
The station named munjeon changed name to Busan International Finance Center, Busan Bankīusan Metro Line 3 (3호선) construction began in November 1997. If this extension opens, then 4 new stations will be added to Line 2. The city of Yangsan subsequently gave up on finishing the extension and building the last three stations.Īn extension of Line 2 towards the eastern extremity of Haeundae-gu is planned. Pusan National University Yangsan Campus Station, which was the fourth station to open in Phase 3, opened on 1 October 2009. On 10 January 2003, Line 2 was extended 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) to the current terminus of Yangsan, but with only three of the originally planned seven stations in operation. The phase was originally supposed to add another 11.3 kilometres (7.0 mi) to the line, with an additional seven stations. Phase 3, started in 1998, extends Line 2 north from Hopo more into the city of Yangsan. The remainder of Phase 2 was implemeneted in two stages: Line 2 was extended 1.8 km (1.1 mi) north to Gwangan on January 16, 2002, and finally on 29 August 2002 it was extended 6.8 kilometres (4.2 mi) east to Jangsan. With Phase 2 (planned to be 16.3 kilometres (10.1 mi) in total), the line was first extended 7.7 kilometres (4.8 mi) southeast from Seomyeon to Geumnyeonsan on 8 August 2001. But this 21.7-kilometre (13.5 mi) route, serving 21 stations between Hopo and Seomyeon, did not open until 30 June 1999. The line uses trains that have six cars each.Ĭonstruction on the Phase 1 began in 1991. It is 46.0-kilometre (28.6 mi) long, serving 43 stations. The extension of the line further into Saha-gu from Shinpyeong to Dadaepo Beach 7.3-kilometre (4.5 mi) was finished in mid-April 2017.īusan Metro Line 2 (2호선) crosses Busan from east to west, running along the shores of Haeundae and Gwangalli, and then north toward Yangsan. Further extensions continued southward: a 5.4-kilometre (3.4 mi) extension from Beomnaegol to Jungang-dong (now Jungang) opened in May 1987 a 4.5-kilometre (2.8 mi) extension to Seodaeshin-dong (now Seodaeshin) opened in February 1990 and a 6.4-kilometre (4.0 mi) extension to Shinpyeong opened in June 1994. This stretch was 16.2-kilometre (10.1 mi) long. Two years later, in 1981, construction began on the first phase, between Nopo-Dong (now Nopo) and Beomnaegol, which was finished in July 1985. The total construction cost was 975.1 billion won. The line uses trains that have eight cars each. It is 39.8-kilometre (24.7 mi) long with 40 stations. Photography in the Busan Metro is permitted.īusan Metro Line 1 (1호선) is the north-south route. The Metro map includes information on which station, and which numbered exit from that station, to use for main attractions. All stations are numbered and the first numeral of the number is the same as the line number, e.g. Announcements at stations for arriving trains are in Korean, followed by English, then Japanese and Mandarin. The Metro itself consists of 4 lines, cover 116.5 kilometres (72.4 mi) of route and serving 114 stations.Īll directional signs on the Busan Metro are written in both Korean and English, and the voice announcement in the trains indicating the upcoming station, possible line transfer and exiting side are all spoken in Korean, followed by English. The metro network first opened in 1985 with seventeen stations. The Busan Metro (Hangul: 부산 도시철도 Hanja: 釜山 都市鐵道 RR: Busan dosicheoldo) operated by the Busan Transportation Corporation is the urban rail system of Busan, South Korea.
