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Online Extra:
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The Thalys
high-speed train
(parked here at
the Cologne train
station in
Germany) zips
passengers
between
Brussels and
Paris in an hour
and 25 minutes.
Photograph
courtesy of the
Rail Europe
Group |
| High-Speed Train Links | Related Reading |
In the July/August issue we poll a panel of rail experts to
bring you ten of the very best rail trips. Online: how
high-speed trains are providing new, and sometimes
faster, ways to travel.
Not all trains are leisurely paced and reminiscent of the past. Some
are fast and futuristic, streaking across the countryside at up to
187 miles (300 kilometers) an hour and giving some airplanes a run
for their money.
The sleek red Thalys, www.thalys.com, zooms between Brussels
and Paris in an hour and 25 minutes. The Eurostar,
www.eurostar.com, zips from downtown London to downtown Paris
in just three hours by way of the Channel Tunnel?about as long as
taking a plane and making ground connection, with less fuss. Since
Eurostar’s inauguration in 1994, overall traffic between the two
capitals has doubled, with 60 percent of travelers choosing
high-speed rail over flying.
“You can have breakfast in your hotel in Paris and say, ‘Oh, let’s go to London for the day,’” says Nanci Adler of Carlsbad,
California, who found the Eurostar a relaxing alternative to flying
while on vacation last November. “You just sit there, drinking wine,
eating lunch, and seeing all the little villages go by.”
High-speed rail networks that link major European cities and
airports may eventually relieve congested air routes and roadways.
Classic high-speed trains, such as France’s TGV,
www.sncf.com/indexe.htm, require special tracks and flat, straight
railbeds.
More nimble?and almost as fast?tilting trains, such as Italy’s
Pendolino (“little pendulum”), www.fs-on-
line.com/eng/treninavi/treni.htm, can handle sinuous routes on
existing, but upgraded, tracks. Two new lines will link Madrid to
Barcelona and Paris to Frankfurt by 2005. Plans for another route
call for burrowing a tunnel through the Pyrenees to connect
Montpelier in the south of France to Barcelona by the end of 2005.
Since fares are often competitive with air travel, high-speed trains
are catching on worldwide. Besides Japan, whose bullet train
started rolling 35 years ago, Australia, China, and Taiwan are
considering fast train routes, and South Korea is planning to
launch its first in 2001. In the United States, Amtrak hopes to
launch its 150-mile-an-hour (241-kilometer-an-hour) Acela from
Boston to New York to Washington, D.C., this year.
?Robin Terry
Robin Terry is a researcher for a TRAVELER sister
publication, WORLD.
Post your opinion: Should taxes be used to expand U.S. train
service?
International Union of Railways
www.uic.asso.fr
Includes sections on rail news and statistics, plus links to
high-speed rails and European timetables
Rail Europe
www.raileurope.com
An extensive site that includes rail-pass links, business travel
services, rail history, rail-related products, and vacation planners
The Information Train Station?High Speed Trains and
Monorails
www.railroadinfo.com/links/links-highspeed.html
Includes links to international and domestic rail companies and
associations, virtual tours, and travel guides
High Speed Trains by Chelsea House Publishing Staff (Chelsea
House Publishers, 1999, U.S. $21.95)
Ultimate Train by Peter Herring (DK Publishing, Inc., 2000, U.S. $24