Brescia railway station
Brescia | |
---|---|
The passenger building. | |
Location |
Viale della Stazione 7 25122 Brescia Brescia, Brescia, Lombardy Italy |
Coordinates | 45°31′57″N 10°12′46″E / 45.53250°N 10.21278°ECoordinates: 45°31′57″N 10°12′46″E / 45.53250°N 10.21278°E |
Operated by |
Rete Ferroviaria Italiana Centostazioni |
Line(s) |
Milan–Venice Lecco–Brescia Brescia–Cremona Brescia–Iseo–Edolo Brescia–Parma |
Distance |
82.842 km (51.476 mi) from Milano Centrale |
Tracks | 11 |
Train operators |
Trenitalia Trenord Thello |
Connections |
|
Other information | |
Classification | Gold |
History | |
Opened | 24 April 1854 |
Location | |
Brescia railway station Location of railway station in Brescia |
Brescia railway station (Italian: Stazione di Brescia) serves the city and comune of Brescia, in the region of Lombardy, northern Italy. Opened in 1854, the station lies on the mainline running between Milan and Venice. It is also a terminus of local railway lines from Cremona, Bergamo, Parma and Edolo (Valcamonica).
The station is currently managed by Rete Ferroviaria Italiana (RFI). The commercial area of the passenger building, however, is managed by Centostazioni. These companies are full subsidiaries of Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), Italy's state-owned rail company. Train services are operated by Trenitalia, Trenord, Thello and NTV-Italo.
The station has about 20 million passenger movements each year. Work has begun in preparation for the high-speed line between Treviglio and Brescia (construction work will be completed at the end of 2016[1]), which is part of the future Milan-Verona high-speed railway.
Location
Brescia railway station is situated at Viale della Stazione, the south-western edge of the city centre.
History
Designed by the engineer Benedetto Foix, Brescia station was opened on 24 April 1854 upon the inauguration of the Coccaglio-Verona section of the Milan–Venice Railway.[2][3]
Features
The passenger building is constructed in a neoclassical style and influenced by neo-Roman elements and medieval style fortifications.
The station has eleven tracks, three of those are bay platforms located at the western end (Italian: Piazzale Ovest). The bay platforms are exclusively used for trains operating on the Valcamonica Railway (Brescia–Iseo–Edolo railway).
Two mainline tracks are commonly used for high-speed and Eurocity services between Milan and Venice. The other six tracks are used by regional trains for Cremona, Bergamo and Parma.
Additional tracks are dedicated to goods trains to and from Brescia Scalo or used for storage of rolling stock.
Train services
The following services call at the station:
Domestic (High-speed)
- High-speed train (Trenitalia Frecciarossa) Milan-Venice: Milan - Brescia - Peschiera del Garda - Verona - Vicenza - Pauda - Venice
- High-speed train (Trenitalia Frecciabianca) Turin-Venice: Turin - Milan - Brescia - Peschiera del Garda - Verona - Vicenza - Padua - Venice - (Trieste)
- High-speed train (Trenitalia Frecciargento) Brescia-Rome: Brescia - Verona - Bologna - Florence - Rome
- High-speed train (Italo NTV) Brescia-Naples: Brescia - Verona - Bologna - Florence - Rome - Naples
Domestic
- Regional train (Trenitalia Regional) Milan-Verona: Milan - Treviglio - Brescia - Desanzano del Garda - Peschiera del Garda - Verona
- Regional train (Trenitalia Regional) Brescia-Cremona: Brescia - Manerbio - Verolanuova - Cremona
- Regional train (Trenord Regional) Brescia-Parma: Brescia - Ghedi - Asola - Piadena - Casalmaggiore - Parma
- Regional train (Trenord Regional) Brescia-Bergamo: Brescia - Rovato - Bergamo
- Regional train (Trenord Regional) Brescia-Edolo: Brescia - Iseo - Pisogne - Darfo Corno - Boario Terme - Breno - Capo di Ponte - Edolo
- Regional train (Trenord Regional) Brescia-Iseo: Brescia - Brescia Ospitaletto - Rovato - Iseo
Cross-border
(CH for Switzerland, F for France, A for Austria, D for Germany)
On 11 December 2016, ÖBB will take over for Deutsche Bahn's night trains. The Munich-Milan service will be withdrawn.
- Night train (Thello EuroNight) Paris-Venice: Paris (Gare de Lyon) (F) - Dijon (Ville) (F) - Milan (Centrale) - Milan (Rho-Fiera for Expo 2015) - Brescia - Verona - Padua - Venice (Mestre) - Venice (Santa Lucia)
- Night train (DB CityNightLine) Milan-Munich/Vienna: Milan (Centrale) - Brescia - Verona^ - Vicenza - Padua - Venice (Mestre) - Villach (A) - Klagenfurt (A) - Leoben - Bruck - Vienna (Meidling) (A)
- Intercity train (SBB-CFF-FFS EuroCity) Geneva-Milan/Venice: Geneva (CH) - Brig (CH) - Milan (Centrale) - (Brescia) - (Verona) - (Padua) - (Venice)
^ 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).
Preceding station | Trenitalia | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Terminus | Frecciargento | toward Roma Termini |
||
toward Torino Porta Nuova | Frecciabianca | toward Trieste Centrale |
||
Terminus | Frecciabianca | toward Udine |
||
Terminus | Treno regionale | toward Venezia Santa Lucia |
||
toward Bergamo | Treno regionale | Manerbio toward Pisa Centrale |
||
Preceding station | Thello | Following station | ||
toward Paris-Gare de Lyon | Thello | toward Venice |
||
Preceding station | Trenord | Following station | ||
toward Genève-Cornavin | EuroCity | toward Venezia Santa Lucia |
||
Terminus | EuroNight | toward Wien Hbf |
||
toward Milano Centrale | Treno regionale | toward Verona Porta Nuova |
||
toward Sesto San Giovanni | Treno regionale | Terminus | ||
toward Bergamo | Treno regionale | Terminus | ||
Terminus | Treno regionale | San Zeno-Folzano toward Cremona |
||
Terminus | Treno regionale | San Zeno-Folzano toward Parma |
||
Borgo San Giovanni toward Edolo | Treno regionale | Terminus |
Passenger and train movements
The station is used by 50/60,000 passengers each day, for an annual total of about 20 million passengers.[4]
Long-distance traffic to and from the station is catered for by Frecciargento and Frecciabianca trains. Regional passenger services are mostly operated by Trenord. Trenitalia operates a few regional services per day to Venice and Pisa.
Interchange
Brescia railway station is served by Stazione FS, a station of the Brescia Metro. Near the passenger building there are also two bus stations for suburban public transport: the main bus station and the SIA bus station. The forecourt is also an interchange point for several bus lines. The SIA bus station, with departures to Mantova, Verona, Milan Bergamo (Orio al Serio) Airport and other destinations, is directly linked by a short walkway to the train station's forecourt.
See also
- History of rail transport in Italy
- List of railway stations in Lombardy
- Rail transport in Italy
- Railway stations in Italy
References
- ↑ Davide Bacca (2014-11-13). "Il primo convoglio Tav l'11 dicembre del 2016" (in Italian). Corriere della Sera. Retrieved 2015-06-15.
- ↑ Alessandro Tuzza; et al. "Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926" [Chronological overview of the features of the railways opened between 1839 and 31 December 1926]. Trenidicarta.it (in Italian). Alessandro Tuzza. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
- ↑ Ganzerla, Giancarlo (2004). Binari sul Garda - Dalla Ferdinandea al tram: tra cronaca e storia [Rails on the Garda - From Ferdinandbahn to tramway: between chronicle and history]. Brescia: Grafo. p. 126. ISBN 88-7385-633-0.
- ↑ "La rivoluzione Tav sbarca in stazione" (in Italian). Corriere della Sera. 2014-02-07. Retrieved 2015-06-15.
External links
Media related to Brescia railway station at Wikimedia Commons
This article is based upon a translation of the Italian language version as at January 2011.