Alexandroupolis–Svilengrad railway

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Alexandroupoli–Svilengrad railway
Pythio station
Overview
StatusOperational up to Dikaia
OwnerOSE
LocaleGreece (East Macedonia and Thrace),
Bulgaria (Haskovo Province)
Termini
Service
Operator(s)TrainOSE
History
Opened1874 (1874)
Technical
Line length178.5 km (110.9 mi)
Number of trackssingle track[1]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrificationno[1]
Route map

km
Svilengrad
28.1
Ormenio
24.5
Ptelea
20.9
Dikaia
000.0
012.7
Dilofos
0.0
150.4
Marasia
Ardas River
147.2
Kastanies
147.9
Edirne (Karaağaç)
137.9
Nea Vyssa
135.4
Kavyli
133.4
Sakkos
129.6
Orestiada
123.0
Cheimonio
121.0
Thourio
119.8
Sofiko
116.3
Rigio
Pythion Halt
112.0
Pythion
000.0
107.6
Petrades
104.5
Praggion
98.2
Didymoteicho
93.7
Nei Psathades
88.8
Amori
78.3
Mandra
69.4
Soufli
57.1
Lagyna
52.6
Filakto
50.3
Tychero
39.9
Peplos
28.5
Feres
Alexandroupolis Dialogi
0.0
Alexandroupolis ferry/water interchange
km

The Alexandroupoli–Svilengrad railway is an about 178.5 km long railway connecting Alexandroupoli in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace, Greece with Svilengrad in Bulgaria, via the village of Dikaia. As of 2015 there is only passenger service on the section on Greek territory, between Alexandroupoli and Dikaia, as the international services to Sofia and Istanbul ("Friendship Express") have been suspended.

Course

The southern terminus of the Alexandroupoli–Svilengrad railway is Alexandroupoli railway station. About 30 km east of Alexandroupoli the line starts following the river Evros upstream on its right bank. At Pythio, between Didymoteicho and Orestiada, the line to Istanbul branches off. It reaches Dikaia, the current terminus of all passenger services, shortly before crossing the Bulgarian border at Ormenio and joins the railway from Sofia to Istanbul in Svilengrad.

History

The section between Alexandroupoli (formerly Dedeagatch) and Svilengrad was opened in 1874 by the Chemins de fer Orientaux (CO) when the entire Thrace was part of the Ottoman Empire. The part between Pythio and Svilengrad was part of the CO main line from Istanbul to western Europe.[2] After the Treaty of Lausanne was signed in 1923 and the borders between Greece and Turkey were drawn, the line was in Greek territory with the exception of a 10 km (6.2 mi) long section from Nea Vyssa to Marasia via Karaağaç that was in Turkey. In order to get from Alexandroupoli to Dikaia, Ormenio and Svilengrad in Bulgaria, trains of the French-Hellenic Railway Company (Chemin de fer Franco-Hellenique) and later of the Hellenic State Railways would travel through Turkish territory. Trains stopped at Karaağaç, which in Greek timetables was listed as Αδριανούπολις (Adrianoupolis)/Edirne.

When the Hellenic Railways Organisation took over in 1971, they designed and constructed a 9 km (5.6 mi) direct connection between Nea Vyssa and Marasia within the Greek borders, bypassing Karaağaç and with a new intermediate station at Kastanies. The new line section, which includes a new bridge over the river Ardas, was opened in 1975 and is still in use.[3] Karaağaç railway station was abandoned and is now used as the administrative building of Trakya University.[4] The Turkish railways opened a direct line from Pehlivanköy to Svilengrad, avoiding Greek territory, in 1971.[2]

Services

As of 2015, the Alexandroupoli–Svilengrad railway is only used by three daily pairs of local trains Alexandroupoli–Dikaia[5]

References

  1. ^ a b "OSE - 2017 Network Statement Annexes". p. 5.
  2. ^ a b Trains of Turkey
  3. ^ I. Zartaloudis; D. Karatolos; D. Koutelidis; G. Nathenas; S. Fasoulas; A. Filippoupolitis (1997). Οι Ελληνικοί Σιδηρόδρομοι (Hellenic Railways) (in Greek). Μίλητος (Militos). p. 126. ISBN 960-8460-07-7.
  4. ^ Trains of Turkey
  5. ^ "2014/15 Intercity schedule" (PDF). TrainOSE. Retrieved 11 March 2015.

External links