Trento railway station

Trento

View of the station yard

View of the station yard
Location Piazza Dante
38122 Trento TN
Trento, Trentino, Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol
Italy
Coordinates 46°04′19″N 11°07′10″E / 46.07194°N 11.11944°E / 46.07194; 11.11944Coordinates: 46°04′19″N 11°07′10″E / 46.07194°N 11.11944°E / 46.07194; 11.11944
Operated by
Line(s)
Distance 94.79 km (58.90 mi) from Verona Porta Vescovo
Train operators Trenitalia
Connections
Other information
Classification Gold
History
Opened 23 March 1859 (1859-03-23)
Location
Trento
Location within Northern Italy

Trento railway station (Italian: Ferrovie Stazione di Trento, German: Bahnhof Trient) is the main station of Trento, capital of the autonomous province of Trentino (region of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol), in northeastern Italy. Opened in 1859 when Trento was in the Austrian Empire, the station lies on the Brenner Railway between Innsbruck and Verona via Brenner Pass at 1,371 m above sea. It contains a junction with Valsugana Railway and metre-gauged railway Trento-Malè.

The station is currently managed by Rete Ferroviaria Italiana (RFI). The commercial area of the passenger building, however, is managed by Centostazioni, whereas train services are operated by Trenitalia and ÖBB. RFI, Centostazioni and Trenitalia are full subsidaries of Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), Italy's state-owned rail company.

Location

Trento railway station is situated at Piazza Dante, the northwestern edge of the city centre and on the east bank of River Adige/Etsch.

Features

The external colonnade

The passenger building hosts the ticket office, a waiting room, two newsagent stores and a cafe bar.

The station has four tracks and three through platforms. At the southern end, there is a bay platform for trains operating on the Valsugana Railway. The metre-gauged railway station of the same name is located at the northern end. In addition, there is a locomotive shed for siding train carriages overnight. The goods yard is situated at Roncaforte district, a short distance to the north of the station.

Train Services

The following services call at the station (incomplete):

Domestic

Cross-border

(D for Germany, A for Austria)

On 11 December 2016, ÖBB will take over Deutsche Bahn's night trains. The Munich-Milan service will be withdrawn.

^ Train connects at Verona with ÖBB EuroNight Rome-Vienna: DB CityNightLine splits into two trains (first half couples with ÖBB Rome-Vienna and leaves for Vienna or Rome; second half continues to Munich or Milan). Vienna-Rome splits into two trains (first half continues to Rome or Vienna; second half couples with DB CityNightLine for Milan or Munich).

Passenger and train movements

The station has 5 million passenger movements each year and is therefore the second busiest, after Bozen/Bolzano, in the region in terms of passenger numbers.[1]

All trains passing through Trento, including InterCity and Eurostar Italia (now Freccia) trains, call at the station. The main domestic destinations are Verona, Venezia, Bassano del Grappa and Bolzano/Bozen, but passengers also depart for and arrive from other domestic destinations such as Bologna or Rome. The main international links are Munich and Innsbruck.

See also

References

Notes

  1. "Flussi Annui nelle 103 Stazioni" [Annual flows at the 103 stations]. Centostazioni website (in Italian). Centostazioni. Retrieved 4 December 2010. External link in |work= (help)

Further reading

Media related to Trento railway station at Wikimedia Commons

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

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.