Porto Ceresio–Milan railway

Porto Ceresio–Milan railway
Overview
Native nameFerrovia Milano-Porto Ceresio
OwnerRFI
LocaleLombardy, Italy
Termini
Stations20
Service
Typeheavy rail
ServicesS5, RE5
Operator(s)Trenord
History
Opened18 July 1894 (1894-07-18)
Technical
Number of tracks2
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification3 kV DC
Route map

km
14.240
Porto Ceresio
274 m
9.758
Bisuschio-Viggiù
341 m
from Stabio
6.086
Arcisate
380 m
3.621
Induno Olona
390 m
Varese Nord
0.000
18.458
Varese
382 m
junction FS-FNM
14.030
Gazzada-Schianno-Morazzone
361 m
10.027
Castronno
323 m
7.518
Albizzate-Solbiate Arno
304 m
4.637
Cavaria-Oggiona-Jerago
279 m
0.000
25.039
24.922
Gallarate
242 m
Milano Centrale
130 m
km
Source: Italian railway atlas[1]

Porto Ceresio–Milan railway is a railway line in Lombardy, Italy. It uses the tracks of the Milan–Arona railway until Gallarate.

History

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The line was opened from Gallarate to Varese on 26 September 1865;[2] in 1885 it went to the state network Rete Mediterranea, operated by the Società per le Strade Ferrate del Mediterraneo.

In 1894 the Società per le Strade Ferrate del Mediterraneo extended the line from Varese to Porto Ceresio,[2] through a beloved touristic area until the shore of Lake Lugano.

In 1899 the line was chosen for an experimental electrification with a third rail at 650 V DC, put into service in 1901–1902.[3]

From 1905 the line was operated by the new state railway company, the Ferrovie dello Stato;[3] but between 1908 and 1918 the section from Varese to Porto Ceresio, that had been built by the Società per le Strade Ferrate del Mediterraneo, was given back to that society.[4]

In 1949 the line was electrified with the actual overhead line system, with a tension of 3 kV DC;[5] the third rail was dismantled two years later.[6]

Since December 2004 the section from Gallarate to Varese is used by the trains of the line S5 of Milan suburban railway service.[7]

Since 1 January 2010 the section from Varese to Porto Ceresio has been put out of service,[8] due to reconstruction works related with the new international line to Stabio, that will connect Varese with Como and Lugano via Mendrisio.[9]

References

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ Railway Atlas 2017, pp. 5, 21, 123, 127.
  2. ^ a b Prospetto cronologico 1926.
  3. ^ a b Giovanni Cornolò: Locomotive elettriche FS., Parma, Ermanno Albertelli Editore, 1994. ISBN 88-85909-97-3. P. 21.
  4. ^ Adriano Betti Carboncini: La questione della Roma-Viterbo. In: ″I Treni″ Nr. 204 (May 1999), p. 19.
  5. ^ Giovanni Cornolò: Automotrici elettriche dalle origini al 1983. Duegi Editrice, 2011. ISBN 978-88-95096-05-6. P. 149.
  6. ^ Giovanni Cornolò: Locomotive elettriche FS., Parma, Ermanno Albertelli Editore, 1994. ISBN 88-85909-97-3. P. 23.
  7. ^ Andrea Canale: ...finalmente Passante! In: ″ I Treni″ Nr. 268 (March 2005), pp. 12–19.
  8. ^ Impianti FS. In: ″I Treni″ Nr. 323 (February 2010), p. 6.
  9. ^ Arcisate al via. In: ″I Treni″ Nr. 318 (September 2009), p. 4.

Sources

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See also

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