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Chernihiv–Ovruch railway

The Chernihiv–Ovruch railway is a partially electrified[4] and partially operational single track railway line that stretches between the town of Ovruch and the city of Chernihiv, in northern Ukraine, passing through southern Belarus and the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. The line is owned by Ukrzaliznytsia alone, with railway stations located in Belarus being leased from the government of Belarus. A portion of the line between railway stations Vilcha and Semykhody has not been in service since the Chernobyl disaster, on 26 April 1986.

Chernihiv–Ovruch railway
Chernihiv station building and platforms
Overview
Native nameUkrainian: Дільниця Чернігів–Овруч
Russian: Участок Чернигов–Овруч
Belarusian: Ўчастак Чарнігаў–Оўруч
StatusPartially active (84.4 km)
OwnerUkrainian Railways (UZ)
LocaleUkraine, Belarus
Termini
Service
TypeCommuter rail
Operator(s)Southwestern Railways (PZZ)
History
Opened1930 (1930)
Technical
Line length177.5 km (110.3 mi)
Track gauge1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) (Russian)
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC (84,4 km)

History edit

The line's construction started in 1928, as part of a modernization and development program of Southwestern Railways (Ukrainian: Південно-Західна залізниця). It was opened for passenger traffic in 1930.[5][6] Partially abandoned after the Chernobyl disaster of 1986, it works in its eastern section, between Chernihiv and Semikhody, a terminus station near Pripyat serving the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. This line section was electrified in 1988.[7][8]

Route edit

Chernihiv-Slavutych-Pripyat edit

The line begins at the central station of Chernihiv, capital of the Chernihiv Oblast, located on the Minsk-Gomel-Kyiv line. After two minor stops within the city, it passes through a few small villages in Chernihiv Raion. At Zhukotky station began a now closed branch to Karkhivka and Zhydinychi. 36 km (22 mi) after Chernihiv the line reaches Slavutych, a city built in 1986 for the refugees fleeing the Chernobyl disaster. Its station replaced the pre-existing "Nerafa", demolished to build a larger station for the new city.[9]

After the stops in Lisnyi (in Slavutych) and Nedanchychi (in Chernihiv Raion) the line enters Belarus' Oblast of Gomel, passing over the Dnieper river. The station of Iolcha is the only functioning stop working on the Belarusian part of the line. It serves the villages of Staraya Iolcha, Novaya Iolcha, Krasnoe, and the near town of Kamaryn, all in Brahin Raion. After Iolcha, the line enters in the Polesie State Radioecological Reserve, created to enclose the territory of Belarus most affected by radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident, through three abandoned stations. The first one, Kaporenka, was the interchange point (in Russian: Пересадочная, "Peresadochnaya")[10] of an abandoned siding to a decontamination park.

The line then reenters Ukraine, joining Vyshhorod Raion, in Kyiv Oblast, and the Exclusion Zone. After Zymovyshche it passes over the Pripyat River and past a branch to the new Semikhody terminal station.[11] Built in 1988, the Semikhody station is a terminus that substitutes Semykhody stop, on the main line, and is the endpoint of the electrification and passenger service. Located in front of the nuclear plant, close to the New Safe Confinement, the terminus serves workers and is the only working station in Pripyat.[12][13]

Continuing on the main line, it passes the first industrial siding for the Chernobyl Plant and, after the so-called Bridge of Death, a second siding, just before Yaniv, the main station of Pripyat. The industrial line, which runs a loop around the nuclear plant passing between the 4 reactors and next to the cooling pond, is partially active because it allows goods and materials to be moved around the plant.[12]

Pripyat-Vilcha-Ovruch edit

Yaniv station, located between Yaniv village and the southern suburb of Pripyat, was an important passenger hub before the nuclear accident. It is the nearest station to Chernobyl town, 18 km (11 mi) south, and nowadays is a railroad graveyard, with a high number of abandoned trains, making it one of the tourist sights in Pripyat. The station, refurbished in the 2010s, is used by workers of the society "Chornobylservis" (Ukrainian: Чорнобильсервіс)[11] for fixing heavy machinery.[14][15][16]

After leaving Pripyat, the line continues through a forested area, highly contaminated at several points. It is rarely used by freight trains serving the nuclear plant and passes several villages, such as Buriakivka, known for its large vehicle graveyard full of abandoned radioactive machinery.[17] After Tovstyi Lis the line runs along the border between the "10-km" and "30-km" zones and enters Vyshhorod Raion. It passes through the ghost town of Vilcha, 17 km (11 mi) north of Poliske, today one of the checkpoints to the Exclusion Zone. This section of the line is the most decrepit, with the track invaded by vegetation and the station buildings mostly in ruins.[13][18]

Leaving Vilcha, the line enters Narodychi Raion of the Zhytomyr Oblast and after Racha (or Radcha), the line reaches Ovruch Raion. It crosses several villages and ends at Ovruch station, on the line linking Mazyr to Korosten. The Vilcha-Ovruch section, de jure operating but de facto abandoned, has had no passenger services since 1986. Vilcha station was open until 2013.[13][19][20]

Train services edit

Until 1986, the entire line was served by regional and long-distance trains such as the Moscow-Khmelnytskyi express service.[6][14] Current passenger services include the following trains:

Category Route (RT) Notes
Regional Chernihiv-Slavutych-Iolcha With not all stations served, the Nedanchychi-Iolcha service, passing the Belarusian border, is limited.[10][4]
Regional Slavutych-Semikhody Non-stop train, for Chernobyl Plant workers[4]

In popular culture edit

Ovruch station was mentioned in the 1963 book The Truce (Italian: La tregua), by the Italian writer Primo Levi. It was a stop on his roundabout 1945 trip from the Auschwitz concentration camp to his home in Turin.[21][22][23]

Yaniv station appears as an accessible location in the 2009 video game S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Call of Pripyat.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ in english: Island
  2. ^ in english: Town
  3. ^ in english: Transfer Point
  4. ^ a b c ""All Aboard for Chernihiv" (Radioactive Railroad)". from the original on 2015-11-27. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  5. ^ (in Russian) Юго-Западная железная дорога. Вчера. Сегодня. Завтра ("Southwestern Railways: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow"). 244 pp., Kyiv, «Transport of Ukraine» 1995. ISBN 5-7707-7927-6
  6. ^ "Railway map of Ukraine and Moldova showing rail traction". from the original on 2018-04-06. Retrieved 2019-01-07.
  7. ^ (in Russian) "Island" electrified lines in the countries of the former Soviet Union Archived 2012-07-23 at archive.today
  8. ^ ""Reborn in Slavutych" (Radioactive Railroad)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  9. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Southwestern Railway timetable for Chernihiv-Iolcha service 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b "The Pripyat Railway Bridge" (Lost Places)
  11. ^ a b ""Trains in the Exclusion Zone" (Radioactive Railroad)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  12. ^ a b c "Ovruch-Chernihiv line scheme (Radioactive Railroad)". from the original on 2015-11-21. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  13. ^ a b ""Permanently Contaminated: The Railroad Graveyard" (Radioactive Railroad)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  14. ^ ""Railway station Yaniv" (Lost Places)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  15. ^ ""Yaniv Train Station - Pripyat" (UrbanX)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  16. ^ ""Chernobyl Rescue Operation: The Vehicle Graveyard" (Urban Ghosts)". from the original on 2015-11-26. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  17. ^ "Securing the Chornobyl exclusion zone against illegal movement of radioactive materials" 2015-11-25 at the Wayback Machine (IRPA)
  18. ^ ""Abandoned: The Radioactive Railroad" (Radioactive Railroad)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  19. ^ ""On "diesel engine" on the Zone" (Lost Places)". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  20. ^ (in Italian) "Ovruch" on primolevi.it
  21. ^ See map on Commons
  22. ^ La Tregua. Einaudi, Turin, 1963 - ISBN 0-349-10013-6

External links edit

  • Schematic map of the Southwestern Railway 2021-10-10 at the Wayback Machine. Southwestern Railway website.
  • wikimapia.org
  • Radioactive Railroad
  • Lost Places - Chornobyl Zone
  • Chernobyl Commuter Train on Vimeo
  • Поезд на ЧАЭС / Train to ChNPP on YouTube

chernihiv, ovruch, railway, partially, electrified, partially, operational, single, track, railway, line, that, stretches, between, town, ovruch, city, chernihiv, northern, ukraine, passing, through, southern, belarus, chernobyl, exclusion, zone, line, owned, . The Chernihiv Ovruch railway is a partially electrified 4 and partially operational single track railway line that stretches between the town of Ovruch and the city of Chernihiv in northern Ukraine passing through southern Belarus and the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone The line is owned by Ukrzaliznytsia alone with railway stations located in Belarus being leased from the government of Belarus A portion of the line between railway stations Vilcha and Semykhody has not been in service since the Chernobyl disaster on 26 April 1986 Chernihiv Ovruch railwayChernihiv station building and platformsOverviewNative nameUkrainian Dilnicya Chernigiv Ovruch Russian Uchastok Chernigov Ovruch Belarusian Ўchastak Charnigay OyruchStatusPartially active 84 4 km OwnerUkrainian Railways UZ LocaleUkraine BelarusTerminiChernihiv UkraineOvruch UkraineServiceTypeCommuter railOperator s Southwestern Railways PZZ HistoryOpened1930 1930 TechnicalLine length177 5 km 110 3 mi Track gauge1 520 mm 4 ft 11 27 32 in Russian Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC 84 4 km vteChernihiv Ovruch lineLegendkmKorostenBilokorovychi212 6 Ostriv 1 Noryn RiverT06190 0 OvruchNorth to Mazyr6 1 Selyshche 2 12 0 Hrezlia13 8 HusarivkaHrezlia River22 8 Nyvky30 5 Tychkiv33 3 RachaRadcha River40 5 VilkhovaZhytomyr OblastExclusion ZoneT103544 4 Vilcha52 0 Pavlovichi57 0 Klivini63 0 Tovstyi Lys71 0 Krasnytsa76 0 Buriakivka79 0 Shepelychi87 0 YanivTo Chornobyl PlantBridge of DeathTo Chornobyl Plant91 1 SemykhodyPripyat River97 0 Zimovishche105 0 MasheveExclusion ZoneRadioecological Reserve109 0 Posudovo113 0 KolybanBrahinka River118 1 KaporenkaRadioecological ReserveGomel OblastPeresadochna 3 122 7 IolchaDnieper River Gomel OblastChernihiv Oblast131 1 NedanchychiChernihiv OblastKyiv OblastKyiv OblastSlavutych city 135 1 Selyshche LisoveP56139 7 SlavutychSlavutych city Kyiv OblastKyiv OblastChernihiv Oblast145 6 DemiykaPakulka River150 3 Maliyky0 0 Zhidinichi13 2 Karkhivka157 120 2 Zhukotki160 9 Levkovichi168 1 BilousM01Bilous River173 9 Chernihiv Pidusivka174 6 175 kmHornostaivka175 5 ChernihivNizhyn Contents 1 History 2 Route 2 1 Chernihiv Slavutych Pripyat 2 2 Pripyat Vilcha Ovruch 3 Train services 4 In popular culture 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe line s construction started in 1928 as part of a modernization and development program of Southwestern Railways Ukrainian Pivdenno Zahidna zaliznicya It was opened for passenger traffic in 1930 5 6 Partially abandoned after the Chernobyl disaster of 1986 it works in its eastern section between Chernihiv and Semikhody a terminus station near Pripyat serving the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant This line section was electrified in 1988 7 8 Route editChernihiv Slavutych Pripyat edit The line begins at the central station of Chernihiv capital of the Chernihiv Oblast located on the Minsk Gomel Kyiv line After two minor stops within the city it passes through a few small villages in Chernihiv Raion At Zhukotky station began a now closed branch to Karkhivka and Zhydinychi 36 km 22 mi after Chernihiv the line reaches Slavutych a city built in 1986 for the refugees fleeing the Chernobyl disaster Its station replaced the pre existing Nerafa demolished to build a larger station for the new city 9 After the stops in Lisnyi in Slavutych and Nedanchychi in Chernihiv Raion the line enters Belarus Oblast of Gomel passing over the Dnieper river The station of Iolcha is the only functioning stop working on the Belarusian part of the line It serves the villages of Staraya Iolcha Novaya Iolcha Krasnoe and the near town of Kamaryn all in Brahin Raion After Iolcha the line enters in the Polesie State Radioecological Reserve created to enclose the territory of Belarus most affected by radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident through three abandoned stations The first one Kaporenka was the interchange point in Russian Peresadochnaya Peresadochnaya 10 of an abandoned siding to a decontamination park The line then reenters Ukraine joining Vyshhorod Raion in Kyiv Oblast and the Exclusion Zone After Zymovyshche it passes over the Pripyat River and past a branch to the new Semikhody terminal station 11 Built in 1988 the Semikhody station is a terminus that substitutes Semykhody stop on the main line and is the endpoint of the electrification and passenger service Located in front of the nuclear plant close to the New Safe Confinement the terminus serves workers and is the only working station in Pripyat 12 13 Continuing on the main line it passes the first industrial siding for the Chernobyl Plant and after the so called Bridge of Death a second siding just before Yaniv the main station of Pripyat The industrial line which runs a loop around the nuclear plant passing between the 4 reactors and next to the cooling pond is partially active because it allows goods and materials to be moved around the plant 12 Pripyat Vilcha Ovruch edit Yaniv station located between Yaniv village and the southern suburb of Pripyat was an important passenger hub before the nuclear accident It is the nearest station to Chernobyl town 18 km 11 mi south and nowadays is a railroad graveyard with a high number of abandoned trains making it one of the tourist sights in Pripyat The station refurbished in the 2010s is used by workers of the society Chornobylservis Ukrainian Chornobilservis 11 for fixing heavy machinery 14 15 16 After leaving Pripyat the line continues through a forested area highly contaminated at several points It is rarely used by freight trains serving the nuclear plant and passes several villages such as Buriakivka known for its large vehicle graveyard full of abandoned radioactive machinery 17 After Tovstyi Lis the line runs along the border between the 10 km and 30 km zones and enters Vyshhorod Raion It passes through the ghost town of Vilcha 17 km 11 mi north of Poliske today one of the checkpoints to the Exclusion Zone This section of the line is the most decrepit with the track invaded by vegetation and the station buildings mostly in ruins 13 18 Leaving Vilcha the line enters Narodychi Raion of the Zhytomyr Oblast and after Racha or Radcha the line reaches Ovruch Raion It crosses several villages and ends at Ovruch station on the line linking Mazyr to Korosten The Vilcha Ovruch section de jure operating but de facto abandoned has had no passenger services since 1986 Vilcha station was open until 2013 13 19 20 Train services editUntil 1986 the entire line was served by regional and long distance trains such as the Moscow Khmelnytskyi express service 6 14 Current passenger services include the following trains Category Route RT NotesRegional Chernihiv Slavutych Iolcha With not all stations served the Nedanchychi Iolcha service passing the Belarusian border is limited 10 4 Regional Slavutych Semikhody Non stop train for Chernobyl Plant workers 4 In popular culture editOvruch station was mentioned in the 1963 book The Truce Italian La tregua by the Italian writer Primo Levi It was a stop on his roundabout 1945 trip from the Auschwitz concentration camp to his home in Turin 21 22 23 Yaniv station appears as an accessible location in the 2009 video game S T A L K E R Call of Pripyat Gallery edit nbsp Chernihiv station building nbsp An ER9T used on the line at Chernihiv nbsp Chernihiv Pidusivka station nbsp Maliyky station nbsp Slavutych station building nbsp Poselok Lesnoi station near Slavutych nbsp Iolcha station building nbsp Rail bridge in Chernobyl Plant part of the industrial branch from Yaniv station nbsp Yaniv station building at Pripyat nbsp Abandoned trains at Yaniv station nbsp A rail track nearby Vilcha station nbsp Ovruch station buildingSee also editYaniv railway station Rail transport in UkraineReferences edit in english Island in english Town in english Transfer Point a b c All Aboard for Chernihiv Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 27 Retrieved 2015 11 25 in Russian Yugo Zapadnaya zheleznaya doroga Vchera Segodnya Zavtra Southwestern Railways Yesterday Today Tomorrow 244 pp Kyiv Transport of Ukraine 1995 ISBN 5 7707 7927 6 a b The Ovruch to Chernihiv Rail Link Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Railway map of Ukraine and Moldova showing rail traction Archived from the original on 2018 04 06 Retrieved 2019 01 07 in Russian Island electrified lines in the countries of the former Soviet Union Archived 2012 07 23 at archive today Reborn in Slavutych Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 a b in Ukrainian Southwestern Railway timetable for Chernihiv Iolcha service Archived 2015 12 08 at the Wayback Machine a b The Pripyat Railway Bridge Lost Places a b Trains in the Exclusion Zone Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 a b c Ovruch Chernihiv line scheme Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 21 Retrieved 2015 11 25 a b Permanently Contaminated The Railroad Graveyard Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Railway station Yaniv Lost Places Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Yaniv Train Station Pripyat UrbanX Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Chernobyl Rescue Operation The Vehicle Graveyard Urban Ghosts Archived from the original on 2015 11 26 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Securing the Chornobyl exclusion zone against illegal movement of radioactive materials Archived 2015 11 25 at the Wayback Machine IRPA Abandoned The Radioactive Railroad Radioactive Railroad Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 On diesel engine on the Zone Lost Places Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 in Italian Ovruch on primolevi it See map on Commons La Tregua Einaudi Turin 1963 ISBN 0 349 10013 6External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chernihiv Ovruch railway Schematic map of the Southwestern Railway Archived 2021 10 10 at the Wayback Machine Southwestern Railway website wikimapia org Radioactive Railroad Lost Places Chornobyl Zone Chernobyl Commuter Train on Vimeo Poezd na ChAES Train to ChNPP on YouTube Portals nbsp Ukraine nbsp Belarus nbsp Trains Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chernihiv Ovruch railway amp oldid 1152929337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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