Puster Valley Railway

{{Short description|Railway line in South Tyrol, Italy}}

{{Infobox rail line

| name = Puster Valley Railway

| other_name = *Franzensfeste–Innichen railway

  • Fortezza–San Candido railway

| native_name = Pustertalbahn

| native_name_lang = de

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| image = Stadler Flirt in Innichen.jpg

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| caption = Puster Valley Railway

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| locale = South Tyrol, Italy

| start = {{rws|Franzensfeste}} (Fortezza)

| end = {{rws|Innichen}} (San Candido)

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| open = {{Start date|1871|11|20|df=y}}

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| linelength_km = 65

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| tracks = 1

| gauge = {{RailGauge|sg|allk=on}}

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| linenumber = 44

| routenumber = 210

| electrification = 3 kV DC

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| map = {{Routemap

|inline = 1|title = no|footnote=Source: Italian railway atlas{{Sfn|Railway Atlas|2010|p=3}}

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~~km~~ ~~ ~~elev

d\\STR+l\CONTfq\d~~ ~~ ~~from Innsbruck

BHF~~0.000~~{{rws|Franzensfeste}}/Fortezza~~ ~~747 m

dCONTgq\exLSTR+r!~STRq\ABZgr\\d~~ ~~ ~~to Verona

exLSTR\eHST\~~1.819~~Unterau/Pradisotto, closed 1944)

exLSTR\STRo\~~1.893~~ ~~Franzensfeste Fortress bridge (78 m)~~744 m

exhLKRZWae\hKRZWae\~~2.340~~ ~~Eisack/Isarco

exLSTR\eBHF\~~3.293~~Aicha/Aica~~ ~~749 m

exLSTR\TUNNEL1\~~3.843~~ ~~Ochsenbich/Colle del Bue tunnel~~(257 m)~~752 m

exLSTR\eHST\~~4.780~~Schabs/Sciaves~~(closed 1962{{cite journal|publisher=Ferrovie dello Stato|journal=Ordine di Servizio|title=none|issue=85 |date=1962|language=it}})~~757 m

exLKRWl\exLKRW+r!~STR\~~ ~~ ~~Rigger Valley Link (under construction)

WBRÜCKE1~~7.668~~ ~~Valles

BHF~~8.100~~Mühlbach/Rio di Pusteria~~ ~~749 m

BHF~~13.475~~Vintl/Vandoies~~ ~~744 m

hKRZWae~~ ~~ ~~Rienz/Rienza

eHST~~ ~~St. Sigmund/San Sigismondo~~ ~~761 m

BHF~~23.699~~Ehrenburg/Casteldarne~~ ~~749 m

HST~~29.368~~St. Lorenzen/San Lorenzo~~(since 2008{{cite journal|title=Impianti FS|journal=I Treni |issue=311 |date=January 2009| pages=8, 10|language=it}})~~815 m

eHST~~29.615~~St. Lorenzen/San Lorenzo~~ ~~816 m

BHF~~32.442~~{{rws|Bruneck}}/Brunico~~ ~~828 m

d\\eABZgl\exCONTfq\d~~ ~~ ~~to Taufers/Tures (closed 1957)

hKRZWae~~ ~~ ~~Rienz/Rienza

HST~~33.344~~Bruneck Nord/Brunico Nord~~(opened 2013{{cite journal|title=Impianti FS|journal=I Treni|volume=XXXIV|issue=364 |date=November 2013| page= 8|language=it}})

TUNNEL1~~36.807~~ ~~Lamprechtsburg/Monte Lamberto tunnel (338 m)

HST~~38.455~~{{BSsplit|Percha-Kronplatz/|Perca-Plan de Corones}}~~(opened Dec 2010)

hKRZWae~~ ~~ ~~Rienz/Rienza

TUNNEL2~~39.819~~ ~~Wielenberg/Vila tunnel (61 m)

TUNNEL2~~40.029~~ ~~Rasen/Rasùn tunnel (192 m)

BHF~~43.944~~Olang-Antholz/Valdaora-Anterselva~~ ~~1002 m

TUNNEL1~~49.728~~ ~~Welsberg/Monguelfo tunnel (140 m)

BHF~~50.896~~{{BSsplit|Welsberg-Gsies/|Monguelfo-Valle di Casies}}~~ ~~1094 m

BHF~~55.943~~{{BSsplit|Niederdorf-Prags/|Villabassa-Braies-Val di Braies}}~~ ~~1148 m

hKRZWae~~ ~~ ~~Rienz/Rienza

exdCONTgq\exSTR+r\STR\\d~~ ~~ ~~from Calalzo (closed 1964)

d\exKBHFe\BHF\\d~~60.717~~{{rws|Toblach}}/Dobbiaco~~ ~~1210 m

BHF~~64.509~~{{rws|Innichen}}/San Candido~~(voltage change)~~1176 m

eHST~~68.819~~Vierschach/Versciaco~~(1961–1989)~~1138 m

HST~~69.115~~{{BSsplit|Vierschach-Helm/|Versciaco-Elmo}}~~(opened 2014)~~1137 m

eBHF~~??.???~~{{BSsplit|Vierschach-Winnebach/|Versciaco-Prato}}~~(closed 1961)~~1138 m

WBRÜCKE1~~ ~~ ~~Drava

eHST~~71.668~~{{BSsplit|Winnebach/|Prato alla Drava}}~~(1961–1989)~~1125 m

GRENZE~~72.568~~ ~~{{BSsplit|{{0|0}}Italy|Austria}} national border~~1113 m

CONTf~~ ~~ ~~to Klagenfurt

~~km~~

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The Puster Valley Railway (German: Pustertalbahn; Italian: Ferrovia della Val Pusteria) is a standard gauge, single-track railway line in the Puster Valley between Franzensfeste (Italian: Fortezza) and Innichen (San Candido), South Tyrol, Italy. The line branches off the Brenner Railway in Franzensfeste and runs via Bruneck and Toblach to Innichen, where it continues as the Drava Valley Railway (Drautalbahn).

Historically, there was no separation between the Puster Valley Railway and the Drava Valley Railway, as the granting of the concession, the construction and the commissioning of the line from Villach to Franzensfeste covered the whole line. However, since the transition between the Italian and Austrian electrification systems is now located in Innichen station, this is usually considered the terminus of the two lines. Alternatively, the national border east of Innichen or the Toblach saddle west of Innichen may be seen as the border between the two lines.

History

As early as 1858, the Southern Railway Company (Südbahngesellschaft) developed its first plans and shortly afterwards received the building permit to connect, Vienna with the Tyrol via the Southern Railway (Südbahn).

The Hügel & Sager company was awarded the contract to construct the Puster Valley Railway and work began in the late autumn of 1869. As this proceeded much faster than expected, operations on the 20 km long Puster Valley Railway and Drava Valley Railway started on 20 November 1871.{{cite news|title=Die Eröffnung der Eisenbahn Villach–Franzensfeste|newspaper=Wiener Zeitung|page=696|date=21 November 1871|url=http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno?apm=0&aid=wrz&datum=18711121&seite=8&zoom=2 | via=ANNO|accessdate=3 November 2020|language=de}}{{Sfn|Prospetto cronologico|1926}} While the Drava Valley Railway from Villach to Lienz was built as a flat railway, it becomes a mountain railway on its continuation to Franzensfeste and reaches its highest point at the Toblach Saddle at about 1215 m above sea level.

An original task of the Puster Valley Railway was to connect East Tyrol to the capital of the Tyrol, Innsbruck. However, with the collapse of the Habsburg monarchy and the loss of South Tyrol to Italy after the end of the First World War, the importance of the railway declined sharply.

File:Italy Rail 006 Dobbiaco 1.jpg

From 1985 to 1989, the Puster Valley Railway and the Drava Valley Railway were electrified on the basis of a treaty between Italy and Austria signed in 1984. At the same time, almost all viaducts were renewed and all tunnels were enlarged to allow electrical operation during two closures of the line in 1986 and 1988. Special efforts were required for the tunnel near Welsberg (Monguelfo), where, due to constant collapses, the entire ground cover of the 140 m long tunnel was removed and replaced after the construction of a new tunnel structure.{{sfn|Pozzato|1989|p=120}} While the Puster Valley Railway is equipped with the Italian electrical system (3 kV DC), the Drava Valley Railway is equipped with the Austrian electrical system (15 kV / 16.7 Hz AC). The voltage change point is located in Innichen station. While operations continued, electrical operations commenced at the timetable change on 28 May 1989. During the electrification in the Puster Valley, many crossings were replaced by underpasses. This involved tracks and embankment being removed during the night and prefabricated underpasses being inserted hydraulically.{{sfn|Pozzato|1989|p=128}} In addition, the trackwork and track base were reinforced and the station facilities were rebuilt. The purpose of the electrification was the relief of the Brenner Railway, with the intention of the Italian side to deliver up to ten pairs of freight trains a day including a rolling highway service{{sfn|Pozzato|1989|p=120}} to run on the Puster Valley Railway. This has never happened. In fact, the opposite happened, because while the Val Pusteria/Pustertal had previously been a well-used international express service on the Vienna South–Villach–Lienz–Franzensfeste–Innsbruck route, it was discontinued at the May 1996 timetable change, meaning there is no longer any cross-border long-distance traffic in the Puster Valley Railway.

Between 2008 and 2010, Südtiroler Transportstrukturen (South Tyrol transport infrastructure; STA), which coordinates transport in the province of South Tyrol, financed the total renovation of the Puster Valley Railway. The route was initially prepared by adapting the stations and the interlockings to support a half-hour cycle, which was introduced gradually up to December 2009. All stations were equipped with 55 cm high platforms and underpasses, enabling the time-saving, simultaneous entry of crossing trains. The remote-control signalling and passenger information systems were also brought up to date with the latest technology. Waiting rooms were also renewed, lifts built, station areas rearranged, eight new trains purchased, car and bicycle parking spaces were installed and two new stations were built: St. Lorenzen station was opened in December 2008 and Percha-Kronplatz station, which is directly connected to the Kronplatz ski resort by cable car, on 12 December 2010. As a result of these measures, the number of passengers tripled within five years (January–November 2006: 312,000 passengers; January–November 2011: 980,000 passengers).{{cite press release | title=Pustertal Bahn: Fahrgastzahlen in fünf Jahren verdreifacht | publisher=Pressedienst der Autonomen Provinz Bozen – Südtirol | date=9 December 2011 | language=de}}

The new Bruneck Nord station was opened near the hospital in October 2013.{{cite news | url=http://www.stol.it/Artikel/Chronik-im-Ueberblick/Lokal/Neue-Zughaltestelle-Bruneck-Nord-wird-eroeffnet | title=Neue Zughaltestelle Bruneck Nord wird eröffnet | newspaper=Südtirol Online | date=13 October 2013 | accessdate=4 November 2020| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131212053109/http://www.stol.it/Artikel/Chronik-im-Ueberblick/Lokal/Neue-Zughaltestelle-Bruneck-Nord-wird-eroeffnet | archivedate=12 December 2013|language=de}} The new Vierschach station, which was connected by cable car to Helm and the associated ski resort, was opened in December 2014.{{cite press release | url=http://www.provinz.bz.it/news/de/news.asp?news_action=4&news_article_id=479562#artikel | title=Vierschach: Neue Zughaltestelle in Betrieb - "Ein Meilenstein" | publisher=Pressedienst der Autonomen Provinz Bozen – Südtirol | date=14 December 2014 | accessdate=4 November 2020|language=de}}

Operations

Prior to electrification, steam-hauled trains were mainly operated, initially with locomotives from the Austrian Southern Railway Company, and from 1918 from Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane (FS). Class 740, 741 and 940 locomotives were common until the early 1980s.{{sfn|Pozzato|1989|p=46}} The use of diesel locomotives and diesel multiple units lasted only for a short time. After mixed electrical operations with a locomotive change in Innichen, only two-system Stadler Flirt articulated multiple units have been operated by SAD Nahverkehr (Südtiroler Automobildienst, "South Tyrol automotive service local transport") and FS. Between Franzensfeste and Innichen there is a 30 minute cycle during the day, and also on weekends during the winter season. Every second train continues to Lienz. In winter, the trains terminating in Innichen run to Sillian, but do not stop in Weitlanbrunn. Some trains are also connected to the Brenner Railway and continue to Merano.

Freight traffic

The pairs of freight trains foreseen in the planning of the electrification did not materialise, but before the new Tarvisio–Udine railway (Pontebbana) was completed in the early 1990s, several empty freight trains ran daily. In addition, imports of the Fiat models, Panda, Cinquecento and Seicento, made in Poland were handled over the Puster Valley Railway. The line was only of particular importance for a short time when the Brenner Railway was closed, when almost a hundred freight and long-distance trains used the line.

Until 2009, there was only regular freight traffic between Bruneck and Franzensfeste. The trains, coming and going from Hall in Tirol, mostly ran in the mornings on certain days of the week. There has been no freight traffic on the Puster Valley Railway since 2012.

Plans

File:Riggertalschleife.jpg

The Rigger Valley Link project has been long discussed: after leaving the Puster Valley, the Puster Valley Railway currently swings north into the Wipp Valley and ends at Franzensfeste station, meaning that passengers travelling towards Brixen and Bolzano have to change to a southbound train. In order to save the majority of passengers having to detour and change trains, there is a proposal for an additional line is in the area, where the Rigger Valley (a short section of the valley of the Eisack) would be crossed by a bridge and the trains from the Puster Valley would no longer exclusively head for Franzensfeste, but some would head south of Brixen. This measure would significantly shorten the travel time from Bruneck to Brixen and Bolzano.{{cite news|url=https://www.stol.it/Artikel/Politik-im-Ueberblick/Lokal/Riggertalschleife-Die-Planung-beginnt|title=Riggertalschleife: Die Planung beginnt|newspaper=Südtirol Online|accessdate=5 November 2020|date=9 June 2015 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20151123055104/https://www.stol.it/Artikel/Politik-im-Ueberblick/Lokal/Riggertalschleife-Die-Planung-beginnt|archivedate=23 November 2015|language=de}}

€49 million was earmarked for the Rigger Valley Link in the operational plan of the European Cohesion Fund on 1 December 2016.{{cite news|url=https://www.stol.it/Artikel/Wirtschaft/Lokal/49-Millionen-fuer-die-Riggertalschleife|title=49 Millionen für die Riggertalschleife|newspaper=Südtirol Online|accessdate=5 November 2020|date=2 December 2016|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170104235127/https://www.stol.it/Artikel/Wirtschaft/Lokal/49-Millionen-fuer-die-Riggertalschleife|archivedate=4 January 2017|language=de}}

Stazione di Vandoies.jpg|Vintl station

Bahnhof Ehrenburg Gleisseite.jpg|Ehrenburg station

Bruneck ETR170-001 IT-SAD 20100717Y671.jpg|Stadler Flirt in {{rws|Bruneck}}

References

=Footnotes=

{{Reflist}}

= Sources=

  • {{cite book|first=Enrico |last=Bassi|title= Südtiroler · Welschtiroler · Bergbahnen|publisher=Bahndra|location=Capriasca |date=2019|isbn=978-0-244-42870-9|language=it}}
  • {{cite book|first=Francesco |last=Pozzato|title= Treno in Pusteria|publisher=Athesia|location=Bozen|date=1989|isbn=88-7014-541-7|language=it}}
  • {{cite book|first=Francesco |last=Pozzato|title=Immagini di treni. Impression Eisenbahn|location=Bozen|publisher=Athesia Spectrum|date=2007|isbn=978-88-6011-070-1|language=it}}
  • {{cite book|first1=Dietmar |last1=Rauter|first2=Herwig |last2=Rainer|title=Ein Verkehrsweg erschließt die Alpen - Kärntner- und Pustertalbahn|location= St. Michael|publisher= Der Wolf-Verlag|date=2004|isbn=3-901551-80-8|language=it}}
  • {{cite web|date = 1927 |url = http://www.trenidicarta.it/aperture.html |title = Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926 |publisher = Ufficio Centrale di Statistica delle Ferrovie dello Stato/Trenidicarta.it |editor-first = Alessandro |editor-last =Tuzza |accessdate= 18 August 2018|language=it|ref={{SfnRef|Prospetto cronologico|1926}}}}
  • {{cite book|publisher= Rete Ferroviaria Italiana|title = Fascicolo Linea 44 Fortezza – San Candido|editor = RFI|date= December 2003|language=it}}
  • {{cite book|title=Atlante ferroviario d'Italia e Slovenia |trans-title=Railway atlas of Italy and Slovenia|publisher= Schweers + Wall | date = 2010 |isbn= 978-3-89494-129-1|ref={{SfnRef|Railway Atlas|2010}}}}

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Category:Railway lines in Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol

Category:Railway lines opened in 1871

Category:1871 establishments in Austria-Hungary