Central Line (Sweden)

The Central Line (Swedish: Mittbanan) is a 358-kilometre (222 mi) long railway line between Sundsvall and Storlien in central Sweden (Västernorrland County and Jämtland County). It continues as the 106-kilometre (66 mi) long Meråker Line through Norway to Hell Station and onwards to Trondheim. The railway shares line with Inland Line between Brunflo and Östersund while the line between Ånge and Bräcke is double track. The entire line is electrified at 15 kV  16.7 Hz AC, but the Norwegian section is not. This requires all trains to Norway to be diesel trains.

Central Line
Overview
TypeRailway
SystemSwedish railway network
TerminiSundsvall Central Station
Storlien Station
Operation
Opened1878
OwnerSwedish Transport Administration
Operator(s)Norwegian State Railways
SJ
Veolia Transport
CharacterPassenger and freight
Rolling stockX2
Regina
NSB Class 92
Technical
Line length358 km (222 mi)
Number of tracksSingle
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV  16.7 Hz AC
Route map
Meråker Line to Trondheim
0 Storlien
13 Enafors
24 Ånn
48 Duved
56 Åre
70 Undersåker
83 Järpen
141 Krokom
Inland Line
161 Östersund V
162 Östersund C
177 Brunflo
Inland Line
195 Pilgrimstad
209 Gällö
222 Stavre
Main Line Through Upper Norrland
233 Bräcke
Northern Main Line
263 Ånge
Northern Main Line
277 Erikslund
286 Ljungaverk
292 Fränsta
301 Torpshammar
304 Bodaberg
317 Stöde
Ådalen Line
357 Sundsvall V
358 Sundsvall C
East Coast Line to Gävle

SJ AB operates night trains with sleeping cars from Storlien or Duved to either Stockholm, Gothenburg or Malmö.[1] The section between Sundsvall and Trondheim is operated by Tågkompaniet under Norrtåg ownership with Class 92 diesel multiple units between Östersund and Trondheim, and Regina trains between Sundsvall and Östersund. Snälltåget also operates Utmanartåget with a biweekly connection between Storlien and Malmö via Stockholm.[1]

History

The first part of the line was the Sundsvall–Torpshammar Railway, a private, narrow gauge and 60-kilometre (37 mi) long line opened fully in 1878, and its first part in 1872. From 1875 the Swedish State Railways were building Norrland Crossline, which opened 1879 between Torpshammar and Östersund. Before 1881 it had no connection to the rest of Sweden (only steamboat from Sundsvall), until the railway between Stockholm and Ånge was finished. At the same time the governments were building a railway east from Trondheim, with the Government of Sweden building the Swedish part, finished 1882. The Government of Norway (Norway was in a union with Sweden at the time) built the Norwegian section, Meråker Line, which was opened in 1886. In 1885 the Sundsvall-Torpshammar Railway was bought by the state and rebuilt to standard gauge the following year. The railway was then known as the Norrland Crossline (Norrländska Tvärbanan) until it got the present name in the early 1990s. In November 2013 the railway had to be closed near the border because of high risk of landslide, opened again February 2015.[2] The place is 1 km from the border and named "Stora Helvetet" ("Big Hell", named after the troubles of building the railway here in 1877).

gollark: But Rust.
gollark: `UseLinux`
gollark: The functional programming discord.
gollark: No, Go is. It broke containment.
gollark: ```Little known fact: GHC compiles code by literally emailing it to the sixth circle of Hell, so no one knows how it works, not even the Type-level Deacons and other curators of scripture. The email address was revealed to the Haskell committee one moonless night when they sacrificed Simon Peyton Jones in an unholy ritual that they reenact every year at the monadic.party. The present-day SPJ is actually a decoy hired by FP Complete to preserve the illusion that anyone in the community even has a clue as to how to build working software.```

See also

  • Western Central Line (Swedish: Västra Centralbanan) was the railway FalköpingUlricehamnLanderyd in Sweden. It is now removed.
  • Eastern Central Line (Swedish: Östra Centralbanan) was the name of the railway LinköpingHultsfred in Sweden. It is now a part of Stångådalsbanan.

References

  1. "Tidtabell" (PDF) (in Swedish). resplus.se. 2010-12-12. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  2. "Pressinbjudan: Invigning av banken över Örabäcken, Storlien (Stora Helvetet)" (in Swedish). Trafikverket. 2015-01-13. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.