Cumana railway

(Redirected from Ferrovia Cumana)

The Cumana railway (Italian: Ferrovia Cumana, sometimes also known as Line 7[1]) is a commuter railway in Campania, southern Italy, connecting Naples by two separate routes with Torregaveta, near Cuma in the town of Bacoli (about 15 km west of Naples). It passes through Pozzuoli and the volcanic Campi Flegrei area. The line was built and run by the Società per le Ferrovie Napoletane (the Neapolitan Railway Company), founded in 1883, and is now operated by the Ente Autonomo Volturno (EAV) company.

Cumana railway
Overview
Statusin use
LocaleCampania, Italy
Service
TypeCommuter rail
Operator(s)EAV
History
Opened1 July 1889 (1889-07-01)
Technical
Line length19.81 km (12.31 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification3 kV DC
Route map

Overview edit

The line was opened on 1 July 1889 by the Società per le Ferrovie Napoletane;[2] the route follows the coast for about 20 km from the main terminal in the populous downtown area of Montesanto to Torregaveta via the stations of Corso Vittorio Emanuele, Fuorigrotta, Mostra, Bagnoli, Pozzuoli, Arco Felice, Baia and Fusaro.

In 1927 the railway, because of the increasing commuter traffic, was electrified with a 1,2 kV DC overhead line.

In 1940 the section in the neighbourhood of Fuorigrotta was reconstructed and put underground, with the new stations of Fuorigrotta and Mostra built in rational architecture style. In the same year the SFN give the line to the SEPSA, a branch of the EAV.

In 1962 the electrification was elevated from 1,2 to 3 kV, and the new ET 100 EMUs were put into service.

The increasing traffic has made it necessary to double the track, beginning in 1975. The doubling of the Montesanto-Bagnoli (8.5 km) and Arco Felice-Torregaveta (5.9 km) sections have been completed and work on the remaining section (Bagnoli-Arco Felice (5.7 km)) is well under way.

Route edit

Stazioni e fermate
 
Montesanto
 
 
 
Corso Vittorio Emanuele
 
 
 
Depot
 
 
 
 
Fuorigrotta
 
Mostra
 
 
Zoo-Edenlandia
 
connection to RFI
 
 
Agnano
 
Bagnoli
 
Dazio
 
Gerolomini
 
Cappuccini
 
Pozzuoli
 
Pozzuoli Cantieri
 
Arco Felice
 
Lucrino
 
Fusaro
 
 
Torregaveta

Service edit

Trains travel every 20 minutes.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mappa della rete metropolitana Napoli" [Map of the Naples metro network]. Napoli Unplugged. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
  2. ^ Francesco Capezza: Napoli: avanti con la SEPSA. In: ″I Treni″ Nr. 95 (July–August 1989), p. 14.
  3. ^ Timetable Archived 12 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine

Bibliography edit

  • Antonio Bertagnin: SEPSA in rinnovamento. In: ″TuttoTreno″ Nr. 150 (February 2002), p. 14–17.
  • Kalla-Bishop, P.M. (April 1966). "Through Neapolitan Suburbs: The Cumana Railway". Railway Magazine. pp. 223–226.

External links edit

  Media related to Cumana railway at Wikimedia Commons