR traffic. Later down the line, platforms were straightened out to prepare for the Northern Mainline and its reference to Limehouse was largely lost.

Major Overhauls

The DLR sat sturdy and free-flowing until 19 February 2023, when the entire network was suspended for major renovations across the entire network. Turnham Road was completely reconstructed to allow for full 4-car trains on all platforms, including a new lower-level platform for C1 and C2. D1 was eliminated and replaced by a lease to Electrostar Rail to run services down to Hampton West from Winbeck. Route C1 was severely adjusted, instead running to a new station at the foot of Peakwell with a cable car a la Wellington Cable Car running to the peak. Hampton Terrace was given a second platform for bidirectional travel, and C1 was extended to Southampton with a direct cross-platform transfer to Tempest and North Tundra-bound Metro Marble Line trains. The forever planned route F1 was redesignated to route C2 (the C designation was reassigned from Hampton Terrace origination to Turnham Road Lower level origination), and the plan was cut back from an orbital to a linear route from Turnham Road to Hixton Town via Llanmara Iceland. Many stations along the line are also receiving renovations. As of 28 February 2023, the DLR construction works were still going on. Routes A1 and A2 were still suspended and C2 was only running as far as Iceland. C1 and B1 were still in operation, but B2 had yet to come back into service since the Saint Devota Renovations. High Street and Chambers Street as well have recently received overhauls as a part of the construction works.

On 3 March 2023, Boulton-on-Mesa received major overhauls to reduce congestion on the old flyover. Victory trains are now on the northern end of the station instead of the southern end, and the station has a new canopy and flooring. A1 and A2 came back into service on the same day.

On 12 June 2023, route C2 was finally extended to Hixton Town.

On 4 July 2023, Waterloo Gate and City Northshore were unceremoniously closed as a part of the Saint Ann's Reconstruction Project. Neither received a farewell ceremony. There were left no more remnants of City Northshore station, and only the station structure itself stood at Waterloo Gate with none of the station's original facilities and amenities left standing. Route B1 was suspended as a part of the construction.

On 1 October 2023, service was reinstated on B1 as far as Saint Ann's along with the station's soft reopening.

On 27 January 2024, DLR Route D1 was reinstated, albeit running on a completely different alignment from the original route via Hampton West. The route runs from Winbeck's terminating platform out to the newly refurbished and stations for connections to the Northern Line and Victory Line respectively. It is the only line to use the specially branded blue Docklands livery.1)

On 23 July 2024, however, DLR Route D1 was once again suspended. It was subsumed by Route B1 which was extended to Docklands North via D1 from Winbeck. This change was made in accordance with the new DLR platforms that were opened in Saint Ann's on the same day.

The Mainline Connection Integration Plan

The DLR released a plan on 2 April 2023 which aimed to connect the new stations along the Northern Mainline for Electrostar Rail with the DLR stations of similar name. On 11 April 2023, DLR Route F1 opened between Kirkenkessie Bank and Mt. Dencradle. It ran to Kirkenkessie Bank until the construction works at Dencradle were complete, where it was shortened to a new bay platform at the station.

On 7 August 2023, DLR Route F1 was closed and absorbed into DLR Route E1, running from Financial Centre to Dencradle via a new tunnel between Mt. Dencradle and Meilan. The absorption meant that E1 trains had to shorten from 6 car/3 unit sets to 4 car/2 unit sets as per the rest of the DLR network. This makes Meilan and Financial Centre the only stations to have DLR platforms built longer than 4 car/2 unit sets.

On 18 January 2024, DLR Route A3 began operation from the new terminal at Faarverness Island out to Southampton, being the first route to use the track connection direct from Winbeck to Peakwell since the junction was rebuilt.

System Operations

The DLR currently serves 28 stations across the centre of Greater Llanmara. There are five branches in addition to the Central Suburban Loop: to the City to the north, to the Lower Islands and Southampton in the south, to Kirkenkessie to the west, to Hixton Town in the east, and to Financial Centre in the southwest to the east. Between High Street and Faarverness Jungle, the DLR runs vaguely parallel to the Victory Line. Between Boulton-on-Mesa and Kirkenkessie Bank, the DLR runs directly parallel to the Victory Line.

Service Patterns
Termini Route Calling at
Kirkenkessie Bank – Clockwise Loop A1 Kirkenkessie Bank, Dencradle, Boulton-on-Mesa, Faarverness Jungle, Queen Elizabeth II, Upper Milford, Winbeck, High Street, Chambers Street, Hereford Delta, Turnham Road, Winbeck, (Winbeck → Kirkenkessie Bank)
Kirkenkessie Bank – Anticlockwise Loop A2 Kirkenkessie Bank, Dencradle, Boulton-on-Mesa, Faarverness Jungle, Queen Elizabeth II, Upper Milford, Winbeck, Turnham Road, Hereford Delta, Chambers Street, High Street, Winbeck, (Winbeck → Kirkenkessie Bank)
Faarverness Island – Southampton A3 Faarverness Island, Faarverness Jungle, Queen Elizabeth II, Upper Milford, Winbeck, Peakwell, Hampton Terrace, Southampton
Docklands North – Saint Ann's B1 Docklands North, Docklands South, Winbeck, High Street, Saint Ann's
Southampton – Turnham Road C1 Southampton, Hampton Terrace, Peakwell, High Street, Chambers Street, Turnham Road
Hixton Town – Turnham Road C2 Hixton Town , Iceland, Walford Pass, Denmark Hill, High Stratham, Chambers Street, Hereford Delta, Turnham Road
Financial Centre – Dencradle E1 Dencradle, Mt. Dencradle, Meilan, Financial Centre
1)
From a lore perspective, it is assumed that these stations and the Docklands area were left abandoned after the Llanmara Docklands Railway closed. However, from a real life timeline perspective, the Docklands area was constructed as apart of the Northern Line proposal, which brought the Victory Line out of the old Llanmara Bay Tunnel and across a new viaduct atop the old right of way