Gorizia Centrale railway station

Gorizia Centrale

The main entrance.

The main entrance.
Location Piazzale Martiri per la Libertà d'Italia
34170 Gorizia GO
Gorizia, Gorizia, Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Italy
Coordinates 45°55′58″N 13°36′27″E / 45.93278°N 13.60750°E / 45.93278; 13.60750Coordinates: 45°55′58″N 13°36′27″E / 45.93278°N 13.60750°E / 45.93278; 13.60750
Operated by Rete Ferroviaria Italiana
Centostazioni
Line(s) Udine–Trieste
Gorizia-Nova Gorica railway
Gorizia–Ajdovščina (closed 1993)
Distance 32.682 km (20.308 mi)
from Udine
Train operators Trenitalia
Connections
  • Local buses
Other information
Classification Silver
History
Opened 1 October 1860 (1860-10-01)
Location
Gorizia Centrale
Location within Northern Italy

Gorizia Centrale railway station (Italian: Stazione di Gorizia Centrale; German: Görz Südbahnhof (former name)) is the main station serving the town and comune of Gorizia, in the autonomous region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, northeastern Italy.

Overview

Opened in 1860, the station forms part of the Udine–Trieste railway, and is also a junction station for an international branch line linking Gorizia with Ajdovščina in nearby Slovenia.

The station is currently managed by Rete Ferroviaria Italiana (RFI). However, the commercial area of the passenger building is managed by Centostazioni. Train services to and from the station are operated by Trenitalia. Each of these companies is a subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), Italy's state-owned rail company.

Location

Gorizia Centrale railway station is situated at Piazzale Martiri per la Libertà d'Italia, at the southwestern edge of the city centre.

History

The station was opened on 1 October 1860, upon the inauguration of the Cormons–Galleria section of the Udine–Trieste railway.[1] Located at that time in the territory of the Austrian Empire, the station then had the dual name of Görz/Gorizia and was operated by the Imperial Royal Privileged Southern Railway Company of Austria, Venice and central Italy (German: Kaiserlich königliche privilegierte Südbahngesellschaft).

In 1902, the station became a junction station for the branch line to Ajdovščina (Italian: Aidussina; German:Haidenschaft), built by the Austrian imperial society Localbahn Görz-Haidenschaft, which awarded management rights to the Südbahngesellschaft.

Four years later, upon the opening of the Jesenice-Trieste railway (part of the network of railway lines known as the Transalpine Railway), the station took on the dual designation of Görz Südbahnhof/Gorizia Meridionale, to distinguish it from its counterpart on the new line, the Görz Staatsbahnhof/Gorizia stazione delle ferrovie dello stato (now the Nova Gorica railway station). The two systems were connected by a short rail link using part of the branch line to Ajdovščina.

Under the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919), the two stations went to the Kingdom of Italy, and the FS became the operator of both. Over the next twelve years, the station on the Udine-Trieste railway changed its name several times: initially it retained only its Italian name Gorizia Meridionale, then it became Gorizia Campagnuzza, and since 1923 it has been Gorizia Centrale.[2]

Features

Inside the station, there are ticket windows, ticket machines, a lounge, a bar, a newsagency, and passport photo machines.

All the regional trains travelling on the Udine-Trieste railway stop at the station, and some of them terminate there.

Train services

The movement of passengers is about 1.4 million people a year, which means that the station is the fifth busiest station in Friuli-Venezia Giulia in terms of numbers of passengers.[3]

The station is served by the following service(s):

Preceding station   Trenitalia   Following station
toward Roma Termini
Intercity Notte
Treno regionale
Treno regionale

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gorizia Centrale train station.

This article is based upon a translation of the Italian language version as at November 2010.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.