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Aosta/Aoste railway station

Coordinates: 45°44′03″N 07°19′21″E / 45.73417°N 7.32250°E / 45.73417; 7.32250
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Aosta / Aoste
The passenger building.
The passenger building.
General information
LocationPiazza/Place Innocenzo Manzetti
11100 Aosta/Aoste
Aosta,  Aosta Valley
Italy
Coordinates45°44′03″N 07°19′21″E / 45.73417°N 7.32250°E / 45.73417; 7.32250
Operated byRete Ferroviaria Italiana
Centostazioni
Line(s)Chivasso–Ivrea–Aosta
Aosta–Pré-Saint-Didier
Distance98.619 km (61.279 mi)
from Chivasso
Train operatorsTrenitalia
Connections
  • Urban (SVAP)and suburban (SAVDA) buses
Other information
ClassificationGold
History
Opened1886; 138 years ago (1886)
Location
Aosta / Aoste is located in Aosta Valley
Aosta / Aoste
Aosta / Aoste
Location in Aosta Valley
Aosta / Aoste is located in Northern Italy
Aosta / Aoste
Aosta / Aoste
Location in Northern Italy
Aosta / Aoste is located in Italy
Aosta / Aoste
Aosta / Aoste
Location in Italy

Aosta/Aoste railway station (Italian: Stazione di Aosta, French: Gare d'Aoste) is the main station serving the city and comune of Aosta, in the autonomous region of Aosta Valley, northwestern Italy. Opened in 1886, it forms part of the Chivasso–Ivrea–Aosta railway, and is also a junction station for a branch line to Pré-Saint-Didier, in the Valdigne, on the way towards Courmayeur.

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

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Aosta railway station is situated in the southern part of the city, a few hundred metres (yards) from the central Émile Chanoux square (town hall square), to which it is linked by Avenue Conseil des Commis.

Features

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The station has recently been renovated. It is composed of a single building with ticketing, waiting rooms, a cafe bar, a bistro restaurant and a tobacconist. A minor building, adjacent to the main one, is the headquarters of the railway police.

The station yard has eight tracks, of which five are dedicated to passenger trains, and faced by platforms equipped with steel canopies. Recently, Centrostazioni fitted the platforms and the subway to Via Paravera with illuminated signs indicating destinations and schedules.

There is no goods shed at the station. In recent years, the only goods traffic passing through the station has been consignments of slate, widely used for roofing in the Aosta Valley, and cargoes of waste, particularly of scrap metal, from Cogne Aciers spéciaux (CAS), a steelworks located near the station. The scrap metal was destined for foundries, and was transported several days a week by goods trains hauled by two D345 class diesel locomotives (one at each end of the train) or the new D242 class diesel locomotives.

Until 2001–2002, the station was managed in collaboration with military railway engineers (who were involved in the management of the Chivasso–Aosta railway).

Train services

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The station is served by the following service:

  • Express services (Regionale Veloce) Turin - Chivasso – Ivrea – Aosta
  • Regional services (Treno regionale) Ivrea - Aosta
Preceding station   Trenitalia   Following station
Treno regionaleTerminus
toward Ivrea
Treno regionaleTerminus

Passenger and train movements

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The station has about one million passenger movements each year.[1] It is used mainly by students attending colleges in the Aosta Valley, by commuters and by tourists.

The main destinations for passengers are Turin, Chivasso, Ivrea.

Interchange

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Innocent Manzetti square, in front of the station, is the terminus for the majority of Aosta's urban and suburban bus lines.

Near the square is the Georges Carrel parking station, and Aosta bus station, the terminus of the bus lines of the SAVDA company.

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Flussi Annui nelle 103 Stazioni" [Annual flows at the 103 stations]. Centostazioni website (in Italian). Centostazioni. Archived from the original on 9 February 2010. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
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