Milan–Verona high-speed railway

Milan–Verona high-speed railway
Overview
Type Heavy rail
Status under construction
Locale Italy
Termini Milano Lambrate railway station
Verona Porta Nuova railway station
Operation
Opened In stages between 2000 (2000) and ?
Owner RFI
Operator(s) Trenitalia
Technical
Line length 165 km (103 mi)
Number of tracks Double track
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 3 kV DC (Padua-Venice section)
25 kV 50 Hz AC (Milan-Brescia section)
Route map

0+000
Milano Centrale
various lines
3+798
Milano Lambrate
Milan–Venice railway ("Venezia LL")
"Rogoredo" branch of Passante
and lines to Genoa and Bologna
from Belt railway and Milano marshalling yard
12+404
Pioltello-Limito
18+750
Melzo Scalo
Adda river
27+425
Casirate junction
29+120
Adda junction
to Bergamo
33+063
Treviglio
Caravaggio viaduct,
35+539
Treviglio artificial tunnel
A35 (BreBeMi)
37+972
start of Treviglio east tunnel
Treviglio east interconnection
38+090
end of Treviglio east tunnel
41+135
Treviglio east crossover
43+526
start of Serio viaduct
44+483
end of Serio viaduct
55+260
start of Oglio viaduct
56+468
end of Oglio viaduct
66+900
Brescia Ovest crossover
66+977
(0+000)
Brescia west interconnection
San Martino viaduct
A21racc
 
(5+186)
Lovernato artificial tunnel
A35 (BreBeMi)
75+508
Roncadelle junction/crossover
line from Treviglio
 
(77+340)
Brescia
 
(5+300)
Brescia east crossover
100+304
(0+210)
Brescia east interconnection
100+514
(0+000)
Brescia east crossover
101+740
start of Calcinato II tunnel
102+200
end of Calcinato II tunnel
104+740
start of Lonato tunnel
112+111
end of Lonato tunnel
118+576
Peschiera crossover
121+655
start of Madonna del Frassino tunnel
123+605
end of Madonna del Frassino tunnel
124+230
start of Mincio viaduct
124+550
end of Mincio viaduct
125+200
start of Paradiso artificial tunnel
126+500
end of Paradiso artificial tunnel
130+180
start of San Giorgio viaduct
133+573
end of San Giorgio viaduct
140+700
Verona Merci crossover
from Bologna, Modena, Rovigo, Innsbruck
Verona Porta Nuova

The Milan–Verona high-speed railway is an Italian 165-kilometre (103-mile) long high-speed railway line, that is partly open and partly under construction to connect Milan with Verona. The route operates through the regions of Lombardy and Veneto. The line is part of Railway axis 6 of the Trans-European rail network (TEN-T) on the Pan-European Corridor V. The line will replace the Milan–Venice railway for high-speed trains.

In 2007 the first stage of construction was completed and opened, between Milan Lambrate and Treviglio. In 2016, the second stage between Treviglio and Brescia has been completed. Construction of the remaining section to Verona is still in progress.

The stretch to be built between Milan and Verona will measure a total of around 165 kilometers. The route will pass through 31 municipalities in Lombardy and 4 in Veneto.

Construction

The project between Milan and Treviglio was approved in 1995. The connection between the Lambrate station in Milan and the station Pioltello-Limito was completed in 2000, while the section to Treviglio was opened on 10 June 2007. The line has a total of just under thirty kilometers long and has cost just under €290 million.

The final design of the stretch Treviglio - Brescia was approved by CIPE in November 2007 with funding from the Economic Financial Planning Document (DPEF) between 2007 and 2011 of €2.05 billion. An agreement was signed between Rete Ferroviaria Italiana and Cepav Due to the start of work on the first construction lot of this on 7 March 2011, to the value of €700 million. Work began in May 2012 and was completed in 2016.

The railway signaling along the route of the line in operation is the same as on most of the conventional lines, while that of the under construction section will feature ERTMS/ETCS, which ensures interoperability between the European rail lines.

Testing of the section Treviglio-Brescia has begun in August 2016.[1]

The route

Leaving Milan Centrale station, the railway shares a common route with conventional tracks to Milan Lambrate station. After leaving Lambrate, it branches off east towards the mainline to Verona and Bergamo. At Melzo (near Pozzuolo station), the high-speed line divides from the historical route west of Treviglio station. This junction at Treviglio West will enable connection of the currently separate Treviglio and Treviglio Ovest stations.

The dedicated high-speed section between Treviglio and Brescia is 39.6 km long. The project approved by the CIPE involves the construction of a new high-speed, high capacity railway that will bypass to the south of the city of Bergamo to reach Brescia along a line that is mostly separate from the conventional line.[2]

The new track will branch from the future junction at Treviglio West to follow the A35 motorway to the municipality of Castrezzato. From this location, at the completion of the railway line up to Verona, there will be a branch to Brescia West junction, joining with the conventional route. This junction will join the conventional line near Ospitaletto to arrive at the station of Brescia. Commercial operation of trains is scheduled for December 2016, at the start of the 2016-2017 timetable.

Based on various projects, not yet approved by the Interministerial Committee for Economic Planning, the stretch Castrezzato - Verona should be 53 km long and its cost has been estimated at €2.8 billion.

The section concerned starts from Brescia West junction, located near Castrezzato, and passed through the towns south of Brescia, following a route alongside the A21 motorway. At Montichiari a High-speed station for Brescia is planned and near Calcinato Brescia East junction is planned.

See also

References

  1. Chiandoni, Marco. "Testing begins on Treviglio - Brescia HSL". Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  2. Article about the progress of building the line at October 2015 Archived 2013-05-22 at the Wayback Machine.

This article is based upon a translation of the Italian language version as at January 2016.

Media related to Milan–Verona high-speed railway at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.