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Rail transport in Greece

Rail transport in Greece has a history which began in 1869, with the completion of the then Athens & Piraeus Railway. From the 1880s to the 1920s, the majority of the network was built, reaching its heyday in 1940. From the 1950s onward, the railway system entered a period of decline, culminating in the service cuts of 2011. Ever since the 1990s, the network has been steadily modernized, but still remains smaller than its peak length. The operation of the Greek railway network is split between the Hellenic Railways Organisation (OSE), which owns and maintains the rail infrastructure; GAIAOSE, which owns the building infrastructure (including stations) and the former OSE rolling stock, Hellenic Train; and other private companies that run the trains on the network. Greece is a member of the International Union of Railways (UIC). The UIC Country Code for Greece is 73.

Rail transport in Greece
Electric locomotive in Thessaloniki station
Operation
Infrastructure companyHellenic Railways Organisation
Major operatorsHellenic Train[1]

PEARL [1] Rail Cargo Logistics Goldair

Grup Feroviar Român
Statistics
Ridership19,599,000 (2019)[2]
Passenger km1.252 billion (2019)[2]
Freight538 million tonne-km
System length
Total5,256.25 kilometres (3,266.08 mi)[3]
Double track1,625 km (1,010 mi)[3]
Electrified1,601 km (995 mi)[3]
Track gauge
Main1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge787 km (489.0 mi)
750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)22.3 km (13.9 mi)[4]
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)15 km (9.3 mi)[4]
Electrification
Main 25 kV 50 Hz
Features
Longest tunnelKallidromo Tunnel 9.6 km (5.97 mi)
Highest elevationKalogeriko
 at814 metres (2,671 ft)
Map
Map showing the Greek railway system c.1901–1902

History

Ancient Greece

The Diolkos was a paved trackway near Corinth in Ancient Greece which enabled boats to be moved overland across the Isthmus of Corinth. The shortcut allowed ancient vessels to avoid the dangerous circumnavigation of the Peloponnese peninsula. It is regarded by the British historian of science M.J.T. Lewis, author of Early Wooden Railways, as the first railway (as defined as a track to direct vehicles so they may not leave the track) to ever be constructed.[5]

The beginnings (1868–1919)

 
Lamia station c.1910
 
Bralos station during WWI

Greek independence in 1832 coincided with the start of the railway era. By 1835 plans were being put to the Greek state to construct a railway line from Athens to the port of Piraeus. Twenty-two years later, in 1857, a contract for its construction was signed and the work commenced. It took four different companies a further twelve years to lay the 8.8 kilometres (5.5 mi) of track, the work being completed in 1869.[6]

Greece towards the end of the 19th century was a collection of small agricultural towns acting as marketplaces and economic centres for the villages that surrounded them.[citation needed] Greece had very little industry and few roads, which made the government think about the development of a railway system that would go towards addressing the lack of internal and external communication that existed.[citation needed] In 1881 the Prime Minister, Alexandros Koumoundouros signed four contracts for the laying of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge lines, with the intention of making Greece a pivotal point on the journey between Europe, India and Asia.

In the following year, 1882, Koumoundouros was replaced by Charilaos Trikoupis as Prime Minister, who cancelled the contracts, replacing them with four of his own. He had a different political vision for the railways, seeing them as a way of stimulating the internal growth of Greece and proposed a 417 kilometres (259 mi) narrow-gauge (1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)) system encircling the northern Peloponnese, with a separate system in Thessaly; linking the port of Volos with the town of Kalambaka on the other side of the Thessalian plain. There was also a line of 76 kilometres (47 mi) to be laid from Athens to Lavrio, on the peninsula of Eastern Attica. Trikoupis preferred narrow gauge over standard gauge due to cheaper initial construction costs, although the line linking Athens to Larissa, which was planned to eventually join with the European system, was constructed to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge. The network took 25 years to complete, 20 years longer than the 5 anticipated by Trikoupis.

Railway companies that arose during this era include: SPAP (Piraeus – Athens – Peloponnese Railways), which operated the system in the Peloponnese, the Thessaly Railways, which operated the lines in Thessaly, the Attica Railways, which operated the railways in Attica and the Railways of Northwest Greece, which operated the railways in Aetolia-Acarnania.

By 1909, 1,606 kilometres (998 mi) of track had been laid, including the main standard-gauge line to the then Greek-Turkish border at Papapouli, past the Tempi valley (400 km north of Athens). The first trains to run the full 506 kilometres from Athens to Thessaloniki on standard-gauge track marked the completion of the line in 1918, which by then was running entirely on Greek territory.

Integration of networks (1920–1970)

During the 1920s the Greek railway network was split between a number of companies – private and public – with the most important being the SPAP (Athens – Piraeus – Peloponnese Railways) and the SEK (Hellenic State Railways). Eventually the SPAP integrated most railways Southern Greece and the SEK those in Northern Greece. Due to the immense financial and social pressure during the interwar period not much railway construction happened. Important construction projects in the 1920s and 1930s include the expansion of the Piraeus-Thissio Railway towards the centre of Athens via a long tunnel, the attempted extension of the Palaiofarsalos – Kalampaka Railway towards Grevena and Kozani and the construction of the Leukothea – Amphipolis railway line. Much of the railway infrastructure was destroyed during the Second World War and the subsequent Civil War resulting in much of the post-war era being devoted into rebuilding it. The only noteworthy expansion between 1940 and 1971 was the building of a new railway line connecting Larissa to Volos and the extension of the Thessaloniki – Florina railway line to Ptolemaida and Kozani. Also significant was the extension of EIS towards Kifisia by absorbing a former Attica Railway line.

 
Brallos (or Papadia) bridge, rebuilt in 1945

Modern era (1971–present)

The Hellenic Railways Organisation (OSE) was founded in 1971, taking over from the Hellenic State Railways. Many services were cut in the 1980s, in particular the metre gauge network, only to be reinstaured during the 1990s but then to be cut again in 2011 with the debt crisis. Since then, the network of Greece's standard railways has been extensively modernised and most of them have been electrified, notably between the cities of Athens and Thessaloniki, between Athens and Kiato and in the vicinity of Athens.

In 2016 the public passenger and freight train operator, TrainOSE, was privatized. It was sold to the Italian FSI (Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane) group, owned by the Government of Italy and train operator in the country, for 50 million euros. Moreover two new freight train operators, PEARL and Rail Cargo Logistics Goldair, have begun operations with the goal of transporting cargo between Piraeus and Central Europe.

Old Urban railways of Athens

Piraeus–Monastiraki–Iraklio–Lavrio–Kifissia

The first railway line that operated in Greece was the one connecting Athens and its port Piraeus, which opened in 1869. It ran for a distance of 8 km from the port of Piraeus to Thissio in center of Athens. It was later extended to Omonoia Square in 1895 and electrified in 1904, with the 600 V DC third rail system. From 1911 it was also possible to run through freight trains on the Piraeus Harbour Tramway using dual system electric locomotives.

 
First generation EIS EMU at Piraeus station

Another company, Attica Railways in 1885, ran a metre-gauge suburban line from Lavrio Square to the north of Omonoia Square and to Iraklio (a northern suburb). It involved a section of street running, along the present 3 September Street, from Lavrio Square to Attiki Square, beyond which it ran on a dedicated trackbed. At Iraklio, the line forked to form two suburban branches. One went further north via Maroussi to Kifissia and Strofyli, with a freight only extension to Dionyssos marble quarries. The other branch ran eastwards to Vrilissia (at a point very near to the present Plakentias station) and then southwards to the villages Peania, Koropi, Marcopoulo, Kalyvia, Keratea, Kamariza and its terminus at the mining town of Lavrio.

In 1926, the Hellenic Electric Railways S.A. (EIS) (Ελληνικοί Ηλεκτρικοί Σίδηρόδρομοι, ΕΗΣ), a new company, created by the co-operation of Attica Railways S.A. and the English "Power Group", took over operation of the two lines Piraeus-Athens and Omonia and Attiki-Kifissia-Strofyli. In 1929 SPAP (Piraeus, Athens and Peloponnese Railways) took over the Iraklio – Lavrio branch line. The Athens terminal for Lavrio was moved from Lavrio Square to Athens Peloponnese Station.[6] To join the Lavrio line to its network, SPAP built a connection between Agioi Anargyroi (Kato Liosia) and Iraklio (1931). The Lavrio line was eventually closed in 1957, due to political pressures from the road lobby.[7]

The line from Attiki Square to Kifissia operated as a steam locomotive hauled railway with numerous level crossings until 1938. The line was subsequently rebuilt in electrified dual track standard gauge without level crossings, connected to the electrified Athens-Piraeus (EIS) line at Omonoia, and reopened to Kifissia in 1957. The extension to Strofyli was abandoned.

Industrial railways

A number of railway lines were constructed mainly by mining operations and by extensive industrial facilities. There were also a few temporary lines, used for the construction of major public works. Most of them were either meter gauge or 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) narrow gauge.[8]

Military railways (1916–1918)

During World War I, after the collapse of Serbia, Eastern Macedonia was occupied by German and Bulgarian forces and Central and Western Macedonia by French and British troops, thus establishing the Macedonian front. The French and British troops and their Greek allies had extensive military logistics facilities in and around Thessaloniki. Supplies had to be transported to the various front line units. As World War I fronts were relatively static, it was possible to construct railway lines for this purpose. Almost all of these lines were of the Decauville system with a 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) narrow gauge. Some of these lines were completely isolated from existing lines while others started at mainline railway stations.[9]

The most important such railways were the following:[10][11]

  1. The Tasli to Stavros line at Orfanu Bay.
  2. The Perivolaki – Nea Zichni railway line. This 66 km long line, built by the British Army, was taken over by the Hellenic State Railways (SEK) in 1921. SEK operated this line until 1947. It was preserved on request of the Hellenic Army until 1952, when it was dismantled. The main rolling stock consisted of War Department Baldwin 4-6-0T steam locomotives.[12]
  3. The Skydra (Vertekop) – Aridaia line. This 42 km long line was handed over after the war to Chemins de fer Vicinaux de Macedoine (1923), which failed to make a profit and the line was taken over by the Hellenic State Railways (SEK) in 1932. SEK closed the line in 1936.
  4. The Armenochori – Skotsidir line
  5. The Goumenitsa line
  6. The Dimitritsi (Gudeli) to Kopriva (Kurfali) line
  7. The Katerini – Dramista line, a mining line for transport of brown coal (lignite)

Some of these railway lines continued operating for scheduled passenger and freight service after the conclusion of the war, under the company "Local Railways of Macedonia".

Current status

The running of the Greek railways is divided between the Hellenic Railways Organisation and GAIAOSE which owns and maintains the infrastructure, and Hellenic Train, and smaller other companies which run the trains on the network.

 
The rail bridge over the Isthmus of Corinth
 
Diakofto-Kalavryta railway
 
Diesel multiple OSE class 660

Railway Lines in Greece

Major rail network (standard gauge)

  • The Piraeus-Platy railway (with its numerous branch lines). The line has been modernized and is now fully electrified and double tracked. It is the busiest passenger and freight line in the country. It passes through many important towns and cities in mainland Greece such as Athens, Chalkis, Thebes, Lamia, Larissa and Katerini. Used for all types of railway service.
  • The Athens Airport–Patras railway which is electrified until Kiato and doubled tracked throughout. It passes through west Attica and the northern coast of the Peloponnese. Some important cities located on the line include Eleusis, Megara, Corinth and Aigio. Used for commuter/regional services. The final section, from Aigio to Patras of the line is, as of 2020, under construction.

Minor rail network

Rail Companies in Greece

 

Passenger and freight train services on OSE lines are operated and provided mainly by TrainOSE S.A., (a former OSE subsidiary which is now owned by the Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane group). Moreover PEARL and Rail Cargo Logistics Goldair operate freight services between Piraeus and the rest of Europe.

Future

 
Schematic passenger railway map of Greece in 2022.

The Egnatia Railway is a planned railway line between Alexandroupolis and Igoumenitsa. The project includes track refurbishment and upgrades on the existing track sections of the Thessaloniki – Florina and Thessaloniki – Alexandroupolis railway lines, and brand new track between Florina and Krystallopigi, and Kozani to Igoumenitsa. The projected cost of this project is €10 billion.[14]

A new double track, standard gauge railway between Athens and Patras is also currently under construction.

An expansion of the Athens Suburban Railway to Loutraki is currently underway.

Stations Gallery

Urban Railways

Athens

Athens Metro consists of one mostly overground line (Line 1), one completely underground line (Line 2) and one mostly underground line (Line 3) serves Athens' Urban area. The system is owned by Attiko Metro S.A. and is operated by Stasy S.A. or STASY. Athens Metro trains reach Athens International Airport over electrified OSE lines that are also used by the Suburban Railway.

The Athens Suburban Railway consists of five lines running on the Athens – Oinoi – Chalkida railway, the Athens Airport – Aigio railway and the Athens – Athens International Airport railway. It is double tracked (except for the Oinoi – Chalkida line) and electrified throughout its route.

The modern day Athens Tram was built according to Light Rail standards in 2004. It runs from Piraeus to Voula along the Athens Riviera, and also connects with Syntagma Square in the centre of Athens. It was built in standard gauge and extends a length of 32.4 km.

Thessaloniki

Proastiakos Thessalonikis is a commuter rail service consisting of two lines and serving much of the region of Macedonia. Line 1 operates from the New Railway Station to Platy and then Katerini and Larissa. Line 2 runs from the New Railway Station to Platy, Edessa and Florina. Both lines are standard gauge, and line 1 is electrified and double tracked whilst line 2 is not.

The construction of Thessaloniki metro began in 2006 with the first phase of the project expected to be complete by 2023. The 9.6 km line will be owned and operated by Attiko Metro S.A.

Patras

Proastiakos Patras is a commuter rail system which operates on two lines. The first one runs from the town of Kato Achaia to the Central Railway Station and the second one from the suburb of Rio to the Central Railway Station. Despite operating on the old metre gauge network and having limited infrastructure, it is considered by the public and many experts as the best commuter rail in Greece.

Thrace

Proastiakos of Thrace was a commuter rail system which operated on 2009 until 2010. Operated from Alexandroupolis to Xanthi. Line is standard gauge. But on 3 February 2010 Proastiakos of Thace suspended.[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Σιδηροδρομικές Επιχειρήσεις – ΡΑΣ".
  2. ^ a b "Railway passenger transport statistics" (PDF). Europa EU. 8 December 2019. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b c "Railway Statistics – 2017 Synopsis" (PDF). International Union of Railways, IUC. 2017. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Σιδηροδρομική Υποδομή" (in Greek). ΟΣΕ. Retrieved 2020-06-22.
  5. ^ Lewis 2001, pp. 8 & 15
  6. ^ a b "Hellenic Railways (OSE) History" 2009-10-30 at the Wayback Machine, Organismós Sidirodrómon Elládos. Retrieved on November 16, 2009.
  7. ^ G. Nathenas; A. Kourbelis; T. Vlastos; S. Kourouzidis; V. Katsareas; P. Karamanis; A. Klonos; N. Kokkinos (2007). Από τα Παμφορεία στο Μετρό (in Greek). Vol. 2. Athens: Μίλητος (Militos). pp. 537–834. ISBN 978-960-8460-91-1.
  8. ^ I. Zartaloudis, D. Karatolos, D. Koutelidis, G. Nathenas, S. Fasoulas, A. Filippoupolitis, A. (1997). Οι Ελληνικοί Σιδηρόδρομοι (Hellenic Railways) (in Greek). Μίλητος (Militos). pp. 290–299. ISBN 960-8460-07-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ A. Deligiannis & D. Papadimitriou (1987–1988). "The train of Stavros" (PDF). Makedonika. Thessaloniki: Etereia Makedonikon Spoudon. 26 (80). {{cite journal}}: External link in |publisher= (help)[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ I. Zartaloudis, D. Karatolos, D. Koutelidis, G. Nathenas, S. Fasoulas, A. Filippoupolitis, A. (1997). Οι Ελληνικοί Σιδηρόδρομοι (Hellenic Railways) (in Greek). Μίλητος (Militos). pp. 280–289. ISBN 960-8460-07-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Keith Taylorson (1996). Narrow gauge at war 2. East Harling, UK: Plateway Press. pp. 82–90. ISBN 1-871980-29-1.
  12. ^ Organ, J. (2006). Greece Narrow Gauge. Middleton Press. ISBN 1-904474-72-1.
  13. ^ Diamantis, Myrtsidis (2021). Η Ιστορία του Σιδηροδρόμου στον Έβρο (The History of Evros Railway) (in Greek) (2 ed.). Nea Vyssa: Myrtsidis. p. 20-23. ISBN 978-618-00-3174-4.
  14. ^ ‘Egnatia Railway’ European Commission
  15. ^ Myrtsidis, Diamantis (2021). Η Ιστορία του Σιδηροδρόμου στον Έβρο (The history of Evros railway) (in greek). Nea Vyssa: Myrtsidis. pp. 144–145. ISBN 978-618-00-3174-4.

Further reading

  • Myrtsidis, Diamantis (2021). Η Ιστορία του Σιδηροδρόμου στον Έβρο (The History of Evros Railway) (in greek) (2nd ed.). Nea Vyssa: Myrtsidis. ISBN 978-618-00-3174-4.
  • I. Zartaloudis, D. Karatolos, D. Koutelidis, G. Nathenas, S. Fasoulas, A. Filippoupolitis, A. (1997). Οι Ελληνικοί Σιδηρόδρομοι (Hellenic Railways) (in Greek). Μίλητος (Militos). ISBN 960-8460-07-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) It is the only extensive and authoritative source for the history of Greek railways until 1997.
  • Simms, W.F. (1997). The railways of Greece. Wilfried F. Sims. ISBN 0-9528881-1-4. Contains brief history, simple line maps and extensive list of rolling stock until 1997.
  • Organ, John (2006). Greece Narrow Gauge: featuring the Thessaly and the Peloponnese systems. Narrow Gauge Branch Lines series. Midhurst, West Sussex, UK: Middleton Press. ISBN 1904474721.
  • Greece — Railway Map (2nd ed.). London, UK: The Quail Map Company. 1992. ISBN 0-900609-85-0. {{cite book}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  • , report submitted to the European Commission, DG Transport and Energy, Version 6, Rijswijk, The Netherlands, 2005.

External links

  • OSE group
  • TrainOSE S.A.

rail, transport, greece, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, ma. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rail transport in Greece news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rail transport in Greece has a history which began in 1869 with the completion of the then Athens amp Piraeus Railway From the 1880s to the 1920s the majority of the network was built reaching its heyday in 1940 From the 1950s onward the railway system entered a period of decline culminating in the service cuts of 2011 Ever since the 1990s the network has been steadily modernized but still remains smaller than its peak length The operation of the Greek railway network is split between the Hellenic Railways Organisation OSE which owns and maintains the rail infrastructure GAIAOSE which owns the building infrastructure including stations and the former OSE rolling stock Hellenic Train and other private companies that run the trains on the network Greece is a member of the International Union of Railways UIC The UIC Country Code for Greece is 73 Rail transport in GreeceElectric locomotive in Thessaloniki stationOperationInfrastructure companyHellenic Railways OrganisationMajor operatorsHellenic Train 1 PEARL 1 Rail Cargo Logistics Goldair Grup Feroviar RomanStatisticsRidership19 599 000 2019 2 Passenger km1 252 billion 2019 2 Freight538 million tonne kmSystem lengthTotal5 256 25 kilometres 3 266 08 mi 3 Double track1 625 km 1 010 mi 3 Electrified1 601 km 995 mi 3 Track gaugeMain1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge787 km 489 0 mi 750 mm 2 ft 5 1 2 in 22 3 km 13 9 mi 4 600 mm 1 ft 11 5 8 in 15 km 9 3 mi 4 ElectrificationMain25 kV 50 HzFeaturesLongest tunnelKallidromo Tunnel 9 6 km 5 97 mi Highest elevationKalogeriko at814 metres 2 671 ft MapMap showing the Greek railway system c 1901 1902 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient Greece 1 2 The beginnings 1868 1919 1 3 Integration of networks 1920 1970 1 4 Modern era 1971 present 1 5 Old Urban railways of Athens 2 Industrial railways 3 Military railways 1916 1918 4 Current status 4 1 Railway Lines in Greece 4 2 Rail Companies in Greece 5 Future 6 Stations Gallery 7 Urban Railways 7 1 Athens 7 2 Thessaloniki 7 3 Patras 7 4 Thrace 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditFurther information History of rail transport in Greece Ancient Greece Edit The Diolkos was a paved trackway near Corinth in Ancient Greece which enabled boats to be moved overland across the Isthmus of Corinth The shortcut allowed ancient vessels to avoid the dangerous circumnavigation of the Peloponnese peninsula It is regarded by the British historian of science M J T Lewis author of Early Wooden Railways as the first railway as defined as a track to direct vehicles so they may not leave the track to ever be constructed 5 The beginnings 1868 1919 Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Lamia station c 1910 Bralos station during WWI Greek independence in 1832 coincided with the start of the railway era By 1835 plans were being put to the Greek state to construct a railway line from Athens to the port of Piraeus Twenty two years later in 1857 a contract for its construction was signed and the work commenced It took four different companies a further twelve years to lay the 8 8 kilometres 5 5 mi of track the work being completed in 1869 6 Greece towards the end of the 19th century was a collection of small agricultural towns acting as marketplaces and economic centres for the villages that surrounded them citation needed Greece had very little industry and few roads which made the government think about the development of a railway system that would go towards addressing the lack of internal and external communication that existed citation needed In 1881 the Prime Minister Alexandros Koumoundouros signed four contracts for the laying of 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge lines with the intention of making Greece a pivotal point on the journey between Europe India and Asia In the following year 1882 Koumoundouros was replaced by Charilaos Trikoupis as Prime Minister who cancelled the contracts replacing them with four of his own He had a different political vision for the railways seeing them as a way of stimulating the internal growth of Greece and proposed a 417 kilometres 259 mi narrow gauge 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in system encircling the northern Peloponnese with a separate system in Thessaly linking the port of Volos with the town of Kalambaka on the other side of the Thessalian plain There was also a line of 76 kilometres 47 mi to be laid from Athens to Lavrio on the peninsula of Eastern Attica Trikoupis preferred narrow gauge over standard gauge due to cheaper initial construction costs although the line linking Athens to Larissa which was planned to eventually join with the European system was constructed to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge The network took 25 years to complete 20 years longer than the 5 anticipated by Trikoupis Railway companies that arose during this era include SPAP Piraeus Athens Peloponnese Railways which operated the system in the Peloponnese the Thessaly Railways which operated the lines in Thessaly the Attica Railways which operated the railways in Attica and the Railways of Northwest Greece which operated the railways in Aetolia Acarnania By 1909 1 606 kilometres 998 mi of track had been laid including the main standard gauge line to the then Greek Turkish border at Papapouli past the Tempi valley 400 km north of Athens The first trains to run the full 506 kilometres from Athens to Thessaloniki on standard gauge track marked the completion of the line in 1918 which by then was running entirely on Greek territory Integration of networks 1920 1970 Edit Main article Hellenic State RailwaysDuring the 1920s the Greek railway network was split between a number of companies private and public with the most important being the SPAP Athens Piraeus Peloponnese Railways and the SEK Hellenic State Railways Eventually the SPAP integrated most railways Southern Greece and the SEK those in Northern Greece Due to the immense financial and social pressure during the interwar period not much railway construction happened Important construction projects in the 1920s and 1930s include the expansion of the Piraeus Thissio Railway towards the centre of Athens via a long tunnel the attempted extension of the Palaiofarsalos Kalampaka Railway towards Grevena and Kozani and the construction of the Leukothea Amphipolis railway line Much of the railway infrastructure was destroyed during the Second World War and the subsequent Civil War resulting in much of the post war era being devoted into rebuilding it The only noteworthy expansion between 1940 and 1971 was the building of a new railway line connecting Larissa to Volos and the extension of the Thessaloniki Florina railway line to Ptolemaida and Kozani Also significant was the extension of EIS towards Kifisia by absorbing a former Attica Railway line Brallos or Papadia bridge rebuilt in 1945 Modern era 1971 present Edit Main article Hellenic Railways Organisation The Hellenic Railways Organisation OSE was founded in 1971 taking over from the Hellenic State Railways Many services were cut in the 1980s in particular the metre gauge network only to be reinstaured during the 1990s but then to be cut again in 2011 with the debt crisis Since then the network of Greece s standard railways has been extensively modernised and most of them have been electrified notably between the cities of Athens and Thessaloniki between Athens and Kiato and in the vicinity of Athens In 2016 the public passenger and freight train operator TrainOSE was privatized It was sold to the Italian FSI Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane group owned by the Government of Italy and train operator in the country for 50 million euros Moreover two new freight train operators PEARL and Rail Cargo Logistics Goldair have begun operations with the goal of transporting cargo between Piraeus and Central Europe Old Urban railways of Athens Edit Piraeus Monastiraki Iraklio Lavrio KifissiaThe first railway line that operated in Greece was the one connecting Athens and its port Piraeus which opened in 1869 It ran for a distance of 8 km from the port of Piraeus to Thissio in center of Athens It was later extended to Omonoia Square in 1895 and electrified in 1904 with the 600 V DC third rail system From 1911 it was also possible to run through freight trains on the Piraeus Harbour Tramway using dual system electric locomotives First generation EIS EMU at Piraeus station Another company Attica Railways in 1885 ran a metre gauge suburban line from Lavrio Square to the north of Omonoia Square and to Iraklio a northern suburb It involved a section of street running along the present 3 September Street from Lavrio Square to Attiki Square beyond which it ran on a dedicated trackbed At Iraklio the line forked to form two suburban branches One went further north via Maroussi to Kifissia and Strofyli with a freight only extension to Dionyssos marble quarries The other branch ran eastwards to Vrilissia at a point very near to the present Plakentias station and then southwards to the villages Peania Koropi Marcopoulo Kalyvia Keratea Kamariza and its terminus at the mining town of Lavrio In 1926 the Hellenic Electric Railways S A EIS Ellhnikoi Hlektrikoi Sidhrodromoi EHS a new company created by the co operation of Attica Railways S A and the English Power Group took over operation of the two lines Piraeus Athens and Omonia and Attiki Kifissia Strofyli In 1929 SPAP Piraeus Athens and Peloponnese Railways took over the Iraklio Lavrio branch line The Athens terminal for Lavrio was moved from Lavrio Square to Athens Peloponnese Station 6 To join the Lavrio line to its network SPAP built a connection between Agioi Anargyroi Kato Liosia and Iraklio 1931 The Lavrio line was eventually closed in 1957 due to political pressures from the road lobby 7 The line from Attiki Square to Kifissia operated as a steam locomotive hauled railway with numerous level crossings until 1938 The line was subsequently rebuilt in electrified dual track standard gauge without level crossings connected to the electrified Athens Piraeus EIS line at Omonoia and reopened to Kifissia in 1957 The extension to Strofyli was abandoned Industrial railways EditMain article Greek industrial railways A number of railway lines were constructed mainly by mining operations and by extensive industrial facilities There were also a few temporary lines used for the construction of major public works Most of them were either meter gauge or 600 mm 1 ft 11 5 8 in narrow gauge 8 Military railways 1916 1918 EditDuring World War I after the collapse of Serbia Eastern Macedonia was occupied by German and Bulgarian forces and Central and Western Macedonia by French and British troops thus establishing the Macedonian front The French and British troops and their Greek allies had extensive military logistics facilities in and around Thessaloniki Supplies had to be transported to the various front line units As World War I fronts were relatively static it was possible to construct railway lines for this purpose Almost all of these lines were of the Decauville system with a 600 mm 1 ft 11 5 8 in narrow gauge Some of these lines were completely isolated from existing lines while others started at mainline railway stations 9 The most important such railways were the following 10 11 The Tasli to Stavros line at Orfanu Bay The Perivolaki Nea Zichni railway line This 66 km long line built by the British Army was taken over by the Hellenic State Railways SEK in 1921 SEK operated this line until 1947 It was preserved on request of the Hellenic Army until 1952 when it was dismantled The main rolling stock consisted of War Department Baldwin 4 6 0T steam locomotives 12 The Skydra Vertekop Aridaia line This 42 km long line was handed over after the war to Chemins de fer Vicinaux de Macedoine 1923 which failed to make a profit and the line was taken over by the Hellenic State Railways SEK in 1932 SEK closed the line in 1936 The Armenochori Skotsidir line The Goumenitsa line The Dimitritsi Gudeli to Kopriva Kurfali line The Katerini Dramista line a mining line for transport of brown coal lignite Some of these railway lines continued operating for scheduled passenger and freight service after the conclusion of the war under the company Local Railways of Macedonia Current status EditThe running of the Greek railways is divided between the Hellenic Railways Organisation and GAIAOSE which owns and maintains the infrastructure and Hellenic Train and smaller other companies which run the trains on the network The rail bridge over the Isthmus of Corinth Diakofto Kalavryta railway Diesel multiple OSE class 660 Railway Lines in Greece Edit Major rail network standard gauge The Piraeus Platy railway with its numerous branch lines The line has been modernized and is now fully electrified and double tracked It is the busiest passenger and freight line in the country It passes through many important towns and cities in mainland Greece such as Athens Chalkis Thebes Lamia Larissa and Katerini Used for all types of railway service The Athens Airport Patras railway which is electrified until Kiato and doubled tracked throughout It passes through west Attica and the northern coast of the Peloponnese Some important cities located on the line include Eleusis Megara Corinth and Aigio Used for commuter regional services The final section from Aigio to Patras of the line is as of 2020 under construction Minor rail network The Thessaloniki Bitola railway from Platy branching off from the Athens Thessaloniki mainline to Florina which continues to form the Kozani Amyntaio railway line The Alexandroupoli Svilengrad railway running parallel to the Evros River and the Turkish border Important settlements on the line include Feres Soufli Didimotiho Orestiada and Nea Vyssa Used for all types of services 13 The standard gauge Thessaly railways Kalambaka Palaiofarsalos and Volos Larissa The Peloponnese metre gauge railway network which is largely unused Main railway lines ran from Athens to Patras and then from Patras to Kyparissia and Kalo Nero Corinth to Kalamata and Katakolo to Olympia through Pyrgos The only active parts of the network are the Katakolo Olympia line and the Proastiakos Patras The 750 mm 2 ft 5 1 2 in narrow gauge rack railway line from Diakofto to Kalavryta the Diakofto Kalavryta Railway The seasonal 600 mm 1 ft 11 5 8 in narrow gauge line from Ano Lechonia to Milies the Pelion railway The Thessaloniki Idomeni railway which is single track and electrified It connects the Greek railway network to that of the rest of Europe Used only for freight services The Thessaloniki Alexandroupoli Railway the second longest in the country Important settlements on the line include Kilkis Serres Drama Xanthi Komotini and Alexandroupoli Used for all types of services although mainly intercity Rail Companies in Greece Edit Main article TrainOSE Passenger and freight train services on OSE lines are operated and provided mainly by TrainOSE S A a former OSE subsidiary which is now owned by the Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane group Moreover PEARL and Rail Cargo Logistics Goldair operate freight services between Piraeus and the rest of Europe Future Edit Schematic passenger railway map of Greece in 2022 The Egnatia Railway is a planned railway line between Alexandroupolis and Igoumenitsa The project includes track refurbishment and upgrades on the existing track sections of the Thessaloniki Florina and Thessaloniki Alexandroupolis railway lines and brand new track between Florina and Krystallopigi and Kozani to Igoumenitsa The projected cost of this project is 10 billion 14 A new double track standard gauge railway between Athens and Patras is also currently under construction An expansion of the Athens Suburban Railway to Loutraki is currently underway Stations Gallery Edit Volos railway station Piraeus station Metro Line 1 Patras railway station Athens railway station Messolonghi railway station Olympia railway station Argos railway stationUrban Railways EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Athens Edit Main articles Athens Tram Athens Metro and Athens Suburban Railway Athens Metro consists of one mostly overground line Line 1 one completely underground line Line 2 and one mostly underground line Line 3 serves Athens Urban area The system is owned by Attiko Metro S A and is operated by Stasy S A or STASY Athens Metro trains reach Athens International Airport over electrified OSE lines that are also used by the Suburban Railway The Athens Suburban Railway consists of five lines running on the Athens Oinoi Chalkida railway the Athens Airport Aigio railway and the Athens Athens International Airport railway It is double tracked except for the Oinoi Chalkida line and electrified throughout its route The modern day Athens Tram was built according to Light Rail standards in 2004 It runs from Piraeus to Voula along the Athens Riviera and also connects with Syntagma Square in the centre of Athens It was built in standard gauge and extends a length of 32 4 km Thessaloniki Edit Main articles Thessaloniki Metro and Proastiakos Thessaloniki Proastiakos Thessalonikis is a commuter rail service consisting of two lines and serving much of the region of Macedonia Line 1 operates from the New Railway Station to Platy and then Katerini and Larissa Line 2 runs from the New Railway Station to Platy Edessa and Florina Both lines are standard gauge and line 1 is electrified and double tracked whilst line 2 is not The construction of Thessaloniki metro began in 2006 with the first phase of the project expected to be complete by 2023 The 9 6 km line will be owned and operated by Attiko Metro S A Patras Edit Proastiakos Patras is a commuter rail system which operates on two lines The first one runs from the town of Kato Achaia to the Central Railway Station and the second one from the suburb of Rio to the Central Railway Station Despite operating on the old metre gauge network and having limited infrastructure it is considered by the public and many experts as the best commuter rail in Greece Thrace Edit Proastiakos of Thrace was a commuter rail system which operated on 2009 until 2010 Operated from Alexandroupolis to Xanthi Line is standard gauge But on 3 February 2010 Proastiakos of Thace suspended 15 See also EditAthens Metro Athens Tram P A Th E P Budapest Belgrade Skopje Athens railway Hellenic Railways Organisation List of town tramway systems in Greece Railway Museum of Athens Transport in GreeceReferences Edit a b Sidhrodromikes Epixeirhseis RAS a b Railway passenger transport statistics PDF Europa EU 8 December 2019 Retrieved 9 January 2021 a b c Railway Statistics 2017 Synopsis PDF International Union of Railways IUC 2017 Retrieved 11 June 2019 a b Sidhrodromikh Ypodomh in Greek OSE Retrieved 2020 06 22 Lewis 2001 pp 8 amp 15 a b Hellenic Railways OSE History Archived 2009 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Organismos Sidirodromon Ellados Retrieved on November 16 2009 G Nathenas A Kourbelis T Vlastos S Kourouzidis V Katsareas P Karamanis A Klonos N Kokkinos 2007 Apo ta Pamforeia sto Metro in Greek Vol 2 Athens Milhtos Militos pp 537 834 ISBN 978 960 8460 91 1 I Zartaloudis D Karatolos D Koutelidis G Nathenas S Fasoulas A Filippoupolitis A 1997 Oi Ellhnikoi Sidhrodromoi Hellenic Railways in Greek Milhtos Militos pp 290 299 ISBN 960 8460 07 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link A Deligiannis amp D Papadimitriou 1987 1988 The train of Stavros PDF Makedonika Thessaloniki Etereia Makedonikon Spoudon 26 80 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a External link in code class cs1 code publisher code help permanent dead link I Zartaloudis D Karatolos D Koutelidis G Nathenas S Fasoulas A Filippoupolitis A 1997 Oi Ellhnikoi Sidhrodromoi Hellenic Railways in Greek Milhtos Militos pp 280 289 ISBN 960 8460 07 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Keith Taylorson 1996 Narrow gauge at war 2 East Harling UK Plateway Press pp 82 90 ISBN 1 871980 29 1 Organ J 2006 Greece Narrow Gauge Middleton Press ISBN 1 904474 72 1 Diamantis Myrtsidis 2021 H Istoria toy Sidhrodromoy ston Ebro The History of Evros Railway in Greek 2 ed Nea Vyssa Myrtsidis p 20 23 ISBN 978 618 00 3174 4 Egnatia Railway European Commission Myrtsidis Diamantis 2021 H Istoria toy Sidhrodromoy ston Ebro The history of Evros railway in greek Nea Vyssa Myrtsidis pp 144 145 ISBN 978 618 00 3174 4 Further reading EditMyrtsidis Diamantis 2021 H Istoria toy Sidhrodromoy ston Ebro The History of Evros Railway in greek 2nd ed Nea Vyssa Myrtsidis ISBN 978 618 00 3174 4 I Zartaloudis D Karatolos D Koutelidis G Nathenas S Fasoulas A Filippoupolitis A 1997 Oi Ellhnikoi Sidhrodromoi Hellenic Railways in Greek Milhtos Militos ISBN 960 8460 07 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link It is the only extensive and authoritative source for the history of Greek railways until 1997 Simms W F 1997 The railways of Greece Wilfried F Sims ISBN 0 9528881 1 4 Contains brief history simple line maps and extensive list of rolling stock until 1997 Organ John 2006 Greece Narrow Gauge featuring the Thessaly and the Peloponnese systems Narrow Gauge Branch Lines series Midhurst West Sussex UK Middleton Press ISBN 1904474721 Greece Railway Map 2nd ed London UK The Quail Map Company 1992 ISBN 0 900609 85 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a External link in code class cs1 code publisher code help ERAIL Greece monograph report submitted to the European Commission DG Transport and Energy Version 6 Rijswijk The Netherlands 2005 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rail transport in Greece OSE group TrainOSE S A Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rail transport in Greece amp oldid 1147366326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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