High-speed rail in the Netherlands


The Netherlands is connected to the European high-speed rail network with one dedicated high-speed line, HSL-Zuid, and improved traditional rail. Plans for a second and third dedicated high-speed line, HSL-Oost and Zuiderzeelijn, have been cancelled. The Hanzelijn is built to accommodate high-speed trains in the future.
Three high-speed train services are operated in the Netherlands: Thalys, InterCityExpress, and Eurostar, although a fourth one has operated there. Thalys started operating on the HSL-Zuid on 13 December 2009.

History

As early as 1973, the Den Uyl cabinet discussed a high-speed railway line in the Netherlands. It was not until 1988 that the Nederlandse Spoorwegen started three HSL projects, namely HSL-Zuid, HSL-Oost, and HSL-Noord. The overall plan, called Rail 21, was approved in 1989, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of the first railway in the Netherlands. HSL-Zuid was constructed between 2000 and 2006, and began operating in 2009. HSL-Oost was cancelled in 2001, HSL-Noord was cancelled in 2007. The Hanzelijn partially took over HSL-Noord's role in connecting the west and north of the country through Lelystad and Zwolle, and has been built to be eventually upgraded to 200 km/h, but so far trains on this track are not running at high speeds yet. New plans for a HSL-Noord, now dubbed 'Lelylijn' instead of 'Zuiderzeelijn', were unveiled in 2019; a feasibility study, with the support of all national political parties, is underway and expected to be finished in late 2020.
After numerous problems after the introduction of the Fyra train service on HSL-Zuid in December 2012, it was cancelled in January 2013, after which Thalys and Eurostar trains took over the HSL-Zuid service. The Intercity Nieuwe Generatie is scheduled to be introduced on Dutch high-speed rails in 2023.

Lines

HSL-Zuid

is a high-speed railway line in the Netherlands. Using existing tracks from Amsterdam Centraal to Schiphol Airport, the dedicated high-speed line begins here and continues to Rotterdam Centraal and to the Belgian border. Here, it connects to the HSL 4, terminating at Antwerpen-Centraal. Den Haag Centraal and Breda are connected to the high-speed line by conventional railway lines. Services running at on the HSL-Zuid began on 7 September 2009 between Amsterdam and Rotterdam. From December 2009, Thalys trains from Amsterdam to Brussels and Paris have run on HSL-Zuid. From December 2012 to January 2013 the Fyra V250 trains ran on HSL-Zuid between Amsterdam and Brussels, only to have service suspended because of the poor quality of the Italian-made trains.
LineRouteSpeedLengthConstruction beganStart of revenue services
HSL-ZuidSchiphol - Antwerpen 20002009

Stations

The HSL-Zuid serves the following stations:
Between Rotterdam and the Belgian border there is a branch to Breda.

Hanzelijn

is a high-speed railway line in the Netherlands. It connects Lelystad, capital of the province of Flevoland, with Zwolle, capital of the neighbouring province of Overijssel, and provides a direct rail link between Flevoland and the north-east of the Netherlands. The maximum speed on the line is, though no Dutch domestic rolling stock can achieve speeds greater than. Only by clearing the line for International trains is the line speed of reached.
LineRouteSpeedLengthConstruction beganStart of revenue services
HanzelijnLelystad - Zwolle20072012

The completion of the Hanzelijn in 2012 turned Zwolle into the Netherlands' second-most important railway junction. A new type of train, the Intercity Nieuwe Generatie, will be introduced in 2023 on the HSL-Zuid track from Breda via Rotterdam, Schiphol Airport, Amsterdam Zuid, Lelystad, Zwolle, Groningen and Leeuwarden. On the Breda–Schiphol HSL-Zuid stretch and the Lelystad–Zwolle Hanzelijn stretch, this new train will be able to achieve 200 km/h instead of the regular 160 km/h. The current direct trains from Breda to Zwolle run via 's-Hertogenbosch and will take 2h 21m. The current fastest route is up to 8 minutes faster if you transfer at Rotterdam Centraal. The new direct route from Breda to Zwolle that will be using the HSL-Zuid removes the need for a transfer the total trip time is expected to be shortened by roughly 30 minutes.

Proposed and cancelled lines

HSL-Oost

is the name of a proposed high-speed line from Amsterdam into Germany via the Dutch cities of Utrecht and Arnhem. The scope of the project has now been reduced, but it is expected that German ICE trains will be able to travel at from Amsterdam to Utrecht in the near future. Currently, ERTMS has been installed on the line, but the soil is soft and needs time to stabilize after the recent expansion works. Transport Minister Tineke Netelenbos turned against the HSL-Oost, deeming it unfeasible and arguing that public funds were better spelt on improving existing infrastructure; the NS eventually agreed. In December 2001, the parliamentary coalition parties Labour, VVD and D66 finally voted in favour of Netelenbos' plan to not double the railway tracks until 2020, and instead only optimise the current two rails with sidetracks so that faster trains can overtake slower ones, and more efficient techniques to let trains drive more closely after one another beginning in 2007.
In 2009, a new feasibility study for the HSL-Oost after the year 2020 was promised by Transport Minister Camiel Eurlings. On 22 September 2010, the study named Synergie in railcorridors: Een onderzoek naar het integraal ontwerpen van railnetwerken was published, which stated that a new design method could make the HSL-Oost economical after all.

Other lines

According to the ProRail 2030 plan, several mainlines will be upgraded. To decrease journey time, some sections are likely to become operated at 160 km/h or 200 km/h. Still it's uncertain, if the whole line between Amsterdam and Groningen will be upgraded or few stretches of it. By the end of 2020 or 2021 the decision of selecting routes to be upgraded is to be made. Some of mainlines, capable for 140 km/h can be upgraded to 160 km/h after re-signalling and even for 200 km/h after four-tracking and changing electrification from DC to AC.