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Brenner Railway - Wikipedia

Innsbruck–Bozen–Verona railway

An OBB EuroSprinter with a Eurocity train
passes KM 91,5 towards Matrei station.

Overview
Line number
  • 302 02 Austria
  • 42 (Brenner–Bozen)
  • 43 (Bozen–Verona)
LocaleAustria and Italy
Service
Route number
  • 300 (Salzburg Hbf - Brennero/Brenner)
  • 301 (Jenbach - Telfs-Pfaffenhofen / Steinach in Tirol)
  • 50 (Italy)
Technical
Line length275.4 km (171.1 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius264 m (866 ft)
Electrification
  • 15 kV 16.7 Hz Austria
  • 3 kV Italy
Operating speed180 km/h (112 mph)
Maximum incline
  • north ramp: 2.5%
  • south ramp: 2.25%

Route map

Map of the Brenner railway

elev (M)
or length (m)
in metres

75.130

Innsbruck

 S3   S4  ↓

582 M

Innsbruck Hbf (freight)

76.725

Bergisel tunnel

662 m

78.198

Sonnenburg tunnel

249 m

79.646

Innsbruck Hbf
1 junction

Innsbruck
bypass

80.291

Ahrnwald tunnel

165 m

80.809

Schupfen tunnel

35 m

81.295

Unterberg-
Stefansbrücke

716 M

81.648

Unterberg tunnel

49 m

82.662

Patsch tunnel

176 m

83.905

Innsbruck Hbf
2 crossover

84.718

Patsch

784 M

85.403

Schönberg tunnel

89 m

85.726

Mühltal tunnel

872 m

86.936

Moserwiese tunnel

74 m

91.847

Matrei tunnel

124 m

93.281

Matrei am Brenner

995 M

97.884

Steinach in Tirol

 S3  ↑

1,048 M

101.918

St. Jodok

1,141 M

102.427

Sankt Jodok spiral tunnel

480 m

104.323

Stafflach tunnel

283 m

106.189

Gries tunnel

173 m

106.651

Gries am Brenner

1,255 M

106.917

Steinach in Tirol 2 crossover

110.9

Brennersee

1,351 M

111.145

Steinach in Tirol 4 junction
track 302 11

111.425

Brennersee Terminal

111.561

ÖBB
RFI

maintenance border

111.663
240.083

239.533

Brennero/Brenner

 S4  ↑

1,371 M

236.2

Brennerbad

(former spa)

1,310 M

Pflersch tunnel

7.267 m

13.1

Moncucco/Schelleberg

1,242 M

Ast spiral tunnel

761 m

226.7

Fleres/Pflersch

1,130 M

222.8

Colle Isarco/Gossensaß

1,100 M

Eisack bridge I

217.0

Vipiteno/Sterzing

943 M

Campo di Trens/Freienfeld

935 M

Palude di Vipiteno bridge

208.9

Mules/Mauls

900 M

204.3

Le Cave/Grasstein

843 M

200.8

Mezzaselva/Mittewald

798 M

197.0

Fortezza/Franzensfeste

747 M

197.0

192.19

Varna/Vahrn

650 M

188.36

Bressanone/Brixen

577 M

Eisack bridge II

184.70

Albès/Albeins

548 M

Funes/Villnöß

539 M

178.24

Chiusa/Klausen

523 M

172.43

Ponte Gardena/Waidbruck

422 M

Schlern tunnel

13,159 m

Rötele bridge

Castelrotto/Kastelruth

428 M

Campodazzo/Atzwang

373 M

Eisack bridge I

tunnel VII

55 m

tunnel VI

72 m

tunnel V

60 m

tunnel IV

62 m

tunnel III

79 m

tunnel II

57 m

Völsersteig/Fiè allo Sciliar

340 M

tunnel I

40 m

Schlern tunnel

13,159 m

157.99

Prato all'Isarco/Blumau

315 M

Kardaun tunnel

3,789 m

Prato Tires tunnel

430 m

Cardano/Kardaun

283 M

Kardaun bridge

150.23

Bolzano/Bozen

266 M

148.59

142.56

Laives/Leifers

230 M

139.29

Bronzolo/Branzoll

227 M

134.17

Ora/Auer

223 M

128.40

Egna/Neumarkt

217 M

124.42

Magrè/Margreid
Cortaccia/Kurtatsch

216 M

118.99

Salorno/Salurn

211 M

111.62

Mezzocorona

110.50

104.32

Lavis

95.43

Trent goods station
Trento-Malè railway

94.79

Trento

93.01

87.22

Mattarello

78.91

Calliano

(

closed
2004

)

71.21

Rovereto

66.91

Mori

Rovereto–Arco–
Riva railway
 [it]

60.86

Serravalle

54.68

Ala

50.36

Avio

45.48

Borghetto

40.36

Peri

32.77

Dolcè

22.80

Domegliara–Sant'Ambrogio

16.98

Pescantina

11.65

Verona Parona

6.39

San Massimo junction (PC)[nb 1]

3.37

Verona Porta Nuova

0.00

Verona Porta Vescovo

elev (M)
or length (m)
in metres

Source: Italian railway atlas[1]

This diagram:

Innsbruck station at the north end of the Brenner railway

The Brenner Railway (German: Brennerbahn; Italian: Ferrovia del Brennero) is a major line connecting the Austrian and Italian railways from Innsbruck to Verona, climbing up the Wipptal (German for "Wipp Valley"), passing over the Brenner Pass, descending down the Eisacktal (German for "Eisack Valley") to Bolzano/Bozen, then further down the Adige Valley to Rovereto/Rofreit, and along the section of the Adige Valley, called in Italian the "Vallagarina", to Verona. This railway line is part of the Line 1 of Trans-European Transport Networks (TEN-T). It is considered a "fundamental" line by the state railways Ferrovie dello Stato (FS).[2]

The railway line was designed under the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the mid-19th century to ensure rapid and safe transport between Tyrol and northern Italy, especially Lombardy–Venetia. It was thus strategically important not only for economic but also for military reasons, as Austria was strongly committed to maintaining its borders south of the Alps.

The first section to be built was the lower section between Verona and Bolzano/Bozen. The design of this section was approved on 10 July 1853 by the engineer Alois Negrelli, an employee of the Südbahn, known for having built other Alpine railway lines and for developing a project of the Suez Canal. The section was opened in two different parts: on 23 March 1859 between Verona to Trento/Trient and 16 May 1859 from Trento/Trient to Bolzano/Bozen. This construction was handled by the k.k. Nord- und SüdTiroler Staatsbahn (German: "North and South Tyrol State Railways"), but the company was taken over by the new Austrian Southern Railway (German: Südbahn) at the beginning of 1859.[3]

Despite the loss of Veneto in the Third Italian War of Independence and its consequent shift of the border between Italy and Austria to Borghetto on the current boundary of Trentino and Verona in October 1866, the upper section from Bolzano/Bozen to Innsbruck was incomplete. The 127-kilometre (79 mi) route from Innsbruck to Bolzano/Bozen took only three years to build. This section had been under construction and was finally opened on 24 August 1867. The main designer and engineer, Karl von Etzel, died in 1865; he was not able to witness the completion of his work. After the Semmering railway, this Brenner Line was the second mountain railway built within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was also the first through line to cross over the Alps.

The section south of Borghetto became part of the Società per le strade ferrate dell'Alta Italia (Italian for Upper (Northern) Italian Railways, SFAI) in 1866.[4] In the 1885 reorganisation it was absorbed by the Società per le Strade Ferrate Meridionali (Adriatic Network).[5] The line came under the control of Ferrovie dello Stato upon its establishment in 1905.

In 1919, Italy acquired Trentino-South Tyrol under the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye and the Austro-Italian border moved to Brenner. The section from Trento/Trient to Brenner was subsequently electrified at 3,700 V at three-phase 16.7 Hz between 1929 and 1934.[6] Electrification was converted to 3,000 V DC on 30 May 1965.

In preparation for the proposed Brenner Base Tunnel, the Innsbruck bypass was completed in 1994 to improve access to the Lower Inn Valley railway. The bypass consists of a 12.75-kilometre (7.92 mi) tunnel (Austria's longest) and aims to remove the bulk of the freight train traffic from Innsbruck. In Italy, several new sections have been built, removing sections of line with several short tunnels with small cross sections. These include the 13,159-metre-long (43,173 ft) Sciliar tunnel opened in 1994, the 7,267-metre-long (23,842 ft) Pflersch tunnel opened in 1999 and the 3,939-metre-long (12,923 ft) Cardano tunnel opened in 1998.

Following a sharp increase in freight traffic through the Brenner Pass (largely on road), the railway is currently considered to have insufficient capacity. Moreover, its steep grades, tight radius bends and the need to change locomotive engines at Brenner due to two different electrical systems as used in Austria and Italy mean that the average travel speed is low. For these reasons, the creation of a new line is planned from Verona to Munich via Innsbruck. At the heart of this project lies a 55-kilometre-long (34 mi) tunnel between Franzensfeste and Innsbruck, known as the Brenner Base Tunnel.[7]

The maximum grade on the track is 31 per thousand (3.1%). The minimum curve radius is 264 metres (866 ft). The highest point of the track is Brenner station at 1,371 metres (4,498 ft), which is also the highest point reached on the standard gauge networks of the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) and the Italian Ferrovie dello Stato (FS) networks.

To overcome the steep climb (796 metres (2,612 ft) between Innsbruck and Brenner) two spiral tunnels were built, using the sides of a valley at St. Jodok on the Austrian side and the sides of the Pflerschtal (German for "Pflersch Valley") on the Italian side.

At Brenner station, located on the Brenner Pass (1,371 metres; 4,498 ft), there is a monument to the designer, Karl von Etzel. This station is situated at the border between Italy and Austria and also the operational border between the ÖBB and FS networks. The two companies operate different electrical systems, (15,000 V AC at 16.7 Hz in Austria, and 3,000 V DC in Italy), which requires a stop to change electric locomotives. For this reason, for a long time the operation of express trains from Munich to Verona and Milan was carried out with diesel railcars. Until 30 May 1965 was also needed a second engine change in Bolzano station, as the Bolzano–Brenner section still operated under three-phase AC electrification.

In recent years the introduction of multicurrent rolling stock, which can be run on both the Austrian and Italian networks, has made it possible, at least in principle, to avoid locomotive changes. However, the need for locomotives to carry equipment for different signalling systems and to have safety approvals for different networks and lines, and the need for staff to know operating rules and routes has limited multicurrent operations in practice.

  1. ^ "Posti di comunicazione", i.e. a crossover.
  1. ^ Railway Atlas 2017, pp. 3, 8, 9, 23, 24, 136, 137.
  2. ^ "Rete FS in esercizio (FS operational network)" (PDF) (in Italian). Ferrovie dello Stato. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2010.
  3. ^ Kalla-Bishop 1971, p. 21
  4. ^ Kalla-Bishop 1971, p. 41
  5. ^ Kalla-Bishop 1971, p. 52
  6. ^ Kalla-Bishop 1971, p. 103
  7. ^ "The Brenner Base Tunnel". Amministrazione trasparente Galleria di Base del Brennero - Brenner Basistunnel BBT SE. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  • Facchinelli, L. (1995), La ferrovia Verona–Brennero. Storia della linea e delle stazioni nel territorio (the Verona–Brennero railway, history of the lines and stations in the area) (in Italian), Bolzano: Athesia
  • Kalla-Bishop, P. M. (1971), Italian Railways, Newton Abbott, Devon, England: David & Charles, ISBN 0-7153-5168-0
  • Mori, Edoardo, La ferrovia da Verona a Monaco di Baviera (The railway from Verona to Munich) (in Italian), Calosci Editore
  • Tuzza, Alessandro, ed. (1927). "Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926" (in Italian). Ufficio Centrale di Statistica delle Ferrovie dello Stato/Trenidicarta.it. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  • Atlante ferroviario d'Italia e Slovenia [Railway atlas of Italy and Slovenia]. Schweers + Wall. 2010. ISBN 978-3-89494-129-1.}


46°18′26″N 11°14′51″E / 46.30722°N 11.24750°E