Parma–La Spezia railway

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Parma–La Spezia railway
Overview
Native nameFerrovia Pontremolese
Owner
standard gauge
Electrification3000 V DC
Route map

km
0.000
Parma
59 m
to Milan (end of double track)
7.304
Vicofertile
86 m
11.771
Collecchio
111 m
16.540
Gaiano
120 m
19.180
Ozzano Taro
129 m
23.019
Fornovo
143 m
25.683
P.P. Osteriazza (start of
double track, opened in 2014)
31.878
P.C. Citerna Taro
203 m
deviation opened in 2014
(34.395)
Selva del Bocchetto
(closed in 2014)
221 m
Marta Giulia tunnel
(4185 m)
(34.989)
Solignano tunnel
(1889–2014)
(1572 m)
(36.561)
36.917
Solignano
233 m
deviation opened in 1996[1]
42.132
Ossella tunnel
(1381 m)
(42.xxx)
Valmozzola
(closed in 1996)
265 m
43.513
45.104
Berceto
end of double track
289 m
45.806
Groppo San Giovanni
tunnel (2489 m)
48.295
50.570
Roccamurata
331 m
53.496
Ostia Parmense
352 m
54.942
Maccagnana tunnel
(2275 m)
57.217
57.798
Martini tunnel
(1370 m)
59.168
60.648
Borgo Val di Taro
(start of double track)
412 m
61.088
Borgallo tunnel
(7972 m)
69.040
69.315
P.M. Grondola-Guinadi
426 m
74.503
Scorano tunnel
(1028 m)
75.531
78.578
Pontremoli
(end of double track)
233 m
82.675
Scorcetoli
196 m
85.185
Filattiera
164 m
89.615
Villafranca-Bagnone
130 m
deviation opened in 2005
94.307
P.P. Chiesaccia (start of
double track, opened in 2005)
Terrarossa-Tresana
(closed in 2005)
98.588
Aulla Lunigiana
(opened in 2005)
(x.xxx)
Aulla
(closed in 2008)
100.217
Serena tunnel
(7014 m)
Caprigliola-Albiano (closed in 2003[2])
106 m
107.231
deviation opened in 2005
107.623
0.288
Santo Stefano di Magra
(2.555)
Ponzano Magra (line and
station unused since 2003[3])
(6.800)
Sarzana
Romito
Arcola
1.774
162.660
P.C. Arcola
(junction/crossover)
111.866
4.590/164.896
Vezzano Ligure
167.500
Cà di Boschetti
3.345
0.000
La Spezia Marittima
0.000/169.661
 
La Spezia Migliarina
171.549
La Spezia marshalling yard
172.462
La Spezia Centrale
km
Source: Italian railway atlas[4]

The Parma–La Spezia railway is the railway line that connects

Apennines. The route is approximately 120 kilometres long. Its Italian name (ferrovia Pontremolese) derives from the town of Pontremoli
, one of the main towns it passes through.

The railway infrastructure is managed by the Rete Ferroviaria Italiana, which classifies it as one of its primary lines.[5]

History

Section Opened[6]
La Spezia-Vezzano Ligure 4 August 1864[note 1]
Parma-Fornovo di Taro 2 July 1883
Vezzano Ligure-Pontremoli 15 November 1888
Fornovo di Taro-Berceto 25 March 1889
Berceto-Borgotaro 15 May 1893
Borgotaro-Pontremoli 1 August 1894
Santo Stefano di Magra-Sarzana[7] 9 August 1897

The first plans for a railway linking the middle

Ligurian and Tyrrhenian coasts began to be considered in 1860, when the Kingdom of Sardinia acquired Lombardy, Emilia and Tuscany
.

In particular, consideration was given to a line connecting the

.

Pontremoli station from which the line takes its name

Two routes were mainly considered: one between Parma and the Gulf of La Spezia passing through the Taro and Magra valleys, the other from Lucca to Reggio Emilia and Modena. This second solution was preferred by the Livorno authorities, as it would have promoted trade through the town's port at the expense of the Ligurian sea ports.

Under a decree issued on 17 July 1860, the government headed by

Apennines through the Borgallo tunnel
.

Construction

Work on the construction of the line, financed by the Baccarini law,[8] began in 1879, and the whole line was completed in 1894. Three years later a link was built from Santo Stefano di Magra to Sarzana to facilitate traffic.[6]

Almost entirely single track, the line was immediately equipped with a second track through the pass section, where the line runs through the most difficult country. The section comprising the pass tunnel (Borgallo tunnel, 7,972 metres-long) and the steep section between Grondola-Guinadi and Pontremoli (with grades of 2.0% in the tunnel and 2.5% in the open sections) were immediately doubled.

In 1931, the line was electrified with the three-phase AC system at 3600 V and 16.67 Hz; during the Second World War it suffered heavy damage, due to its high strategic value as an access route to the Po Valley. The gradual conversion of the line to 3000 V DC electrification, which had already started in 1937, was completed in late 1949, following the electrification of the Milan–Bologna railway, which made it worthwhile to electrify the neighbouring lines including the Parma–Fornovo and Fornovo–Fidenza lines on the same system.[9]

Doubling

The line, which was originally built as single track except for the Borgo Val di Taro–Pontremoli section, has been undergoing duplication since the 1980s with the construction of track at new locations with better grades and geometry.

The line modernisation project dates back to a financial appropriation under the Piano integrativo ("integration plan") of 1981.

Duplicated sections

View of the unused section between Ponzano Magra and Sarzana on the short branch from Santo Stefano di Magra-Sarzana

By 1996, duplication had been completed only on the section from Vezzano Ligure to Santo Stefano di Magra.

On 22 May 1996, the double track deviation between Solignano and Berceto was opened, almost entirely in tunnel. The opening of the new line involved the closure of Valmozzola station.[1]

The new La Spezia Marittima freight yard was opened in 2003.

On 11 September 2005, the double track on the Santo Stefano di Magra–Chiesaccia crossing loop[10] section, connecting with the Lucca–Aulla railway, was opened in 2008.[11]

This work also involved moving the southern link with the Tyrrhenian line northwards, leading to the closure to traffic of the single track section between Santo Stefano di Magra and Sarzana opened on 9 August 1897,[6] including Ponzano Magra station. Consequently, Sarzana has not been a terminus of the line since the early 2000s. The double track junction is now located near Arcola station. The northern link, originally located near Vezzano Ligure station has been moved north as a result of the addition of a track dedicated to the Parma–La Spezia traffic, which runs parallel to the Genoa–Pisa railway from Vezzano Ligure to La Spezia Migliarina.

Work was completed on doubling the Solignano–Fornovo section in 2014.[12]

Work to be done

As of 2011, final planning was underway for the doubling of the remaining sections:[12]

  • Berceto–Chiesaccia, with the completion of the link with the Lucca–Aulla railway, part of which had already started with the doubling of earlier years;
  • Osteriazza–Parma.

Under a decree of 5 July 2020, funds of €78 million have been allocated, which will be followed by a second tranche of an additional €92 million, totalling €170 million, to finance the upgrade of the line and completion of the doubling of the Parma–Vicofertile section by 2032.[13][14]

Traffic

Tunnel Length (metres)
Solignano 1,572
Ossella 1,381
Groppo S. Giovanni 2,489
Maccagnana 2,275
Martini 1,370
Borgallo 7,972
Scorrano 1,028
Serena 7,014

Designed from the outset to facilitate the movement of goods between the ports of the upper Tyrrhenian Sea and Northern Italy (the so-called Tyrrhenian–Brenner corridor), it is still used for this purpose.

Passenger traffic, on the other hand, consists solely of regional trains and is largely limited to commuter traffic from the two valleys to the nearby capitals; however, there are some pairs of longer-distance trains that connect the main cities of the Ligurian and Tyrrhenian coast with some important centres in Emilia and Lombardy, passing through the Fidenza hub.

The movement of trains on the whole line is controlled from the signalling centre in Pisa.

All passenger trains on the line stop at Fornovo, Borgo val di Taro, Pontremoli, Villafranca-Bagnone, Aulla Lunigiana and Santo Stefano di Magra stations.

References

Notes

  1. ^ Part of the Genoa–Pisa line.

Footnotes

  1. ^
    ISSN 0392-4602
    .
  2. .
  3. ^ Morando 2002.
  4. ^ Railway Atlas 2010, pp. 34, 46, 145.
  5. ^ "Rete in esercizio" (PDF) (in Italian). RFI. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 February 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Tuzza, Alessandro, ed. (1927). "Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926". Trenidicarta.it (in Italian). Ufficio Centrale di Statistica delle Ferrovie dello Stato. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  7. ^ Passarelli 2001.
  8. ^ L. 29 luglio 1879, n. 5002, per la costruzione di nuove linee di completamento della rete ferroviaria del Regno (Law of the 29 July 1879, no. 5002, for the construction of new lines for the royal railway network, see table A, point 3)
  9. ^ La Spezia-Parma 1991, pp. 103–108.
  10. ^ "Pontremolese in crescita". I Treni (in Italian) (275): 5. November 2005.
  11. ISSN 0392-4602
    .
  12. ^ a b "Pontremolese" (in Italian). Italferr. Archived from the original on 31 March 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  13. ^ "Arrivano 78 milioni, la Pontremolese si farà". Il Secolo XIX (in Italian). 4 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  14. ^ "Ok ai 170 milioni per la Pontremolese". Il Tirreno (in Italian). 5 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.

Sources