Jijie railway station, Former railway station in Jijie Town, China
Jijie railway station is a former railway facility in Jijie Town featuring mustard-yellow facades designed in French colonial style and multiple structures for passenger and cargo operations along its rail lines. The compound preserves typical early 20th-century railway architecture, including surviving warehouse buildings and siding tracks.
Construction began in 1915 under supervision of Chinese merchants, marking a shift from French control, and operations started in 1921 on the Gebishi line. The station enabled the region to export minerals to distant markets and became essential to the economic development of the area.
The station represents a turning point when Chinese merchants began managing major transportation infrastructure themselves, shifting away from foreign control of such facilities. Walking around the building and its platforms, visitors can sense how this place once connected remote mining regions to the outside world.
The building has been closed to visitors since the 1990s, but the exterior structures and rail lines remain visible from outside the grounds. The site is best explored on foot, and visitors should expect limited access to the interior facilities.
During the 1930s this facility served as a major junction for tin ore shipments from Yunnan's mining regions, making it a critical node in the global mineral supply chain of that era. The volume of tin exported through its platforms reflected the worldwide demand for the metal during rapid industrial expansion.
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