History
Phase 1
In 2004, Line 5 was originally envisioned to be an orbital express commuter railway using an upgraded Pinghu–Nanshan railway. In 2006 the line was redesigned to a subway with more frequent stops but still was an orbital route roughly following the Pingnan railway. In July 2007, the line was approved with an expected budget of 19.2 billion RMB (US$3 billion). The line would be long, of which is elevated, with 29 stations. The number of stations was reduced from 29 to 26 when the line was cut back from to due to Grand Theater Station being planned to be an interchange between three other lines, making construction difficult. Construction of Line 5 started on 21 December 2007 with an additional station, , added to the design. On 22 June 2011, Line 5 officially opened between Qianhaiwan and Huangbeiling. The final cost of the first phase was about 20.45 billion RMB (US$3.2 Billion). In initial opening, a fleet of 37 trainsets will be operating on Line 5 serving an expected daily passenger volume of more than 400,000 passengers. In the long-term Line 5 was planned to operate with a fleet of 74 trainsets serving a daily passenger volume of over 1 million passengers.Phase 2 (southern extension)
On 6 April 2015, a southern extension towards Chiwan station broke ground. The southern extension is in length with 7 stations. The extension was opened on 28 September 2019.Remaining section of Phase 1
The section between from to was removed during planning in 2007. However, with passenger growth subway usage, huge volumes of passengers are transferring westbound between Line 2 and Line 5 at Huangbeiling to reach Line 1 and beyond. By 2021, transfer volumes reached 16,000 passengers per hour during AM peak periods. The environmental assessment of the section was carried out on February 25, 2019, to restart the project and improve capacity in the area. The remaining section of Phase 1 started construction on 13 August 2019. This section is 2.88 km in length with 3 stations and completely parallelsOpening timeline
Service routes
* — * — (Working days peak hours only)Stations
Rolling Stock
References
{{Shenzhen Metro , line5=yes Shenzhen Metro lines Railway lines opened in 2011