Szybka Kolej Miejska (Warsaw)

Transit system in Warsaw, Poland
4 ft 8+12 in) standard gaugeElectrification3 kV DC
System map

S4 S40 Piaseczno
Nowa Iwiczna
Warszawa Jeziorki
Warszawa Dawidy
Warszawa Okęcie
S3 Warsaw Chopin Airport
Pruszków S1
Warszawa Służewiec
Piastów
Warszawa Żwirki i Wigury
Warszawa Ursus-Niedźwiadek
Warszawa Rakowiec
Warszawa Ursus
S2 Warszawa Aleje Jerozolimskie
Warszawa Włochy
Warszawa Zachodnia
S40 Warszawa Główna
Warszawa Wola
Warszawa Ochota
Warszawa Młynów
Warszawa Centralna
Warszawa Koło
Warszawa Śródmieście
Warszawa Powązki
Warszawa Powiśle
Warszawa Gdańska
Vistula
Warszawa Stadion
Warszawa ZOO
Warszawa Wschodnia
Warszawa Praga
Warszawa Toruńska
Warszawa Rembertów
Warszawa Żerań
Warszawa Wesoła
Warszawa Płudy
Warszawa Wola Grzybowska
Warszawa Choszczówka
Sulejówek
Legionowo
S2 Sulejówek Miłosna
Legionowo Piaski
Warszawa Olszynka Grochowska
Michałów Reginów
Warszawa Gocławek
Wieliszew S4 S3 (B service)
Warszawa Wawer
Nieporęt
Warszawa Anin
Dąbkowizna
Warszawa Międzylesie
Radzymin S3 (A service)
Warszawa Miedzeszyn
Warszawa Falenica
Michalin
Józefów
Świder
S1 Otwock
Legend
Out-of-station interchange
This diagram:
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Szybka Kolej Miejska[2] (SKM; which translates as 'Rapid Urban Rail') is a mixed rapid transit and commuter rail system in the Warsaw metropolitan area, operated by the city owned company Szybka Kolej Miejska Sp. z o.o. under the management of Public Transport Authority in Warsaw on shared, general railway lines managed by the PKP Polskie Linie Kolejowe.

History

The earliest attempts to implement an electrified suburban rail system in Warsaw were made in 1936–37, when the Warsaw Railway Junction and surrounding railway lines were electrified to the national standard of 3 kV DC and high platform electric multiple units were introduced (which later came to be designated PKP class EW51).

After World War II, newer EW53, EW54 and EW55 high-platform EMUs were introduced. In 1963, Warszawa Śródmieście railway station was rebuilt into its current form as an underground city station in the city center and in 1967 the Warsaw Cross-City Line was doubled to four tracks to enable separation of suburban and long-distance trains in preparation for the opening of Warszawa Centralna railway station in 1975. The system went into steep decline from the late-1970s due to the country's serious economic problems and the martial law period. These problems persisted well into the 1990s and 2000s as the fall of communism and the country's transition to a market economy made owning private cars more affordable to the general population and as a side effect of decentralization local authorities preferred to invest in infrastructure used directly by their constituencies.

The Warsaw SKM in its current form was proposed in late-2002, stipulating to use the existing infrastructure of the Warsaw Railway Junction, especially the cross city line with its over 2 km long tunnel running under the city center and conveniently located underground station, as a cheap substitute for a badly needed second metro line whose construction did not start until 2010.

Newag 14WE EMUs in the original blue and orange livery and present-day yellow and red of Warsaw public transit
One of the stations - Warszawa Stadion
Train on S9 line

In order to implement this the then-Mayor of Warsaw Lech Kaczyński established in 2004 the municipally-owned company Szybka Kolej Miejska Sp. z o.o. The company was originally incorporated as a joint venture between the City of Warsaw with 50% shares and the companies Metro Warszawskie Sp. z o.o. with 49% shares and Tramwaje Warszawskie Sp. z. o.o. with 1% shares, both owned entirely by the city and responsible respectively for the Metro and Tram system. As such the company is notably completely independent from the national rail operator PKP Group, unlike Koleje Mazowieckie established by the Masovian Voivodeship at around the same time.

The newly formed company was equipped with six Newag 14WE EMUs which were an extensive modernization of the PKP class EN57 EMUs commonly used on regional routes at the time, with a modern looking body but retaining their original underframes.

A year and a half after being established the SKM initiated its operation with its first trains, opening a single line from Warszawa Zachodnia along the cross city line to Warszawa Wschodnia and along the Vistula river to Warszawa Falenica. The new service failed to deliver on its promise to serve as a viable replacement due to the poor state of the rail infrastructure. Passengers within the city center preferred the more accessible trams system and few people wanted to use the trains in the southeastern districts of the city. Additionally, while the integrated fare system of the Warsaw Transit Authority offered a large convenience the modern look and relative cleanness of the rolling stock sharply contrasted with the standard found in the Polish railroad; during rush hours most of the slots on the tracks were taken up by regional traffic and the new EMUs suffered from the same technical problems as the ones they were based on.

Due to the initial low popularity of the line the original concept was somewhat altered in 2006 with the line extended outside the administrative borders of the city through the Ursus district into the town of Pruszków to the west and diverted to the district of the Wesoła and the town of Sulejówek to the east, turning the service into a suburban commuter network which allowed people in the metropolitan area to quickly reach the city center and conveniently transfer within the city's public transit system. The revised formula proved to be very successful leading the city to take the purchase of all the shares of the company and purchase two more Newag 14WE EMUs. The popularity of trains run the SKM was also instrumental in the city negotiating a deal with the Masovian Voivodeship to have Koleje Mazowieckie honor long term tickets of the Warsaw Transit Authority, first along the route of the SKM and eventually within the entire area served by the city's public transit system.

In 2010 the company purchased four brand new Newag 19WE EMUs and opened a new line to the town of Otwock. Additionally, the Warsaw Transit Authority signed a contract with the Koleje Mazowieckie to operate a line between Warszawa Gdańska station on the Warsaw Circumferential Line and the town of Legionowo under the branding of the SKM, and since 2012 taken over by the company.

In 2011 13 new Pesa Elf 27WE EMUs (2011–2012) were purchased. In 2012 a new airport rail link was created running through the Służewiec office district and a newly opened 1.5 km rail tunnel to Warsaw Chopin Airport.

In 2012 the company purchased 9 six car Newag Impuls 35WE units.[3]

In 2020 SKM has awarded Newag a contract to supply an additional 21 Impuls 2 EMUs, 6 four car versions and 15 with five cars each. The trains feature air-conditioning, a passenger information system, ticket vending machines and validators, Wi-Fi, USB sockets and an AED defibrillator.[4]

In January 2022 Newag has delivered the first two Impuls 2 EMUs [5]

In June 2023, the S4 line was extended to Zegrze Południowe, with two new stations: Wieliszew Centrum and Zegrze Południowe. (note: the Wieliszew Centrum station was not yet completed as of the extension's opening, but was completed later on)

Rolling stock

Image Type Number Description
Newag 14WE 2 units Introduced in 2005. The first six units were purchased with the creation of the company. Rebuilt from old PKP class EN57 and extensively modernized giving them a modern look and making them more suitable for carrying large numbers of passengers on shorter routes within the Warsaw metropolitan area. Two units out of eight originally ordered have been sold to Koleje Śląskie. As of 2022, SKM Warszawa operates only 2 14WE units in the fleet however, they have not run any regular service since June 2022 and are used for substitute services when regular trains break down.[6]
Newag 19WE 4 units Introduced in 2010. New EMUs designed and built for the SKM
PESA 'ELF' 27WE 13 units Introduced in 2011. A version of the PESA ELF EMU adapted for the SKM
Newag 35WE 9 units[7] Introduced in 2012
Newag 31WEba „Impuls II” 6 units Introduced in 2022. A four-car EMU[8]
Newag 45WEa „Impuls II” 15 units Introduced in 2022. A five-car EMU[9][10]

Lines

As of September 2023 SKM operates 5 regular and 2 temporary lines:[11]

Line (branch) From To
S1 A Pruszków Otwock
B Warszawa Główna
S10 Warszawa Wschodnia Otwock
S2 Warsaw Chopin Airport Sulejówek Miłosna
S20 Warszawa Wschodnia
S3 A Warsaw Chopin Airport Radzymin
B Legionowo Piaski
S4 Piaseczno Zegrze Południowe
S40 Warszawa Rakowiec

S1 line

Pruszków – Otwock

The line was established in October 2005, running from Warszawa Falenica to Warszawa Zachodnia and suspended indefinitely in July 2006 with all of the rolling stock directed to the newly created line S2. In September 2010 the line was re-established and extended towards the town of Otwock, south east of Warsaw, but only reaching Warszawa Wschodnia, which required most of the potential passengers to transfer there to trains running on the line S2 or regional trains operated by Koleje Mazowieckie to reach the city. The line was extended through Warszawa Śródmieście and Warszawa Zachodnia to Pruszków in December 2010.

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S1
Legend
Fare zone
Pruszków
Piastów
Zone 2
Zone 1
Warszawa Ursus-Niedźwiadek
Warszawa Ursus
Warszawa Włochy
Warszawa Zachodnia
S2 S3 S4
S3 to Radzymin, S4 to Zegrze Południowe
Warszawa Główna
(B terminus)
Warszawa Centralna
Warszawa Wschodnia
S10 S2 S20
Warszawa Olszynka Grochowska
Warszawa Gocławek
Warszawa Wawer
Warszawa Anin
Warszawa Międzylesie
Warszawa Radość
Warszawa Miedzeszyn
Zone 1
Zone 2
Warszawa Falenica
Michalin
Józefów
Otwock Świder
Otwock
S10 (A terminus)
Actual as of: 2023-09-29


S2 line

Warsaw Chopin Airport – Sulejówek Miłosna

The line was established in July 2006 running from Pruszków through Warszawa Śródmieście to Sulejówek Miłosna. In December 2010 the line was shortened to Warszawa Zachodnia in the West, with the line S1 taking over the route from Pruszków to Warszawa Zachodnia and further to Warszawa Śródmieście. In June 2012 the line was extended from Warszawa Zachodnia through the Służewiec office district and a newly opened rail tunnel to an underground station at the Warsaw Chopin Airport. The route assumed its current form on 12 March 2023 due to modernization works at Warszawa Zachodnia station and the Warsaw Cross-City Line.

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S2
Legend
Fare zone
Warsaw Chopin Airport
S3
S4 S40 to Piaseczno
Warszawa Służewiec
Warszawa Żwirki i Wigury
Warszawa Rakowiec
S40
Warszawa Aleje Jerozolimskie
Warszawa Zachodnia
S1
S3 to Radzymin, S4 to Zegrze Południowe
Warszawa Ochota
Warszawa Śródmieście
The logo of Warsaw Metro.
Warszawa Powiśle
Warszawa Stadion
The logo of Warsaw Metro.
Warszawa Wschodnia
S1 S10 S20
Warszawa Rembertów
Warszawa Wesoła
Zone 1
Zone 2
Warszawa Wola Grzybowska
Sulejówek
Sulejówek Miłosna
S20
Actual as of:2023-09-29


S3 line

Warsaw Chopin Airport – Legionowo Piaski / Radzymin

The line was established in June 2012 connecting the Warsaw Frédéric Chopin Airport through the city center with the town of Legionowo north east of Warsaw.[citation needed] S3 line terminates at Radzymin when operating as a full-length A service or earlier at Legionowo Piaski station if operates a B variant route.[12]

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S3
Legend
Fare zone
Warsaw Chopin Airport
S2
S4 S40 to Piaseczno
Warszawa Służewiec
Warszawa Żwirki i Wigury
Warszawa Rakowiec
S40
Warszawa Aleje Jerozolimskie
Warszawa Zachodnia
(Platform 9) S1
S2 to Sulejówek Miłosna
Warszawa Wola
Warszawa Młynów
The logo of Warsaw Metro.
Warszawa Koło
Warszawa Powązki
Warszawa Gdańska
The logo of Warsaw Metro.
Warszawa Zoo
Warszawa Praga
Warszawa Toruńska
Warszawa Żerań
Warszawa Płudy
Zone 1
Zone 2
Warszawa Choszczówka
Legionowo
Legionowo Piaski
(B terminus)
Michałów Reginów
Wieliszew
S4 to Zegrze Południowe
Nieporęt
Dąbkowizna
Radzymin
(A terminus)
Acurate as of 2023-09-29


S4 line

Piaseczno – Wieliszew

Line started running on 12 March 2023. It connects city of Piaseczno in south-west with Wieliszew in north-east, running through Warsaw and crossing the Vistula by northern railway bridge. Large stations it stops at are Warszawa Zachodnia (stops at the Platform 9) and Warszawa Gdańska.[13]

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S4
Legend
Fare zone
Piaseczno
S40
Nowa Iwiczna
Zone 2
Zone 1
Warszawa Jeziorki
Warszawa Dawidy
Warszawa Okęcie
Warszawa Służewiec
S3
Warszawa Żwirki i Wigury
Warszawa Rakowiec
Warszawa Aleje Jerozolimskie
S2
Warszawa Zachodnia
(Platform 9) S1 S2 S40
Warszawa Wola
Warszawa Młynów
M2
Warszawa Koło
Warszawa Powązki
Warszawa Gdańska
M1
Warszawa ZOO
Warszawa Praga
Warszawa Toruńska
Warszawa Żerań
Warszawa Płudy
Zone 1
Zone 2
Warszawa Choszczówka
Legionowo
Legionowo Piaski
Michałów-Reginów
Wieliszew
S3
Wieliszew Centrum
Zegrze Południowe
Interchange
long distance rail
Warsaw Metro

S40 line

Piaseczno – Warszawa Główna

Line started running on 13 March 2023. One train per hour on working days connects the city of Piaseczno with central Warsaw. Trains departure by turns with S4 line.[13]

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S40
Legend
Fare zone
Piaseczno
S4
Nowa Iwiczna
Zone 2
Zone 1
Warszawa Jeziorki
Warszawa Dawidy
Warszawa Okęcie
Warszawa Służewiec
S3
Warszawa Żwirki i Wigury
Warszawa Rakowiec
Warszawa Aleje Jerozolimskie
S2
Warszawa Zachodnia
S1 S2 S3 S4
Warszawa Główna
Interchange
long distance rail

Former lines

Line S9 (Warszawa Zachodnia – Legionowo)

The line was established in March 2010, running between Warszawa Gdańska and Legionowo with some trains reaching Wieliszew. It was initially operated by Koleje Mazowieckie and, from 5 September 2011, gradually taken over by SKM. Since December 2011 the line is fully operated by SKM. From 1 September 2012, the line extended from Warszawa Gdańska to Platform 8 of Warszawa Zachodnia.

As of 2022, S9 services remain suspended until further notice.

Station District/Town
Warszawa Zachodnia Warszawa Wola
Warszawa Ochota
Warszawa Kasprzaka Warszawa Wola
Warszawa Koło Warszawa Wola
Warszawa Gdańska Warszawa Śródmieście
Warszawa ZOO Warszawa Praga Północ
Warszawa Praga Warszawa Targówek
Warszawa Toruńska Warszawa Targówek/Białołęka
Warszawa Żerań Warszawa Białołęka
Warszawa Płudy Warszawa Białołęka
Warszawa Choszczówka Warszawa Białołęka
Legionowo Legionowo
Legionowo Piaski Legionowo
Michałów Reginów Michałów-Reginów
Wieliszew Wieliszew Kolonia

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Szybka Kolej Miejska w Warszawie │ SKM". skm.warszawa.pl. Archived from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  2. ^ "About us". Szybka Kolej Miejska. Retrieved 12 March 2024. Szybka Kolej Miejska is a local railway carrier and one of the elements of Warsaw Public Transport.
  3. ^ "Newag dostarczył już wszystkie Impulsy dla SKM Warszawa". Archived from the original on 17 January 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  4. ^ "SKM and Newag sign $US 160.5m contract for 21 EMUs". 8 April 2020. Archived from the original on 17 January 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  5. ^ "First new Newag trains arrive in Warsaw". 14 January 2022. Archived from the original on 17 January 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  6. ^ "W Warszawie coraz więcej Impulsów 2. Nie ma już 14WE [aktualizacja]". Archived from the original on 27 August 2022. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  7. ^ "Szybka Kolej Miejska w Warszawie" [Fast City Railway in Warsaw]. skm.warszawa.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 23 January 2022.
  8. ^ "Szybka Kolej Miejska w Warszawie" [Fast City Railway in Warsaw]. skm.warszawa.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 17 July 2022.
  9. ^ "Pięcioczłonowe Impulsy 2 dla SKM Warszawa pasażerów zabiorą nieco później". Archived from the original on 8 July 2022. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  10. ^ "SKM Warszawa czeka na rejestrację ostatnich nowych Impulsów 2". 28 December 2022. Archived from the original on 14 January 2023. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  11. ^ "Szybka Kolej Miejska w Warszawie SKM". skm.warszawa.pl. Archived from the original on 13 July 2023. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  12. ^ "Rozkłady jazdy – Warszawski Transport Publiczny". wtp.waw.pl. Archived from the original on 13 July 2023. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  13. ^ a b "Szybka Kolej Miejska w Warszawie SKM". skm.warszawa.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.

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