Acharnes Railway Center

The Acharnes Railway Center (Greek: Σιδηροδρομικό Κέντρο Αχαρνών) or SKA is a two-level railway station in the northern parts of the Athens Urban Area, in the municipality of Acharnes, where several important railway lines converge. It is an important passenger interchange station, opened in April 2011.[2]

Σιδηροδρομικό Κέντρο Αχαρνών
Acharnes Railway Center
Acharnes Railway Center, July 2013
LocationAcharnes, Athens
East Attica
Greece
Coordinates38°03′59″N 23°44′12″E
Owned byOSE
Line(s)Piraeus–Platy railway,
Athens Airport–Patras railway[1]
Platforms3 Side
Tracks15 (2 for the Athens - Thessaloniki line, 1 for Proastiakos Trains, 1 for freight trains from Piraeus and Thriasion to Northern Greece, 4 tracks from/to Peloponnese and 7 unused tracks.
Train operatorsTrainOSE
Connections[1]
Construction
Structure typeat-grade
Platform levels2
ParkingYes
Disabled access
Other information
Websitehttp://www.ose.gr/en/
History
Opened5 April 2011
Electrified25 kV AC[1]
Services
Preceding station   Proastiakos   Following station
Agioi Anargyroi
towards Athens
Line 3
towards Chalcis
Terminus
Line 4
Metamorfosi
towards Airport
Preceding station   TrainOSE   Following station
Athens
Terminus
Intercity
toward Thessaloniki
Route map
Fm Athens
Lykotrypa
SKA
Ano Liosia
Acharnai
To Inoi
Location
Acharnes
Location within Greece

Lines and Services

The lines that converge in the junction are:

As of 2019 the station is served by eight trains per day to Thessaloniki, one train per hour between the Airport and Ano Liosia, one train per hour between Koropi and Ano Liosia,[3] and one train per 2 hours between Athens and Chalcis.[4]

Platforms

The station has 8 platforms, as well as one low-level platform in the median of Attiki Odos Motorway. Currently, only this platform and two others are used.

Future

Usage of the 7 remaining platforms

Apart from the 2 platforms on the Athens to Thessaloniki Line and the Proastiakos platform low level platform, the station has 6 platforms that remain unused. Those platforms exist in order to accommodate future services, especially after the completion of the P.A.Th.E./P..

  • Platforms 1 and 2, which serve tracks 1, 2, 3 and 4 respectively, will open after the completion of the Athens to Patras line. Trains go through these tracks daily, however they do not call at the station. The Athens to Patras line has already been completed as far as Aigio. The next sections are under construction (the link to the city of Patras is still under planning) and will open in stages from 2020 onwards.
  • Platforms 3 and 4 serve tracks 5, 6, 7 and 8. They will be used in case the Acharnes Bypass is completed. If completed, intercity and regional will be redirected through a tunnel, bypassing Acharnes, that will allow them to reach higher speeds, thus reducing travel times. Construction of this bypass seemed likely because the line north of Athens is expected to suffer from capacity issues and become a major bottleneck in the Greek Rail Network. Lack of finance as well as another proposal with the same goal, the Thriasion - Thiva Line have put this project on hold.
  • Platforms 5 and 6, which serve tracks 9, 10 and 11 are terminating platforms. Usage of these platforms is highly unlikely because extending services further from the station instead of having them terminate there is more favourable because of financial reasons, as well as the fact that they would attract more passengers.

Metro Station
A future station has been proposed on line 5 of the Athens Metro. It will not open before 2030.

Criticism

Low usage of the station and its unnecessarily large size and the number of platforms have led to the project being criticised as a white elephant.

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References

  1. "OSE - 2017 Network Statement Annexes".
  2. Σε πορεία εξυγίανσης ο όμιλος ΟΣΕ
  3. "2013 railway timetable Athens Airport-Kiato" (PDF). Proastiakos. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2013. Retrieved 13 August 2013.
  4. "2013 railway timetable Piraeus-Chalcis" (PDF). TrainOSE. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 January 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2014.

See also


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