Thun ship canal

The Thun ship canal (German: Thuner Schiffskanal) is a 500-metre (1,600 ft) long canal in the Swiss canton of Bern. Together with a navigable reach of the Aare of similar length, it connects Lake Thun with a quay in the town of Thun adjacent to Thun railway station.[1]

Thun Ship Canal
The quay at Thun railway station
Specifications
Locksnone
StatusNavigable
History
Date completed1925
BLS passenger ship Stadt Thun leaving the ship canal.

The canal allows shipping services on the lake to serve the town and connect with railway services. It is still in regular use by the Lake Thun passenger ships of the BLS AG.[2]

History

Shipping services on Lake Thun date back to at least 1834, when the first steamship was introduced to connect the towns of Thun and Interlaken, at each end of the lake. Originally steamers docked at Scherzligen, and in 1861 the Bern–Thun railway line was extended to a terminal there.[2]

In 1923, the station at Scherzligen was merged with that at Thun to create a new central station. Two years later, in 1925, the ship canal was constructed in order to retain the connection between trains and ships.[2]

gollark: Not semigroups, though.
gollark: Yes. Also applicatives, cofunctors and comonads.
gollark: PotatOS GPT-███ does obey the laws for functors, so we should be fine.
gollark: That is\* the meaning we mean.
gollark: GPT stands for "GUID Partition Table", actually.

References

  1. map.geo.admin.ch (Map). Swiss Confederation. Retrieved 2012-12-30.
  2. "History of navigation on Lakes Thun and Brienz". BLS AG. Retrieved 2012-12-13.

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