Lanzhou High-speed Railway Station Epidemic Prevention Center 24-hour telephone is 0931-8762070.
Lanzhou Station, located in Lanzhou City, Gansu Province, China, is a first-class passenger and freight station under the jurisdiction of the China Railway Lanzhou Bureau Group Company Limited, and it is one of the large-scale passenger stations of China's national railroad network. It is one of the large passenger stations in China's national railway network. Lanzhou Station was built in October 1952, and underwent a large-scale reconstruction and expansion in October 2000, and in May 2002, the reconstruction and expansion project was fully completed.
During the epidemic, the general public should adhere to the normal epidemic prevention and control measures to maintain personal protection awareness. Adopt scientific norms to wear masks, wash your hands regularly, often ventilation, do not pile up, do not gather, use public chopsticks, a meter line and other good habits. Avoid going to crowded, confined or poorly ventilated public **** places as much as possible.
Introduction of High-speed Railway
High-speed railroad, or high-speed railroad for short, refers to a railroad system with a high level of design standards for safe high-speed train travel. Its concept is not limited to tracks, not to mention trains. High-speed railroad has different regulations in different countries, different times and different research and academic fields. In the document "Design Code for High-Speed Railway" issued by the State Railway Administration of China, high-speed railroad is defined as a newly built passenger-only railroad with a design speed of 250 kilometers per hour (inclusive) to 350 kilometers per hour (inclusive) and a standard gauge for running trains with moving groups.
The first official high-speed railroad system in the world is the Tokaido Shinkansen of Japan, which was completed and opened to traffic in 1964, communicating with the three major metropolitan areas of Japan where Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka are located, and promoting the high-speed development of Japan. Its design speed was 200km/h, so the initial speed standard for high-speed railroads was 200km/h.
Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-High-speed Railway