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Palézieux–Lyss railway

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Railway line in Switzerland
Palézieux–Lyss railway
Kerzers station
Overview
OwnerSwiss Federal Railways
Line number251, 305, 291
Termini
Technical
Line length79.7 km (49.5 mi)
Number of tracks1
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in)
Electrification15 kV  16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Route map

Legend
km elev
from Lausanne R4 R5 R9
TPF line from Bulle S50
20.6 Palézieux terminus of R5 R8 S50 669 m
to Fribourg and Bern R4
23.4 Palézieux-Village 634 m
25.9 Châtillens 602 m
30.6 Ecublens-Rue 484 m
Villangeaux 424 m
36.1 Bressonnaz 533 m
38.0 Moudon 509 m
43.4 Lucens 493 m
47.2 Henniez 476 m
50.4 Granges-Marnand 469 m
53.4 Trey 459 m
from Yverdon-les-Bains S30
58.5 Payerne terminus of S5 452 m
to Fribourg S30
60.8 Corcelles-Nord 448 m
63.7 Dompierre FR 442 m
66.2 Domdidier 439 m
69.1 Avenches terminus of R8 438 m
72.8 Faoug 434 m
TPF-FMA from Fribourg
76.5 Murten/Morat 448 m
78.6 Muntelier-Löwenberg 439 m
79.1 Muntelier 435 m
79.1 TPF-FMA line to Ins
80.7 Galmiz 437 m
BN line from Bern S5 S52
84.8 Kerzers terminus of R9 443 m
to Neuchâtel S5 S52
Kerzers Papiliorama 438 m
87.7 Fräschels 441 m
91.4 Kallnach 445 m
93.9 Bargen BE 449 m
Hagneck canal
95.5 Aarberg 449 m
Lyss Grien 442 m
to Bern S3 S31
100.7 Lyss 444 m
from Biel and
from Büren an der Aare
S3 S31
Source: Swiss railway atlas

The Palézieux–Lyss railway is a single-track standard-gauge line of the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) in Romandy.

The section south of Kerzers is sometimes considered to form one of two lines that intersect at Payerne station and are referred to in French as the Ligne de la Broye (Broye line) or in German as the Broyelinien (Broye lines) or Broyetallinien (Broye valley lines). The Palézieux–Lyss railway includes the Broye longitudinal (Palézieux–Payerne–Murten–Kerzers). The Fribourg–Yverdon railway is considered to form the Broye transversal (Yverdon-les-Bains–Payerne–Fribourg/Freiburg). The lines are named after the Broye river, which passes through the cantons of Vaud and Fribourg, crossing the cantonal border ten times in total.

History

The line was opened in two stages:

  • 12 June 1876: Murten–Kerzers–Lyss,
  • 25 August 1876: Murten–Palézieux

The line between Palézieux and Fräschels was owned by the Western Swiss Railways (Chemins de fer de la Suisse Occidentale), which already operated the Jura Foot Railway via Yverdon and the Lausanne–Bern railway via Fribourg. The Jura bernois also opened its section between Fräschels and Lyss on 12 June 1876, so that the Murten–Kerzers–Lyss section went in operation on the same day, although owned by two companies. The competition from the two established main lines and the rural character of the catchment area never allowed the Palézieux–Lyss railway to advance beyond the status of a secondary line. Various mergers of railway companies led to the line becoming wholly owned by the SBB at its foundation in 1903.

Most of the line was electrified in 1944–1947, late by Swiss standards and reflecting its low traffic. The Murten–Muntelier section had already been electrified at 750 Volt using side-contact third rail between 1903 and 1947 for the trains of the Chemin de fer Fribourg–Morat–Anet (FMA).

Route

The Palézieux–Kerzers route runs in a predominantly northeastern direction, always along the Broye river to Lake Morat. In the first section to Moudon, which also has the only tunnel of the line, the maximum slope is 1.9%; afterwards the line is flatter. At the entrance to Kerzers station, the Bern–Neuchâtel railway is crossed at an acute angle at grade. The station itself, operated jointly by the SBB and BLS, underwent a fundamental reconstruction between 2003 and 2005. The mechanical signal box built in 1896 is preserved as a museum.

References

Footnotes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz. Cologne: Schweers + Wall. 2012. pp. 18, 30. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.

Sources

  • Wägli, Hans G. (2010). Schienennetz Schweiz, Réseau Ferré suisse (in German). Zürich: AS Verlag. ISBN 978-3-909111-74-9.
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