Port Kavkaz railway station

Port Kavkaz (Russian: Порт Кавказ) is a railway station in Krasnodar Krai, Russia.

Port Kavkaz
North Caucasus Railway terminal
Kavkaz station is seen on the right.
Location Russia, Krasnodar Krai, Port Kavkaz
Coordinates45°20′27″N 36°40′29″E
Owned byRussian Railways (North Caucasus Railway)
Platforms2
Tracks2
Construction
Parkingyes
Other information
Fare zone6
History
Opened1944[1]
Electrifiedyes
Services
Preceding station   North Caucasus Railway   Following station

History

The station was opened in 1944 to serve the new Kerch railway bridge. The complex also included construction of tracks to the bridge: from Port Kavkaz to Sennaya station and from Port Krym to Kerch.[2]

In February 1945 the bridge was destroyed by ice.[2]

In 1954 the Kerch ferry crossing had opened.

In 1989 the railway ferries were stopped for passenger trains, however, the station continued to work, serving freight trains and a passenger diesel train KavkazKrasnodar.

In 1995 the railway ferries were stopped and the station became disused.

In 2004 new rail ferries arrived to Port Kavkaz and resumed the movement of freight trains through the Kerch Strait ferry line.

In 2007, the station became primary when sending oil cars from Russia to Armenia, replacing Ukrainian Illichivsk.[3]

In 2008 new railway lines were built to the station.

Since 2009, the station sends cars to Bulgaria, bypassing customs procedures on the borders of Ukraine, Moldova and Romania.

Since 2015 all the trains to Crimea pass the station.[4]

gollark: Those are not mutually exclusive.
gollark: So obviously instead of accepting that you are *not* conscious, you just rationalized it by *imagining* being conscious.
gollark: Anyway, if the human mind is good at one thing it's rationalizing.
gollark: It's funny, though.
gollark: <:acidic:826234302692982794> in other words.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.