What is China’s luxury Silk Road Express train like? We ride its new route
A three-day return journey straddling Sichuan and Yunnan provinces highlights the best of what this world-class luxury tourist train offers

A resplendent train cuts a fine figure at platform two of Chengdu West Railway Station. Its elegant exterior, unlike the other austere carriages trackside, features striking hues of celadon blue and red, and hand-painted gilded lettering. This is the Silk Road Express, one of China’s first world-class luxury tourist trains, and I am about to board it for its new three-day return route to Yunnan.
Though the nation boasts the world’s largest high-speed rail network, conventional railway lines remain twice as long, presenting a sizeable opportunity for slow train travel to take off among domestic travellers.

A road more travelled by
Soliman Ma, executive president of the Silk Road Express, explains that the route is actually part of the Southern Silk Road – a 2,000km (1,240-mile) trade network linking China with Myanmar, India and Bangladesh.