Alstom, an international integrated transport system provider, has signed a contract with Singapore Land Transport Authority (LTA) to supply the signalling system for Singapore Circle Line (CCL) phase, stage 6. This includes the supply of its Urbalis driverless signalling system,the equipment of news trains and locomotives of the existing line and upgrade of the Automatic Train Supervision system (ATS). Besides, Alstom will almost double the capacity of the existing Kim Chuan Depot with new stablings.

Singapore CCL Stage 6 will be 4km long and will add 3 stations, Keppel, Cantonment and Prince Edward, to the existing line of 30 stations across 35.5km. Once completed around 2025, it will close the loop of CCL by connecting HarbourFront Station to Marina Bay Station. By then, commuters will enjoy overall connectivity between areas in the West and key employment areas in the CBD (business district), as well as upcoming developments in the Marina Bay area.

So far, Alstom has been supplying signalling systems for three metro lines in Singapore, in total representing over 100km. They are North East Line (20km), the first full underground driverless metro line in Singapore, the entire Circle Line (39.5km) and Thomson East Coast Line (43km), which will start revenue service in five stages from 2019 until 2024.

Headquartered in France, Alstom is present in over 60 countries and employs 32,800 people. Ling Fang, Managing Director of China & East Asia, Alstom, said, “Alstom is pleased to win this contract to continue supporting our costumer, LTA, to develop Circle Line. By closing the loop of the line with a service-proven signalling system, commuters will have an easier and faster travel experience from the western to the eastern past of Singapore.”

“Alstom will work closely with LTA to execute this project in order to deliver the highest level of excellence,” she added.

 

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Crashed Indonesian passenger jet’s throttles showed ‘anomaly’: investigators

A crashed Indonesian passenger jet’s throttles showed an “anomaly” and had been…

SMRT Trains reports after-tax loss of S$86 million for FY2018, citing higher operating expenses and drop in ridership and fares

In an annual operations review report on Sunday (1 July), SMRT Trains…

Simple Solution to the Causeway Jam: Keep All Booths Open

The perennial traffic jam at the Causeway may have a straightforward fix: keep all immigration booths open. Since the Johor Mentri Besar visited and highlighted closed booths, traffic flow has improved on the Malaysian side. However, the same cannot be said for the Singapore side, raising questions about the government’s willingness to address the issue.

Accidents involving public buses have seen a downward trend over the years due to safety measures in place, says Chee Hong Tat

The numerous safety measures in place by the Land Transport Authority (LTA)…