Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya

Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya
Industry Railway
Founded September 5, 1979
Headquarters Barcelona, Catalonia (Spain)
Key people
Enric Ticó i Buxadós (President)
Number of employees
1534 (2008)
Subsidiaries FGC Operadora
FGC Infraestructures
FGC Enginyeria
FGC Turisme i Muntanya
Website www.fgc.cat

Barcelona–Vallès Line

Legend
L3
to Zona Universitària

Pl. Catalunya

L1
Left arrow to Fondo | to Hospital de Bellvitge Right arrow

Meridiana Tunnel
L2
Left arrow to Badalona Pompeu Fabra | to Paral·lel Right arrow
Aragó Tunnel
Provença Tunnel

Provença
Diagonal

L5
Left arrow to Vall d'Hebron | to Cornellà Centre Right arrow
L3
to Trinitat Nova

Gràcia
Pl. Molina

Sant Gervasi
Pàdua
Muntaner
L9/L10
to Can Zam or Gorg
El Putxet

La Bonanova

Les Tres Torres
Av. Tibidabo

L9/L10
to Airport T1 or Polígon Pratenc
Plaça Kennedy

Sarrià
Tramvia Blau
to Plaça del Doctor Andreu
Reina Elisenda

Ronda de Dalt
Vallvidrera Inferior

Peu del Funicular
Vallvidrera Funicular
to Vallvidrera Superior
Vallvidrera Tunnel
Baixador de Vallvidrera
Les Planes
La Floresta
Valldoreix
Sant Cugat
Castellbisbal–Mollet-Sant Fost railway
to Mollet-Sant Fost
Sant Cugat del Vallès

Volpelleres

C-16

Mira-sol
Hospital General
AP-7

Sant Joan
Castellbisbal–Mollet-Sant Fost railway
to Castellbisbal
Bellaterra
Autonomous University
Rubí Operations Center
Sant Quirze
Rubí
C-58
C-16
Les Fonts
Can Feu | Gràcia
C-58
N-150
Sabadell Plaça Major
La Creu Alta
Terrassa Rambla
Sabadell Nord

Vallparadís Universitat
Lleida–Manresa–Barcelona railway
to L'Hospitalet de Llobregat

Terrassa

Lleida–Manresa–Barcelona railway
to Lleida Pirineus
Sabadell Parc del Nord

Terrassa Estació del Nord
Ca n'Oriac Depot
Terrassa Nacions Unides
Can Roca Depot
FGC train (111 series) in Barcelona.
Ticket vending machines

Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya (Catalan pronunciation: [ˌfɛrukəˈriɫz ðə ɫə ʒənəɾəɫiˈtad də kətəˈɫuɲə], "Catalan Government Railways"), or FGC, is a railway company which operates several unconnected lines in Catalonia, Spain.

The lines operated include metro and commuter lines in and around the city of Barcelona, tourist mountain railways, and rural railway lines. They include 3.5 kilometres (2.2 mi) of 600 mm (1 ft 11 58 in) gauge route, 140 kilometres (87 mi) of 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge route, 42 kilometres (26 mi) of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge route, and 89 kilometres (55 mi) of broad gauge route, making the FGC one of the few railway companies to operate on four different gauges.[1]

Whilst most lines are conventional adhesion railways, the FGC also operates two rack railways and four funicular railways.

History

FGC was founded on September 5, 1979 to manage lines whose ownership was transferred from the state-owned FEVE to the Generalitat of Catalonia in 1978 as part of the process of regional devolution under the Spanish Constitution of 1978. Its oldest line, the standard gauge Línia Barcelona-Vallès however dates back to 1863 which was built and operated by Companyia del Ferrocarril de Barcelona a Sarrià from 1863 until 1874, and Ferrocarril de Sarrià a Barcelona (FSB) (with Ferrocarrils de Catalunya (FCC)) from 1874 until financial difficulties forced FSB and FCC to be acquired by FEVE in 1977, which operated it until FGC took over the line in 1979. The second oldest line the Llobregat–Anoia line was opened in 1892 as an interurban tram using metre gauge tracks, which was taken over by the Companyia General dels Ferrocarrils Catalans (CGFC) in 1912 and transformed it into a train line; CGFC being later taken over by FSB and FCC, followed by the broad gauge Lleida – La Pobla de Segur line in 1951 and operated by RENFE until it was transferred to FGC in 2005-2010.

Barcelona metro and commuter lines

FGC operates some of the Barcelona commuter rail network. All lines are overhead DC electrified at 1.5kV. There are two distinct (and separate) systems:

The line numbering is as follows:

Mountain railway, tourist and funicular lines

Historic car no. 18 of Ferrocarrils de Catalunya

The FGC operates three mountain railway lines:

The FGC also operates four funicular railways:

Broad-gauge lines

On 1 January 2005, ownership of the non-electrified broad-gauge line from Lleida to La Pobla de Segur passed from RENFE to FGC. This is the most derelict line in Catalonia — the stretch from Lleida to Balaguer had been upgraded (using second-hand rails) in the recent past, but from Balaguer northwards the track was in an appalling state. FGC has a number of plans for this line, including increasing the service frequency from three trains a day to a 30-minute service from Balaguer to Lleida, along the lines of a commuter railway; replacing all the rails and sleepers; introducing new trains to replace the ancient diesel stock currently used; and promotion of the line to tourists (it passes through some scenic countryside at its northern end). There are even plans to extend the line to the Pyrenees and possibly on to connect with railways in France — the plan when the line was built, but never carried out. Recent budget cuts had left the line in a worse state than it was on RENFE days, with currently three daily services from Lleida to Balaguer and only one running the whole length up to La Pobla de Segur.

As of 2015, the service on the line is as follows:[3]

Freight

FGC locomotive 254.03 hauling freight cars near Sant Boi

FGC currently operates two types of freight services on the Llobregat–Anoia line; one of which carries potash and salt from Súria and Sallent respectively to Martorell and the Port of Barcelona, and the other carries cars from SEAT's main factory in Martorell to the Port of Barcelona.

In September 2012, FGC announced that it was planning to start operating freight services across the Spanish rail network, as an open access operator. Initial routes would be BarcelonaSevilla and BarcelonaMadrid.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Green, Richard (August 2010). "The railways of Barcelona - Part 2:FGC, metro and tramway". Today's Railways. Platform 5 Publishing Ltd. pp. 20–28.
  2. "Ferrocarril Turístic de l'Alt Llobregat - Traçat" (in Catalan). trenscat.com. Retrieved 2010-07-29.
  3. http://fgc.cat/downloads/horaris/horaris_tren.pdf
  4. "FGC enters national freight market - Railway Gazette". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.