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The Red Line is one of the two lines on the Dubai Metro network in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The first section was inaugurated on 9 September 2009.[1] Construction was declared complete on 28 April 2010. The line has 29 stations spanning 52.1 km (32.4 mi), which have been opened in phases from 2009 to 2011. It runs from Al Rashidiya to Jebel Ali and travels along Sheikh Zayed Road for most of its length.
The Red Line has 29 stations, including 24 elevated (by means of a viaduct), four underground stations, and one at ground level. The line is 52.1 km (32.4 mi) long, with 4.7 km (2.9 mi) underground. The entire journey time on the Red Line is around 60 minutes, traveling at a maximum speed of 110 kilometres per hour (68 mph), with 20–30 seconds stopping time at each station. The average time between stations on the Red Line will be 60–90 seconds. The RTA operates 27 trains in the morning peak hours and 29 trains in the evening peak hours with the interval between train services ranging from 6 to 8 minutes in the morning peak period, and from 5 to 6 minutes in the evening peak period. In 2013 the Red line metro lifted a total of 88.888 million passengers and the current daily average is about 243,000 people as of 2013, according to the RTA Statistics Office.[8] 170 feeder buses provided by the RTA for commuters to commute to stations on the red line are also in operation as of 15 October 2010.
Two transfer stations are designated, Union and BurJuman (formerly Khalid Bin Al Waleed) stations, where the Green and Red Lines intersect, allowing passengers to change between lines. The Red Line has a main depot in Al Rashidiya and one auxiliary depot at Jebel Ali Free Zone.[9]
An extension of the Red Line is currently under design. It will be extended from the Jebel Ali Free Zone to the Dubai-Abu Dhabi border, an additional 12 km (7.5 mi). The Dubai Roads and Transport Authority is also reviewing an alternative plan to extend the Red Line from Jebel Ali to the Al Maktoum International Airport, which opened its first runway in June 2010 for cargo service with passenger service expected to start in November 2011.
On 13 May 2010, The Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) announced that the Al Quoz metro station, which opened on 15 May, would instead be called Noor Islamic Bank Station. This latest announcement that Noor Islamic Bank has won the right to name Al Quoz Station for a period of ten years; was made in the presence of the bank’s representatives at the RTA headquarters in Dubai.
The naming initiative has so far generated Dh2 billion in revenue for the RTA. On average, each station has brought in Dh90-100 million. As many as 21 stations on both Red and Green Lines have already been named after local and international corporate giants, including Etisalat, Emirates Airlines, GGICO, Nakheel, Sharaf DG, First Gulf Bank and Danube for Jebel Ali Industrial Station.[10] Noor Islamic Bank is the latest to join the pantheon.[11]
Stations in italics are not yet open. All names are final; names in parentheses are working names used earlier in the project.
Proposed extensions:
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Red Line (Dubai Metro), Green Line (Dubai Metro), Rapid transit
United Arab Emirates, Arabic language, Emirates of the United Arab Emirates, United States, Dubai Metro
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Dubai
Dubai Metro, Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Red Line (Dubai Metro), Al Qusais
Dubai, Dubai Metro, Middle East, History of Dubai, Dubailand
Dubai, Dubai Metro, United Arab Emirates, Al Maktoum International Airport, Track gauge