Misplaced Pages

Pisa–Rome railway

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Livorno–Rome railway) Railway line in Italy
Pisa–Rome railway
Livorno Centrale station
Overview
Native nameFerrovia Tirrenica
StatusOperational
OwnerRFI
LocaleItaly
Termini
Service
TypeHeavy rail
Operator(s)Trenitalia
History
Opened1859 to 1867
Technical
Line length312 km (194 mi)
Number of tracks2
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in)
Electrification3000 V DC
Operating speed200kmh (124mph)
Route map

Legend
km elev
from Pisa
Livorno San Marco
27.766 Livorno Centrale 14 m
Ardenza closed in 2003 11 m
21.055 Antignano 23 m
14.425 Quercianella-Sonnino 19 m
7.651 Castiglioncello 18 m
4.722 Rosignano 9 m
from Collesalvetti
0.000
287.519
Vada 9 m
from Volterra
Cecina
281.592 Cecina 12 m
Bibbona opened in 2003 9 m
273.718 Bolgheri 9 m
265.128 Castagneto Carducci-Donoratico 20 m
257.353 San Vincenzo 9 m
Piazzalone turnout
to Piombino
Baratti turnout
246.752 Campiglia Marittima 7 m
238.149 Vignale Riotorto 8 m
229.555 Follonica 10 m
FS-FMF junction
FMF line to Massa Marittima, closed in 1944
222.683 Scarlino 12 m
214.659 Gavorrano 74 m
206.600 Giuncarico 23 m
mining railway to Ribolla
from Siena
199.410 Montepescali 15 m
187.644 Grosseto 11 m
to Cana
Ombrone
from Cana
Rispescia 11 m
173.141 Alberese (Bus interchange only)
164.347 Talamone 7 m
Albegna
156.421 Albinia 3 m
149.923 Orbetello-Monte Argentario 3 m
SNFT line to Porto Santo Stefano
closed 1944
145.233 Ansedonia opened in 1950 8 m
137.645 Capalbio 7 m
131.057 Chiarone (Bus interchange only)
Tuscany
Lazio
Fiora
115.941 Montalto di Castro 19 m
Marta
100.575 Tarquinia 16 m
from Civitavecchia Marittima
new track opened in 2000
old track closed in 2000
from Orte, closed 1961
 
80.678 Civitavecchia 10 m
Civitavecchia-Viale della Vittoria
71.779 Santa Marinella 15 m
63.600
Borgata XXVIII Ottobre
(opened 1939, closed 1947)
62.312 Santa Severa 14 m
58.xxx Furbara 9 m
54.287 Marina di Cerveteri
50.297
Ladispoli-Cerveteri
opened 1939
12 m
from Ladispoli, closed 1938
47.944 Palo Laziale 11 m
40.975 Torre in Pietra-Palidoro 12 m
34.175
31.070
Maccarese-Fregene 10 m
freight line to Roma via Ponte Galeria
Autostrada A12 - E80
26.774 Macchia Grande tunnel (1.395 m)
25.379
Grande Raccordo Anulare
17.041 Roma Aurelia
16.357 Via Aurelia, E80 (4.134 m)
12.223
from Viterbo
from Vatican City
11.542 Roma San Pietro 38 m
11.137 Gianicolo-Pamphili tunnel (2.391 m)
8.746 from Fiumicino via Ponte Galeria
8.221 Roma Trastevere 17 m
Tiber
Rome–Lido railway
Line B (Metro)
6.692 Roma Ostiense 18 m
3.082 Roma Tuscolana 40 m
to Naples (via Formia), Velletri, Albano,
Frascati and Naples (via Cassino)
to Florence and Florence (HS)
from Florence, Florence (HS),
Pescara and Naples (HS)
0.000 Roma Termini 58 m

Original route via Ponte Galeria


from Livorno
34.175 Maccarese-Fregene 10 m
to Rome (via Roma Aurelia)
Autostrada A12 - E80
from Fiumicino
22.220 Ponte Galeria 8 m
16.650 Muratella opened in 1988
14.433 Magliana 14 m
11.475 Villa Bonelli opened in 1996
to Viterbo and from
Maccarese (via Roma Aurelia)
Roma Trastevere
to Roma Termini
km
Source: Italian railway atlas
This diagram:

The Pisa–Rome railway (also called the ferrovia Tirrenica—"Tyrrhenian Railway") is one of the trunk lines of the Italian railway network. It connects Italy’s northwest with its south, running along the Tyrrhenian coast between the Italian regions of Tuscany and Lazio, through the provinces of Livorno, Grosseto, Viterbo and Rome. The line is double track and is fully electrified at 3,000 V DC. Passenger traffic is managed by Trenitalia.

An international branch line connects from the Pisa–Rome railway at Roma San Pietro railway station to Vatican City: the 300-metre Vatican railway.

History

The southernmost section of the line between Rome and Civitavecchia was opened on 24 April 1859 by the Società Pio Central (Italian for Central Pius Company). In 1862 work started on a line south from Livorno, which initially ran east to Collesalvetti before turning south and joining the path of the current Pisa–Rome line at Vada (now 27 km south of Livorno). This route is now known as the Maremmana railway. The line continued south from Vada and was opened to Nunziatella, near Capalbio, on the border with the Papal States on the Chiarone river in 1864. In 1865 the Leopolda railway was taken over by the owner of the Rome–Civitavecchia railway, now called the Società per le Strade Ferrate Romane (Roman Railways). It opened the connecting section between Civitavecchia and Capalbio in 1867. In 1910 a direct line was opened along the coast from Vada to the new central station at Livorno. A new route was opened between Rome and Maccarese-Fregene via Aurelia on 25 May 1990.

Section opened
RomeCivitavecchia (via Ponte Galeria) 24 April 1859
LivornoFollonica (via Collesalvetti) 20 October 1863
Follonica–Orbetello 15 June 1864
Orbetello–Nunziatella 3 August 1864
Nunziatella–Civitavecchia 27 June 1867
Pisa–Collesalvetti 1 April 1874
Livorno–Vada (via costiera) 3 July 1910
Roma–Maccarese (via Aurelia) 25 May 1990

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Impianti FS". I Treni (in Italian). XXIV (248). Salò: Editrice Trasporti su Rotaie: 5–6. May 2003. ISSN 0392-4602.
  2. Service order no. 36 of 1950
  3. Azienda autonoma delle Ferrovie dello Stato, Service order no. 103, 1939
  4. Ferrovie dello Stato, Service order no. 28, 1947
  5. Service order no. 70 of 1939
  6. "Notizie flash". I Treni Oggi (in Italian). IX (83). Salò: Editrice Trasporti su Rotaie: 6. June 1988. ISSN 0392-4602.
  7. "Fermata silenziosa". I Treni (in Italian). XVII (173): 8. July–August 1996.
  8. Railway Atlas 2017, pp. 50–1, 56, 62, 68–9, 146–7, 149.
  9. Kalla-Bishop 1971, p. 28
  10. Kalla-Bishop 1971, p. 44
  11. Prospetto cronologico 1926.
  12. Alessandro Tuzza. "Bibliografia Ferroviaria Italiana" (in Italian). Trenidicarta.it. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  13. S. Ceccarini (June–July 2010). "La Stazione di Livorno Centrale: 3 luglio 1910 - 3 luglio 2010". Il Pentagono (in Italian) (6): 8–11.

Sources

See also

External links

Media related to Pisa–Rome railway at Wikimedia Commons

Italy Major railway lines in Italy
High-speed
Standard-speed
Categories: