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Template:Turin–Milan railway diagram

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(0.000)
Torino Lingotto
0.000
Torino Porta Nuova
1.092
0.000
start of Turin-Novara
1.400
Copertura Trincea tunnel
(2253 m)
1.465
Zappata 4-way junction
2.139
Crocetta junction
3.653
4-track tunnel to the east
(4446 m)
3.943
Torino Porta Susa
opened 2008
3.943
Torino Porta Susa
1856–2009
Torino Dora (under reconstruction)
to Ceres
(9+359)
Torino Rebaudengo Fossata
8.099
10.935
Torino Stura
12.347
link
14.062
14.014
Settimo Torinese junction
from Turin Passante
15.763
Settimo
Torino-Settimo Torinese
interurban tramway (1884–1954)
22.896
Brandizzo
27.251
Chivasso
184 m a.s.l.
30.763
Castelrosso
30.783
Castelrosso junction
(to Alessandria)
33.395
Torrazza Piemonte
38.391
Saluggia
41.186
Sant'Antonino di Saluggia
45.403
Livorno Ferraris
49.796
Bianzè
55.396
Tronzano
57.933
Santhià
to Biella and Arona
63.584
San Germano Vercellese
68.483
Olcenengo
Vercelli–Trino (closed 1949), V–Aranco
(c. 1933) and V–Biella (c. 1933) interurbans
77.054
Vercelli
128 m a.s.l.
Sesia river
79.348
Sesia junction
Vercelli-Biandrate-Fara
interurban tramway
82.051
Borgo Vercelli
88.937
Ponzana
Agogna torrent
Novara FNM
(old)
98.940
Novara / Novara Nord
151 m a.s.l.
Novara Boschetto
link to Turin–Milan (HS)
Novara–Vigevano–Ottobiano
interurban tramway
108.464
Trecate
Novara–Vigevano–Ottobiano
interurban tramway
113.982
120.421
Magenta
123.688
Corbetta-Santo Stefano Ticino
(opened 1936)[1]
Milano–Castano Primo
interurban tramway
126.206
Vittuone-Arluno
131.037
Pregnana Milanese
(opened 2009)[2][3]
133.381
134.571
16.348
Rho
"Varese" lines / "Novara" lines
12.618
Rho Fiera
opened 2008
8.526
Milano Certosa
Milano Villapizzone
opened 2002
Milano Bovisa FS
closed 1997
Farini marshalling yard
Milano Porta Garibaldi
Left arrowopened 1963 (surface)
Left arrowLeft arrowopened 1997 (underground)
0.000
Milano Centrale
Source: Italian railway atlas[4]

This is a route-map template for the Turin–Milan railway, a railway in Italy.

Note: Per consensus and convention, most route-map templates are used in a single article in order to separate their complex and fragile syntax from normal article wikitext. See these discussions [1],[2] for more information.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ferrovie dello Stato, Service order no. 25, 1936
  2. ^ RFI S.p.A. Departmental Circular MI 19/2009. p. 2.
  3. ^ "Impianti FS". I Treni (in Italian) (317): 6. July 2009.
  4. ^ Atlante ferroviario s'Italia e Slovenia [Italian and Slovenian railway atlas)] (1 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2010. pp. 19–21, 31, 120, 124, 130–33. ISBN 978-3-89494-129-1.