Quezzi inclined elevator

Coordinates: 44°25′16″N 8°58′18″E / 44.421173°N 8.971611°E / 44.421173; 8.971611
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Quezzi inclined elevator
Overview
StatusOpen
LocaleGenoa, Liguria, Italy
Coordinates44°25′16″N 8°58′18″E / 44.421173°N 8.971611°E / 44.421173; 8.971611
Service
TypeInclined elevator
Operator(s)AMT Genova
History
OpenedMay 2015
Technical
Line length131 m (430 ft)

The Quezzi elevator (Italian: Ascensore inclinato di Quezzi) is a public inclined elevator with variable slope in the Quezzi quarter of Genoa, Italy. The elevator opened in May 2015 and connects the lower terminus at Via Pinetti to the terminus at Via Fontanarossa, with an intermediate stop at Portazza.[1][2]

The plant is one of the many public people movers in the city, including several elevators and funiculars, the older and best known of which are the Zecca–Righi funicular, the Sant'Anna funicular and the Principe–Granarolo rack railway. The latter is erroneously described as a funicular in popular jargon.

From 1 December 2021 it has been free to use courtesy of the Municipality of Genoa and AMT.[3]

Operation

The elevator, managed by AMT Genova, has a total length of 131 metres (430 ft), of which the lower 27 metres (89 ft) are in a tunnel, the middle 23 metres (75 ft) in a cutting, and the remainder on an elevated rail. The lower section has a gradient of 44%, transitioning to a gradient of 30% in the upper section. The single car is designed to tilt, in order to maintain the floor leveled, despite the change in gradient.[1][2]

The line has the following parameters:[1][2]

Number of cars 1
Number of stops 3
Configuration
Single track
Track length 131 metres (430 ft)
Rise 76 m (249 ft)
Gradient 44% (maximum)
Journey time 100 seconds
Capacity 25 passengers per car

References

  1. ^ a b c Cacozza, Marco (April 2016). "New funicular in Genova". Today's Railways Europe. No. 244. Platform 5 Publishing Ltd. p. 18.
  2. ^ a b c "Ascensore inclinato di Quezzi" [Inclined lift of Quezzi] (in Italian). AMT. 21 January 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  3. ^ "Mobilità sostenibile, prolungata fino al 31 luglio la gratuità di metro e impianti verticali" (in Italian). 30 March 2022. Retrieved 2022-05-18.