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Bieszczady Forest Railway

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Bieszczady Forest Railway
Bieszczadzka Kolejka Leśna
On a track towards Przysłup
LocaleBieszczady, Poland
TerminusMajdan
Coordinates49°12′21″N 22°17′55″E / 49.205829°N 22.298700°E / 49.205829; 22.298700
Commercial operations
Original gauge760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)
750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
Preserved operations
Owned byState Forests
Operated byFundacja Bieszczadzkiej Kolejki Leśnej
Stations5
Length20 kilometres (12.4 mi)
Preserved gauge750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
Commercial history
Opened1898
1944ceased operation due to war damages
1953taken over by State Forests, reconstruction started
1963passenger traffic renewed
Closed1994
Preservation history
1997Re-opened as a heritage railway
Website
http://kolejka.bieszczady.pl/

The Bieszczady Forest Railway (Polish: Bieszczadzka Kolejka Leśna) is a 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) narrow gauge railway built in a sparsely populated, forested region of the Bieszczady Mountains. Construction commenced at the end of the 19th century and completed before World War I. Regular traffic ceased in 1994. Nowadays, a part of the railway is utilized as a tourist attraction. Trains run regularly on weekends from the beginning of May until October, and also on weekdays in July and August.

The main station with all the rolling stock is located in Majdan near Cisna.

Majdan train station

History

Construction of a narrow-gauge railway in the Bieszczady mountains started in 1890, when Galicia was under Austro-Hungarian rule. Its main purpose was to make forest exploitation easier, by linking the heart of Bieszczady with the standard-gauge First Hungarian-Galician Railway (Erste Ungarisch-Galizische Eisenbahn) in Nowy Łupków.[1] The first line, 25 km long, led from Nowy Łupków eastwards to Cisna, mostly along the Solinka river valley, and was opened on 21 January 1898. The gauge initially was 760 mm. The railway was operated by kkStB, and there ran two pairs of mixed trains and a number of timber trains daily.[1] In 1900-1909 there were built further private forest extensions from Cisna towards Kalnica, Beskid (part of Smerek) and Roztoki Górne.[1]

During World War I the railway was used by the Austro-Hungarian army, and was largely destroyed. In 1918, after Poland had regained independence, the railway was taken over by Polish State Railways (PKP).[1] During the economic crisis in the 1930s, its importance decreased and private extensions towards Kalnica, Smerek and Roztoki Górne were disassembled.[1] During World War II and the German occupation, the railway was taken over by German Ostbahn. It was modernized, and the gauge was changed to the current 750 mm.[1] During East Front fighting in 1944, and subsequent fighting with the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, the railway was demolished, and tracks and sleepers were removed in many places or damaged by tanks.[1]

After the war, the Bieszczady mountains were deserted due to the forced resettlement of Ukrainian population, and PKP railways lost interest in renewing operation. By 1953 the line was handed over to State Forests administration (Lasy Państwowe), and subsequently it was rebuilt to serve as a timber railway.[1] By the 1960s it was enlarged: towards the north-west to Mików (linking it with a former private railway to Rzepedź), and eastwards through Cisna to Wetlina and Moczarne.[1] The main depot and station was in Majdan (a settlement of Cisna). In 1963 limited passenger traffic began (it was the only public railway in Poland beside Polish State Railways at that time).[1] Passenger volume reached some 30,000 a year.[1] From the late 1970s, steam traction was replaced with diesel locomotives PKP class Lyd2. Due to economic crisis, competition from road transport, and then Poland's transition to a market economy in the 1980s and 1990s, the railway, still operated by State Forests, fell into financial difficulties, and ceased operation in 1994.[1] Its infrastructure and part of the rolling stock were preserved thanks to placing the railway in the National Monument Registry in 1992.[1]

Restoration as a heritage railway

Thanks to efforts of local authorities, community and railroad workers, the Bieszczady Forest Railway Foundation was created in 1996 and it took over the railway operation as a tourist attraction, on a shortened track.[2] It acquired its current name Bieszczadzka Kolejka Leśna (lit. Bieszczady Light Forest Railway), which had been its popular designation before. From 4 July 1997 the trains started to run on an 11-km route from Majdan eastwards to Przysłup.[2] From the following year, the trains also ran westwards to Balnica and further to Wola Michowa (17 km).[2] For some time the trains ran even to Smolnik, but eventually Balnica became the last station, and the westward route was shortened to 9 km.[3] Soon the renewed railway became the major tourist attraction in Bieszczady. It runs several times a day in the summer season starting from May, and occasionally in other months; it is also possible to hire a special train.

From 2007 it regularly carried over 50,000 passengers a year, and from 2014 over 100,000 passengers.[4] In 2018 it carried a record 153,000 passengers.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Jerczyński (2007). p.14-15
  2. ^ a b c Jerczyński (2007). p.16
  3. ^ TRASA I: MAJDAN – BALNICA (9 KM) , kolejka.bieszczady.pl
  4. ^ mb (2014-12-28). "Wąskotorowa kolejka leśna przewiozła 102 tys. osób". onet.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2018-04-11.
  5. ^ PAP (2018-11-09). "Rekord! Bieszczadzka Kolejka Leśna przewiozła w tym roku 153 tys. osób". inforail.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  • Jerczyński, Michał (2007). "10 lat Bieszczadzkiej Kolejki Leśnej" [10 years of Bieszczadzka Forest Railway]. Świat Kolei (in Polish). No. 7/2010. pp. 14–18.